2. ORIGIN
The Flying Dutchman is a legendary ghost ship that can never make port and is
doomed to sail the oceans forever. The myth is likely to have 17th century nautical
folk lore. Sightings in the 19th and 10th centuries Flying Dutchman will try to send
messages to land or to people long dead.
Many people heard of the superstitions of sailors respecting apparitions and doom
but had never given much credit to the report; it seems that some years since a
Dutch man of war was lost off the Cape of Good Hope, and every soul on board
perished.
in the night people saw or imagined that they saw a vessel standing for them under
a press of sail, as though she would run them down. The story spread like wild fire,
and supposed phantom was called The Flying Dutchman.
3. CONT…
Thomas Moore (1799-1852) in his poem Written on passing Dead-man's island in the.
Gulf of St. Lawrence, Late in the evening, September, 1804 places the vessel in the
north Atlantic:
"Fast gliding along, a gloomy bark
Her sails are full, though the wind is still,
And there blows not a breath her sails to fill."
A footnote adds: " The above lines were suggested by a superstition very common
among sailors, who call this ghost-ship, i think, 'The Flying Dutch-man'."
4. CONT…
It is a common superstition to mariners, that, in the high southern latitudes on the
coast of Africa, hurricanes are frequently ushered in by the appearance of a
specter-ship, denominated the Flying Dutchman ... The crew of this vessel are
supposed to have been guilty of some dreadful crime, in the infancy of navigation;
and to have been stricken with pestilence ... And are ordained still to traverse the
ocean on which they perished, till the period of their penance expire.
5. CONT…
Sir Walter Scott (1771-1832), a friend of John Leyden's, was the first to refer to the
vessel as a pirate sip, writing in the notes Rokeby; a poem (first published
December 1812) that the ship was "originally a vessel loaded with great wealth, on
board of which some horrid act of murder and piracy had been committed" and the
apparition of the ship
"is considered by the mariners as the worst of all possible omens"
6. CONT…
According to some sources the 17th century Dutch captain Bernard Fokke is the
model for the captain of the ghost ship.
Fokke was renowned for the speed of his trips from the Netherlands to Java and
was suspected of being in league with the Devil.
The first version of the legend as a story was printed , in Blackwood’s Edinburgh
Magazine for May 1821, which puts the scene as the cape of Good Hope.
This story introduces the name of Captain Hendrick Vender Decken for the captain
and motifs of letters addressed to people long dead being offered to other ships for
delivery, but if accepted will bring misfortune; and the captain having sworn to round
the Cape of Good Hope thought it should take until the day of judgment.
7. CONT…
• She was an Amsterdam vessel and sailed from port seventy years ago.
• Her master’s name was Vender Decken.
• He was a staunch seamen, and would have his own way in spite of the Devil.
• For all that, never a sailor under him had reason to complain; though how it is on
board with them nobody knows.
8. CONT…
• The story is this: that in doubling the cape they were a long day trying to weather
the Table Bay.
• However, the wind headed them, and went against them more and more, and
Vander Decken walked the deck, swearing at the wind.
• Just after sunset a vessel spoke him, asking him if he did not mean to go into the
bay that night. Vander Decken replied: ‘’ May I be asking him if I do, though I should
beat about here till the day of judgment.
• And to be sure, he never did go into the bay, for it is believed that he continues to
beat about in these seas still, and will do so long enough.
• This vessel is never seen but with foul weather along with her.
10. The myth of The Flying Dutchman is believed
to have occurred in 1641 when a Dutch ship
sank off the cost of the Cape of Good Hope.
The myth of the Flying Dutchman deals
about a ghost ship that could not make a
port, condemned to sail on the ocean
endlessly. It perhaps originates from 17th
century nautical folktale. Sightings in the 19th
and 20th periods report the ship shinning to
be with ghost light. It is said that if hailed by
another ship, its crew will try to send
messages to land or to people long dead.
11. The Flying Dutchman set sail from
Amsterdam in 1860 sailing for Batavia,
which was a port in the Dutch East India
with Captain Hedrick Vander Decken at
the helm. Captain Hedrick Vander
Decken, who set sail in 1860 from
Amsterdam to Batavia, in Dutch East
India, and disappeared in a gale while
circumnavigating the cape. The ship
sunk, sending all the onboard to their
death.
13. • Many people would suggest that the Flying Dutchman is just a legend and folklore,
but here were reliable clams that the Dutchman was sighted and was agreed by
most witnesses. All of these were in the cape of good Hope
• 1823: HMS Leven skipper, Captain Owen logged two sightings in his log.
• 1835: Crew on the British ship saw a sailing ship heading towards them in the
middle of a storm. It appeared there would be a collision, but the ship suddenly no
where to be found.
14. • 1881: Three crew of HMS Bacchant including
king George V, saw the ship. The next day,
one of the men who saw it fell from the rigging
and died
• 1879: the crew of SS Pretoria saw the
apparition of the ghost ship.
• 1911: a whaling ship nearly struck with her
before the ghost ship vanished.
