Gustaaf Willem, baron van Imhoff (born Aug. 8, 1705, Leer, Neth.—died Nov. 1, 1750, Batavia, Dutch East Indies [now Jakarta, Indonesia]) was the governor-general of the Dutch East Indies (1743–50), a reformer who tried in vain to restore the decaying Dutch East India Company to prosperity.
Son of a Dutch nobleman, van Imhoff went to the Indies in 1725 as a servant of the company. By 1732 he was a member of the chiefly advisory Council of the Indies and in 1736 became governor of Ceylon. Because of his opposition to the ruthless repression of a Chinese uprising, he was sent back (1740) to Holland, where the company’s directors took his part, however, and made him governor-general of the Indies.
Van Imhoff’s plan for reform was set forth in his tract “Considerations on the Present State of the Dutch East India Company.” To encourage the development of the company as a territorial power, he wanted to confine its activities to the eastern part of the archipelago and to settle Dutchmen in colonies to raise crops and to trade. He eased the restrictions on free trade with Asia but not enough to make it profitable.
In his dealings with Indonesians van Imhoff was tactless. He intervened in a quarrel between the ruler of the Mataram kingdom of Java and his brother, thus touching off the Third Javanese War of Succession (1749–57), which left Mataram split into two kingdoms. In Bantam, another kingdom of Java, van Imhoff lent his support to the unpopular faction of a dynastic dispute, bringing on a popular uprising. The rebels were seeking English help when van Imhoff died, leaving his successor to solve the problem.