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Leendert Hasenbosch : ウィキペディア英語版 | Leendert Hasenbosch
Leendert Hasenbosch, (c.1695–probably end of 1725) was a Dutch employee of the Dutch East India Company (VOC) who was set ashore as a castaway on uninhabited Ascension Island in the South Atlantic Ocean, as a punishment for sodomy. He wrote a diary until his death. == Early life ==
Leendert Hasenbosch was likely born in The Hague, Holland in 1695.〔for details about the identity and biography see Alex Ritsema, ''A Dutch Castaway on Ascension Island in 1725'' (2010), pp.31-45 and Michiel Koolbergen, ''Een Hollandse Robinson Crusoë'' (2002), pp.67-87.〕 Around the year 1709 his father, a widower, moved himself and his three daughters to Batavia in the Dutch East Indies (''Modern Indonesia'') while Leendert stayed in Holland. On 17 January 1714,〔(VOC - Sea-voyagers Records Netherlands National Archives )〕 Hasenbosch became a soldier of the Dutch East India Company, (''Vereenigde Oost-Indische Compagnie, henceforth VOC'') and boarded the flute-ship "Korssloot" in Enkhuizen bound for Batavia where he served for about a year. From 1715 to 1720 he served in Cochin, a Dutch possession at the time. In 1720 he returned to Batavia and was promoted to corporal. He later became a military writer, responsible for small-scale bookkeeping. In 1724, he took a position aboard a ''VOC'' ship as the ship's bookkeeper. On 17 April 1725, Hasenboch was convicted of sodomy following the ship's compulsory stop in Cape Town. On 5 May 1725, he was set ashore on Ascension Island as punishment.
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