15. CONT…
• 1923: British Navy crew saw the ghost ship and sent documentation to the Society
for Psychical Research, SPR. Fourth Officer Stone wrote the findings of the fifteen
minute sighting on January 26th. Second Officer Bennett, a helmsman and cadet
also witnessed the ship.
• 1939: Another sighting of the Flying Dutchman. Admiral Karl Doenitz of the German
submarine kept the recorded sightings by the U-Boat crews.
• 1941: People at Glen cairn Beach sighted the apparition ship that disappeared
before she collided into rocks.
16. CONT…
• 1941: People at Glen cairn Beach sighted the apparition ship that disappeared
before she collided into rocks.
• 1942: Four observers saw the ghost ship arrive Table Bay, and then disappeared.
Second Officer Davies and Third Officer Montserrat, HMS Jubilee, saw the Flying
Dutchman. Davis recorded it in the ship’s log.
• 1959: The Straat Magelhan ship nearly collided with the ghost ship.
18. THE PHANTOM OCEAN
• The news spread through the vessel that a phantom-ship with a ghostly crew was
sailing in the air over phantom-ocean.
• That was a bad omen. That meant none of them could ever see land again.
• The captain was told a wonderful tale, and came on deck.
• He explained to the sailors that this strange appearance was caused by the
reflection of some ship that was sailing on the water below this image.
• But at such a distance they could not see it.
19. • There are conditions of the atmosphere, he said, when the suns rays could form a perfect
picture in the air of objects on earth, like the images one sees in the glass or water
• But they are not generally upright, as in the case of this ship, but reversed ( turned upside
down).
• This appearance in the air is called mirage.
• He told his sailors to go up to the foretop and look beyond the phantom-ship.
• The men obeyed, and reported that he could see something on the water, below the ship in
the air, one precisely like it.
• Just then another ship was seen in the air. It was a steamship, and it the captain said it was
mirage………..
• The sailors were now convinced, and never afterwards believed in phantom-ships.
20. EXTRA FACTS
• Another optical effect, known as looming occurs when rays of light are bent across
different refractive indices. This could make the ship look like it is just off the horizon
appearing to be hoisted in the air.
22. There is a 20-foot one-design high-performance two-
person monohull racing dinghy names the Flying-
Dutchman (FD). It made its Olympic debut at the
1960 Olympics Games and is still one of the fastest
racing dinghies in the world.
23. In artworks and design
The Flying Dutchman has been captures in paintings by albert Ryder, now in
the Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington D.C and by Howard Pyle,
and artist famous for illustrations of pirates.
Dutch artist Joyce Overhaul also adapted the name of The Flying Dutchman
onto her crochet pattern designs, resembling the similarity of her designs
‘roaming’ the world just the ghost ship once did.
Flying Dutchman Tobacco was a popular blend for pipes and smocking. Many
of their tins are still collected by those who appreciate packaging art and
design.
24. The video games
The Flying Dutchman is a cheat until in the original Age of Empires computer game. It
is a ship that can travel on both land and sea.
In the year 1993 multiplatform game Alone in the Dark 2, fictional detective Edward
Carnby investigates a missing girl who he discovers has been kidnapped by undead
One-Eyed Jack who, in the game, is captain of the undead crew of The Flying
Dutchman.
25. In amusement park
The Eftleing amusement park in the Netherlands has a roller
coaster called The Flying Dutchman which features a character
named Willem Van Der Decken.
Worlds of Fun amusement park in Kansas City, Missouri boat ride
called The Flying Dutchman.
26. TV SERIES AND MANGA
• The Flying Dutchman is a recurring character on popular Nicklodeon cartoon series
Spongebob Squarepants , although he is a drawn character
• Resembling a famous pirate , Edward Teach , best known as Blackbeard. He is
often in episodes that deal with repentance of wrong doing and moral judgment.
• Carl Barks wrote and drew a 1959 comic book story where Uncle scrooge ,
Donal Dick and Huey , Dewey , and Lounie meet the Flying Dutchman .
• In Eiichiro Oda’s magma One Piece Vander Decken is the Flying Dutchman
’captain.
• In Soul Eater , the Flying Dutchman is the soul of the ghost ship.
• In the Spider man cartoon episode “Return Of The Flying Dutchman” the is
used by Spider Man’s enemy.
27. CONT…
• In a 1976 episode of land of the lost ,the Marshalls discover the captain of a
mysterious ship that appears in “the mist”. Later in the episode it is discovered that
the ship is the Flying Dutchman.
28. At the tail end of the prior episode two
Rod Serling advertises “The Arrival” as a
retelling of the Flying Dutch tale. Now in
sponge bob square pants there is the
Flying Dutch man.
29. IN FILMS
• The story was dramatized in the year 1951
film “Pandora and Flying Dutchman”.
• Staring James, Mason and Ava gardener, in
this vision, flying Dutchman is a man, not a
ship.
• The 2 hours long film, scripted by its director
Albert Lewis, sets the main on the
Mediterranean cost of Spain during the
summer of 1930.
