Jeremias van Riemsdijk


Jeremias van Riemsdijk was a Dutch colonial administrator who served as Governor-General of the Dutch East Indies from 1775 to 1777.
Jeremias van Riemsdijk was born on 18 October 1712 in Utrecht, the son to Scipio van Riemsdijk, the minister of Bunnik near Houten, and Johanna Bogaert. He entered service with the Dutch East India Company as a sergeant left for the Indies, aboard the van de Proostwijk, on 25 February 1735. Very shortly after his arrival in Batavia/Jakarta on 14 September 1735, he entered the civil service. Jeremias was the nephew of the future Governor-General Adriaan Valckenier, who at the time was still a member of the. H could therefore expect to make rapid progress in his career.
In 1736 he became onderkoopman, in 1738 koopman, in 1740 tweede opperkoopman and in 1742 eerste opperkoopman in the castle headquarters at Batavia/Jakarta. In 1743 he became the chief of the company of clerical/writing staff and in October Jeremias van Riemsdijk was named Counsellor-extraordinary to the Council of the Indies. In 1759 he was appointed President of the College van Weesmeesters. On 15 October 1760 he was named ordinary Counsellor and on 17 August 1764 Director-General.
On 28 December 1775, following the death of Petrus Albertus van der Parra, Van Riemsdijk was chosen as Governor-General. He had had at the time five marriages, to leading Eurasian ladies. He had learned a lot from the eleven years he had worked with his predecessor, whose great appetite for money he had acquired. During his term in office, there was a shortage of ships and ship personnel. This problem was solved with help from the homeland. However, shortly after his governorship had begun, Jeremias van Riemsdijk died in Batavia/Jakarta. He was followed as Governor-General by Reynier de Klerck