Zwaanendael

E169566

Zwaanendael was a short-lived 17th-century Dutch colonial settlement established in what is now Lewes, Delaware.

All labels observed (2)

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (37)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Dutch colonial settlement
former colony
causeOfDestruction attack by Indigenous inhabitants
conflictWith local Indigenous peoples
coordinateApprox Lewes, Delaware area
country Dutch Republic
dissolved 1632
duration short-lived
followedBy later Dutch and English settlements in the Delaware region
foundedBy Dutch West India Company
patroon Samuel Blommaert
patroon Samuel Godyn
foundingPurpose colonization
seal hunting
trade
whaling
hasHistoricalPeriod 17th century
heritageSite commemorated by the Zwaanendael Museum in Lewes, Delaware
inception 1631
language Dutch
legacy considered the first permanent European settlement site in Delaware, though the colony itself failed
locatedIn Delaware Colony
North America
present-day Lewes, Delaware
territory then known as New Netherland
locatedOn Atlantic coast of North America
namedAfter Zwaanendael self-linksurface differs
surface form: Swan Valley (Zwaanendael) in the Netherlands
onBay Delaware Bay
onRiver near the mouth of the Delaware River
partOf Dutch colonial expansion in the 17th century
population about 28 colonists at founding
precededBy early Dutch exploration of the Delaware Bay
primaryEconomicActivity agriculture
fur trade
whaling
religion Dutch Reformed
result massacre of most colonists

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (3)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Lewes, Delaware foundedAs Zwaanendael
Lewes foundedAs Zwaanendael
subject surface form: Lewes, Delaware
Zwaanendael namedAfter Zwaanendael self-linksurface differs
this entity surface form: Swan Valley (Zwaanendael) in the Netherlands