• Centuries earlier the Dutchman had killed its
wife.
30. IN LITERATURE
• From 1797 to 1798 poem by Samuel Taylor Coleridge , The rime of the ancient
mariner , contained a similar account of a ghosts ship , which may have been
influenced by the tale of flying Dutchman. One of the first Flying Dutchman short
stories was titled Vander Decken’s Message Home and was published in Blackwood
in 1821.
• The story was adapted in English melodrama The Flying Dutchman or The
Phantom Ship. Later adapted HET VIIEGEND SCHIP.
31. IN AVIATION
• KLM Royal Dutchman Airlines references the endless traveling aspect of the
famous story by having painted flying Dutchman painted on it.
32. IN EDUCATION
• The nickname of Lebanon Valley College is Flying Dutchman.
• Another adaptation was The Flying Dutchman on the Tappan Sea by Washington
Irving (1855), in which the captain is named Ramhout Van Dam. Irving had already
used the story (based on Moore’s) in his Brace Bridge Hall (1822). Hedvig Ekdal
visions of the Flying Dutchman from the books she reads in the Henrik Ibsen’s “ The
Wild Duck ” (1884).
• John Boyle O’ Reilly’s The Flying Dutchman was first published in The Wild Goose,
a handwritten newspaper produced by Fenian convicts being transported Western
in 1867.
33. CONT…
• Another adaptation was The Flying Dutchman on the Tappan Sea by Washington
Irving (1855), in which the captain is named Ramhout Van Dam. Irving had already
used the story (based on Moore’s) in his Brace Bridge Hall (1822). Hedvig Ekdal
visions of the Flying Dutchman from the books she reads in the Henrik Ibsen’s “ The
Wild Duck ” (1884).
34. CONT…
• British author Jacques wrote a trilogy of fantasy/ young adult novels concerning two reluctant
members of the Dutchman’s crew, a young boy and his dog, who were wept off the ship by a
wave on the night the ship was cursed.
• The same angel who were pronounced the curse on the ship and crew to them and
blessed them, charging them to help them in need.
• The first novel was titled Catsaways of the Flying Dutchman and was published by
Jacques at Puffin Books in 2001.
• The second book was named the Angel’s command and was published in 2006
,and the third book “ The Journey of the Slaves” was published in 2011.
35. IN OPERA
• Richard Wagner’s opera. The Flying Dutchman (1843) is adapted from an episode in
Heinrich Heine’s satirical novel the memoires of mister Scnabelewopski (aus den Memoiren
des Herrn von scnabelewepski) (1833),in which a character attends a theatrical
performance of the Flying Dutchman in Amsterdam. Heine had first briefly used the legend
in his Reisbeilder: Die Nordsee (pictures of Travel: the North Sea)(1826) which simply
repeats from blackwood’s.
• Magazine the features of the vessel being seen in the storm and sending letters addressed
to persons long since dead. In his 1833 elabaraton, it was once thought that it may have
been based.
36. CONT…
• On Fitzball play, which was playing, which was playing at the Adelphi theatre
in London, but the run had ended on 7 April 1827 the Heine did not arrive in
London until the 14th. Aeine was the first author to introduce the chance of
salvation through a woman's devotion and the opportunity to set foot on land
every seven years to seek a faithful wife. This imaginary play, unlike Fitzball’s
play, which had acape of good hope location, in Heines’s account is
transferred to the north sea off Scotland. Although during the final rehearsals
he transferred the action to another part of the North sea, off Norway.
37. CONT…
• The opera’s overture would later became the signature theme for captain video and
his video rangers .
• One of television’s earliest children’s pot boiler series.
• Berlioz though Le Vaisseau Fantome too solemn, but other reviewers were in more
favourable
• Amiri Baraka wrote the play ‘’Dutchmen’’ in 1964.
• The plays abstract nature makes it difficult to draw a direct correlation between it
and the myth, but its emphasis on fate and doom recasts themes of the legend in
terms of race relations in the contemporary united states.
38. IN MUSIC
• In 1949 RCA Victor ,investors released as one of their first 45s a recording of the legend in
song in bandleader Hugo Winterhalter’s
“The Flying Dutchman”
• Jethro Tull refer to the flying dutchman on their 1979 album stormwatch.
• Jimmy Buffett refers to the Flying Dutchman in his 1995 song “Remittance Man” on the
album Barometer Soup.
• Rufus Wainwright refers to the Flying Dutchman in his song “Flying Dutchman” on the album
Poses.
• Carach Angren wrote a concept album about the Flying Dutchman entitled Death Came
Through a Phantom Ship.
39. CONT…
• In the 1969 classic self-titled album by the Band,the Flying Dutchman was referenced in the
song “Rocking Chair”.
• Iron Maiden a Heavy Metal band produced a song titled,Rime of The Ancient Mariner” Which
is loosely based on the poem of the same name,and is in reference to the,Flying Dutchman”
tale.
• God Dethroned ,a Dutch death metal band,featured the song Soul Capture 1562 about the
Flying Dutchman on their album Bloody Blasphemy.