Adriaen Cornelissen van der Donck (c. 1618 – c. 1655) was a
lawyer and
landowner in
New Netherland after whose
honorific Jonkheer the city of
Yonkers, New York is named. In addition to being the first lawyer in the Dutch colony, he was a leader in the political life of
New Amsterdam (modern
New York City), and an activist for Dutch-style
republican government in the
Dutch West India Company-run trading post.
Enchanted by his new homeland of New Netherland, Van der Donck made detailed accounts of the land, vegetation, animals, waterways, topography, and climate. Van der Donck used this knowledge to actively promote immigration to the colony, publishing several tracts, including his influential
Description of New Netherland. Charles Gehring, Director of the
New Netherland Project, has called it "the fullest account of the province, its geography, the Indians who inhabited it, and its prospects...It has been said that had it not been written in
Dutch, it would have gone down as one of the great works of
American colonial literature."
Van der Donck is a central figure in
Russell Shorto's
The Island at the Center of the World, which argues, based on newly translated records from the colony, that he is a great early American patriot, forgotten by history because of the eventual English conquest of New Netherland.
Today, he is also recognized as a sympathetic early
Native American ethnographer, having learned the languages and observed many of the customs of the
Mahicans and
Mohawks. His descriptions of their practices are cited in many modern works, such as the 2005 book
1491: New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus.
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