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16 August 2009

Colombo, the Pettah, the Dutch Museum & the von Ranzows

Colombo was called Kalanpu by Ibn Battuta. A mainly Muslim trading port, the Portuguese took it over in 1517 and drove out all the non-Christians. They built a large fort, which encompassed present-day Fort and Pettah.

The Dutch and Sri Lankan armies before Colombo

Allied with the Sinhalese king Rajasinghe II, the Dutch under Gerard Pieterszoon Hulft laid siege to and captured the fort in 1655. The Hollanders were in the employ of the Netherlands East India Company, the Vereenigde Oost-Indische Compagnie or VOC.

The VOC logo

The hitherto feudalistic Lusitanian colony was henceforth to be run with capitalist, Teutonic efficiency. The thrifty Dutch reduced the size of the fort to the area now encompassed within the Colombo city-core known as the 'Fort'. The remainder (outside the new fort) became the outer fort, the 'Pettah'.

Map: Dutch Period Museum marked with orange cross

The Fort is divided from the Pettah by a broad canal, linking the harbour to the Beira lake, which may clearly be seen on the map.

The Dutch Period Museum (larger Photo available here.)

On Prince St in the modern Pettah lies the 'Old Dutch House'. It was built in the late 17th century and was originally the home of the Dutch governor, Thomas van Rhee (1692-1697). In 1796 the British, who displaced the Dutch, took it over and made it into a Military Hospital . Still later it became a post office. The building was restored in 1977-81 and was opened to the public in 1982 as the 'Dutch Period Museum'.

Entrance to the museum

The museum is open daily - except Fridays - from 0900 to 1700 (9 am to 5 pm). Embodying the architectural features of a tropical colonial Dutch town house, it displays old Dutch furniture and artefacts and portrays aspects of contemporary Burgher life and culture.

Old Dutch furniture

Among the items illustrating the Dutch period is a copy of a portrait of Gerard Hulft, the VOC's First Councillor and Director-General of the Indies, Commander-in-Chief of the military forces over the waters of Ceylon and the Coast of India. Hulft was killed during the siege of Colombo.

Gerard Hulft by Flinck (detail)

The original of the portrait by Govert Flinck is at the the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam.

Among the original occupants of the Old Dutch House was apparently August Carel Fredrik von Ranzow (also known as August Carl Friedrich von Rantzow, 1789-1844), who styled himself Graf (Count). He was a scion of an aristocratic German-Dutch-Danish family with the (rather Ruritanian-sounding) name of von Rantzau , who traced their ancestry back to Charlemagne. A son of Count Ferdinand Anton von Ranzow of Wolffenbuettel, his progeny engendered Brohiers, Sissouws and Greves, among others. He returned to Brunswick and married an equally aristocratic baronness, and three of the ensuing sons returned to serve the VOC in Sri Lanka.

Another relative who served the VOC in Sri Lanka was Daniel Detlef von Rantzow (1741-1822), who is mentioned, in a list of those attending the funeral of a Robertus Cramer, as having married the daughter of OnderKoopman Salomon van Lier: "Anna Sophia Lier married in 1768, being a widow, with count Daniel Ditloff von Ranzow". He appears soon after to have married Johanna Elizabeth Cramer (possibly a relative of the aforementioned Robertus Cramer?).

Altogether, he had 22 children, one of whom, Ludvig Carl (born in Mannar, Sri Lanka) had numerous descendants, including the van Ranzows of California. Ludvig Carl's son Ferdinand appears to have served in Java. The Ranzows certainly went forth and multiplied.

The Slavic-sounding Detlev name seems to have been in the family since the early 1600s. Interestingly, the first von Ranzow immigrant to Australia appears to have been another Daniel Detlev von Ranzow (or Daniel Detloff Von Ranzow - born 1821), who had been transported in 1838 from Prince of Wales Island. The Australian National University's Elena Govor thinks he was Russian, from the Alaskan island of that name.

She says that he had
"non-European looks – yellow skin, dark hair and dark chestnut eyes. It is known that he was a literate man and had served as a captain’s mate on a ship, been arrested for an attempt to murder, sentenced for life in Bombay and deported to Australia. In 1841 he was released on parole."

Penang was named 'Prince of Wales Island' by the British, so he could possibly have been from there, rather than from an island of the same name in Alaska or Canada. It sounds like this Daniel Detlev was a mixed-race Burgher, possibly a descendant of the aforementioned Daniel Detlev. In which case, he was probably the first of many thousands of Sri Lankan Dutch Burgher immigrants to Australia.

4 comments:

  1. Hello,
    Daniel Detloff was a son of Carl Ludvig, the son of Daniel Detlev and former governor of Riouw, then residing in Malacca and Liem Akhaniong.
    See the Malakkan newspaper 1836 for an account of a fight between CL, DD and a servant with a Mr de Wind. I have informed Elena Govor.
    He is #6095 in my Rantzau database.
    Greetings, Leo van der Plas, Delft, NL

    ReplyDelete
  2. I see you have more entries from my website at
    http://home.hccnet.nl/v.d.plas

    ReplyDelete
  3. Hello again,
    ACF is probably August Carl Friedrich, born 1760 in Hollzminden, Germany and dead in Colombo, in 1844.
    He is a son of Christoph Ferdinand Anton and Louisa Henriette Brockenburg.
    He married Isabella Cornelia Engelbrecht in Colombo in 1789.
    The two children most likely are:
    Loewisa, born in Colombo in 1791, and
    Carel Ferdinand Theodorus, born in 1794.

    Henrik Matteus is the 12th child of Daniel Detlof and Johanna Elizabeth Cramer.
    He was born in Manaar in 1789 and died in Soerebaia in 1826.
    Greetings, Leo van der Plas

    ReplyDelete
  4. Daniel Detloff was born, "as son and heir", in 1820, in Sumenek, on the island of Maduura
    Greetings, Leo van der Plas

    ReplyDelete