Jacob de Graeff

Jacob de Graeff (28 June 1642 in Amsterdam – 21 April 1690) was a member of the De Graeff-family from the Dutch Golden Age. He was an Amsterdam Regent and held the titles as 20.th Lord of the Free and high Fief Ilpendam and Purmerland. Jacob de Graeff was a member of a family of regents who belonged to the republican political movement also referred to as the ‘state oriented’, as opposed to the Royalists.[1]

Jacob de Graeff, painted by Gerard Ter Borch (between 1670 and 1675 (1670–1681)
Jacob de Graeff laid the foundation stone for the new city hall on the Dam in 1648, painted by Barend Wijnveld Jr. (19th century)

Biography

Jacob was the son of Cornelis de Graeff and Catharina Hooft, and the younger brother of Pieter de Graeff. In 1648 Jacob laid the foundation stone for the new city hall on the Dam. Joost van den Vondel wrote a poem to Jacobs Foundation stone. During the summers the family spent a lot of their time at the Palace Soestdijk, and he and his brother played with the young William III of Orange – who later became King of England, Scotland and Ireland and stadtholder of the United Provinces of the Netherlands – at the lake and woods at Soestdijk. After he finished his studies at the University of Harderwijk he returned to Amsterdam. In 1666 he married to Maria van der Does. Maria died 3 months later and they had no children.

In 1672 Jacob became a member of the Government of the City of Amsterdam. He was a political advisor to his cousin Johan De Witt. In the rampjaar 1672, after the death of the brothers De Witt and the raise of the House of Orange, the republican-minded faction of the De Graeff family included Jacob and Pieter, their uncle Andries de Graeff and their nephew Lambert Reynst, lost their political positions. In 1674 Jacob sold the hunting lodge and its surrounding fields, now the Soestdijk Palace, for only 18,755 Guilder to William III, and became one of the princes captains in the battle at Reibach near Bonn. In the same year Jacob owned 260.000 Guilder. About that he was one of the richest persons from the Dutch Golden Age.

Jacob was like his father Cornelis a man who surrounded himself with art and beauty. He was an art collector and patron to some famous artists. Jacob was painted by Gerard Ter Borch, Jacob Isaakszoon van Ruisdael, Thomas de Keyser, Karel Dujardin and Jan Victors and sing by the poet Joost van den Vondel. Jacob owned the castle Ilpenstein. He died 1690; his tomb chapel is to be found in the Oude Kerk at Amsterdam.

Notes

  1. "Triumpf of Peace". Archived from the original on 2012-03-01. Retrieved 2011-03-13.

Literature

  • Elias, Johan E. (1903–1905) De vroedschap van Amsterdam, 1578–1795, Haarlem (herdruk 1963, uitgeverij Israël, Amsterdam)
  • Zandvliet, Kees (2006) De 250 rijksten van de Gouden Eeuw: kapitaal, macht, familie en levensstijl, p. 97, uitgeverij Nieuw Amsterdam, Amsterdam, ISBN 90-8689-006-7
  • Moelker, H.P. (1978) De heerlijkheid Purmerland en Ilpendam, p. 158–166, uitgeverij Nooy, Purmerend (2e druk)
  • Graeff, P. DE (P. Gerritsz de Graeff en Dirk de Graeff van Polsbroek) Genealogie van de familie De Graeff van Polsbroek, Amsterdam 1882
  • Bruijn, J. H. DE Genealogie van het geslacht De Graeff van Polsbroek 1529/1827
Jacob de Graeff
Born: 28 June 1642  Died: 21 April 1690
Preceded by
Maria Overlander van Purmerland
18th Lord of the Free and high Fief of Purmerland and Ilpendam (together with his mother Catharina Hooft)
1678–1690
Succeeded by
Catharina Hooft (1690) and Pieter de Graeff
gollark: ```pythonimport syswith open(sys.argv[0]) as f: code = f.read()b = "`" * 3print(f"""++exec {b}python\n{code}\n{b}""")```
gollark: I forgot to make it not respond to itself when I made it respond to bots.
gollark: I made autobotrobot loop with itself by accident.
gollark: I just need to figure out a way to make DDG somehow print a code block.
gollark: ```pythonimport syswith open(sys.argv[0]) as f: code = f.read()b = "`" * 3print(f"""++exec {b}python\nprint("ddg! test")\n{b}""")```
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.