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18th-century French territorial claim From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
French Western Australia (French: Australie-Occidentale française) was a French territorial claim in modern-day Western Australia. It was made at Dirk Hartog Island by an expedition under French explorer Louis Aleno de St Aloüarn in 1772.
On 28 March 1772, the French navigator Louis Aleno de St Aloüarn landed on Dirk Hartog Island "and became the first European to claim possession of Western Australia".[1] The actual claim for French Western Australia on behalf of King Louis XV was made at Baie de Prise de Possession (literally, 'Bay of taking Possession'; later Turtle Bay), Dirk Hartog Island on 30 March 1772 by officer Jean Mengaud de la Hage while Louis Aleno de St Aloüarn remained aboard the ship.[2]: 9 [3] Members of Mengaud's ceremonial team raised the royal flag on the island and buried a bottle containing a document stating what had occurred, alongside two silver écu coins, worth six Livres tournois (Francs).[3] This occurred in sight of Cape Inscription, where in 1696 the Dutch mariner Willem de Vlamingh had also left a commemorative plate recording his visit and that of Dirk Hartog in 1616.[4]
An 18th century bottle was recorded, containing an annexation document and a coin.[citation needed] In 1998, a lead bottle cap with a shield coin set into it was discovered at Turtle Bay by a team led by Philippe Godard and Max Cramer.[citation needed] This triggered a wider search by a team from the Western Australian Museum led by Myra Stanbury, with Bob Sheppard, Bob Creasy and Michael McCarthy.[citation needed] On 1 April 1998, an intact bottle bearing a lead cap identical to the one found earlier, also with an écu coin in it, was unearthed. This led to a ceremony on 30 March 1999, during which several bottles were buried on the island.[citation needed]
About 260 places in Western Australia bear French names today;[5] examples by alphabetical order:
Moreover, Western Australian historian and university researcher Noelene Bloomfield explains, in her book Almost a French Australia, that most of the so-called Dutch-sounding names in Western Australia were in fact given by French explorers.[6][7]
Zoologist Danielle Clode wrote in her documentary French Voyages of Discovery to Australia:[8][9]
More interested in science than in new colonies, these early French voyages, led by commanders like Bougainville, Lapérouse, D’Entrecasteaux, Baudin, Freycinet, Duperrey and Dumont d’Urville, were the first to name, describe and beautifully illustrate many Australian species. They took specimens back to French museums where they provided an important foundation for Australian biology and conservation, particularly in botany and marine biology. England may have colonised Australia, but for many years it was France that understood it best.
Several exhibitions were organised around French Western Australia:
About the 2018–2019 Western Australian Museum exhibition, Diana Jones (its executive director of collections and research) declared:[13]
Whatever the motives, the expedition returned with more than 18,000 specimens of flora, fauna and other objects — 10 times that of British explorer James Cook, during his famous second journey to Australia. [...] Of the animals, there were 3,500 species new to science and there was something like 460 plant specimens new to science. [...] That doubled the number of known specimens in the world at the time.
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