Skipper Jan Rebeck
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sea song
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Transcription: by Darryl D. Bush
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Lyrics:
Now who is the king of the Fighting Dutch?
Skipper Jan Rebeck!
And who do the sailors fear so much?
Skipper Jan Rebeck!
Chorus:
And it's Ja, Ja, leave your hammock
Ja, Ja, hands on deck
Ja, Ja, break your back
For skipper Jan Rebeck
Now, who can furl the main topsail
All by himself in a living gale?
Who brought all the tea from China,
And sold it all in Carolina?
And when he got a ship of his own,
T'was brute force kept him on the throne.
And who can drink his weight in beer?
And who takes two baths every year?
Who sleeps with four girls every night?
One black, one yellow, one red, one white.
Who is the king of the Fighting Dutch?
Who do the sailors fear so much?
The chanty does not appear in Hugill, and may not have even
existed when 'Shanties From The Seven Seas' was first
published in 1961: Bob Walser's sleevenotes for his album
'Landlocked', state: "According to Ian Woods, the late
Angus Russell was the source of Skipper Jan Rebek. If Angus
wrote the song, as some people think likely, I think he
would have been pleased to have folk think it was traditional."
Jan van Riebeeck was born in 1619 in the Netherlands.
He joined the Dutch East India Company as assistant surgeon
and was posted to Batavia, the present-day Jakarta.
After service in Japan, he was put in charge of the trading
post in the Tonkin region of Vietnam, but was recalled to
Holland when it was discovered that he had been doing some
trading on his own account (perhaps selling tea in Carolina?).
He eventually regained favour, and landed with three ships
to set up a staging post, at what is now Cape Town to enable
ships bound for the Indies to take on supplies of fresh food
and water. Up till then scurvy had been a huge problem on
long voyages with death rates of 40%, but it was known that
recovery was quick once on shore. Wine was also known to be
better than water for preventing scurvy, so he imported vines
from Europe, with the first pressing in autumn 1659.
After 10 years as Commander of the Cape, he continued his career
further east, being promoted to Secretary to the Governor-General
of the Dutch East Indies . His wife, who bore him eight sons,
died in Malacca in 1664 en route to this new post, but he
lived a further 13 years, dying in Batavia in 1677, at the
age of 57 without returning to the Netherlands. His son,
Abraham van Riebeeck, was born at the Cape and later attained the
rank of Governor-General of the Dutch East Indies.
Jan van Riebeeck's significance in South Africa remains huge, with
many Afrikaaners regarding him as the founding father of
their nation. Up to the mid-1990s, his image appeared on bank
notes and postage stamps, while April 6th was a public holiday,
known intially as Van Riebeeck's Day, and recently as Founders' Day.
Many towns have streets named after him, and there is a statue of
him and his wife in Cape Town. The city's coat of arms is based on
that of the Van Riebeeck family.
I learned this from The Hardtackers.
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