Pieter Nuyts

Pieter Nuyts
Japanese art possibly featuring Pieter Nuyts in Taiwan in 1629
3rd Governor of Formosa
In office
1627–1629
Preceded byGerard Frederikszoon de With
Succeeded byHans Putmans
Personal details
Born1598
Middelburg, Dutch Republic
Died(1655-12-11)11 December 1655
Hulst, Dutch Republic
Spouses
  • Cornelia Jacot
    (m. 16201632)
  • Anna van Driel
    (m. 1640; died 1640)
  • Agnes Granier
    (m. 16491655)
Children
  • Laurens Nuyts (c.1622  1631)
  • Pieter Nuyts (1624–1627)
  • Anna Cornelia Nuyts (b. 1626)
  • Elisabeth Nuyts (b. 1626)
  • Pieter Nuyts (1640  c.1709)
Alma materLeiden University

Pieter Nuyts or Nuijts (1598  11 December 1655) was a Dutch explorer, diplomat and politician.

He was part of a landmark expedition of the Dutch East India Company in 1626–1627 which mapped the southern coast of Australia. He became the Dutch ambassador to Japan in 1627, and was appointed governor of Formosa in the same year. Later he became a controversial figure because of his disastrous handling of official duties, coupled with rumours about private indiscretions. He was disgraced, fined and imprisoned, before being made a scapegoat to ease strained Dutch relations with the Japanese. He returned to the Dutch Republic in 1637, where he became the mayor of Hulster Ambacht and of Hulst.

Nuyts is remembered today chiefly in the place names of various points along the southern Australian coast, named for him after his voyage of 1626–1627. During the early 20th century, he was vilified in Japanese school textbooks in Taiwan as an example of a "typical arrogant western bully".