- Hendrik Gravé
Infobox Military Person
name=Hendrik Gravé
lived=1670–1749
caption=Engraving of Hendrik Gravé
nickname=
placeofbirth=Amsterdam
placeofdeath=Amsterdam
allegiance=Dutch Republic
branch=Navy
serviceyears=1688–1749
rank=Lieutenant Admiral
unit=
commands=
battles=
awards=
relations=
laterwork=Hendrik Gravé (Amsterdam, 5 December 1670- Amsterdam, 25 March 1749) was a Dutch admiral.
Life
On his eighteenth birthday, Gravé entered the service of the
Admiralty of Amsterdam , in 1691 becoming luitenant-ter-zee. In 1698, he became buitengewoon kapitein (captain-extraordinary). He married Lucia van Mollem in 1704 in the Waldensian church in Utrecht, and they had one son, Hendrik (1709-1738), and one daughter, Jacoba.In 1713, Hendrik became a full captain. In 1716, Gravé led a convoy to the
Baltic Sea and in 1717 becamecommandeur with the Admiralty. In 1718 he became the owner of the fine Nieuwe Herengracht 99, well known for art connoisseurs due to the five gigantic hunting still lifes byJan Weenix . By 1721 Hendrik Gravé had moved toKloveniersburgwal 95. In 1722, Hendrik Gravé becameschout-bij-nacht and was the following year put in command of a Dutch expedition against the Algerian pirates. [Aa, A.J. van der (1852-1878) "Biografisch Woordenboek der Nederlanden, bevattende levensbeschrijvingen"]Due to a problem with his foot (called podagra, possibly meaning
gout ), Gravé had himself tied onto his chair when there were storms. Gravé … :"delighted in the company of everybody, even of English colleagues, in wide-ranging talks and fencing language, sat gaming for days in succession in coffee houses inPortsmouth , afterwards falling into post-prandial sleep by the hearth. To the Lords of the Admiralty in London he wrote high-flown letters, laden with Latin quotations. Gravé once entertained them with an exposition in Latin on the origin of his family with theNorth Brabant ish Gravés." [Bruyn, J.R. (1970) "De Admiraliteit van Amsterdam in rustiger jaren 1713-1751 — Regenten en financiën, schepen en zeevarenden"]In 1742, he possessed four servants, a carriage, two horses and an income of 7,000 guilder a year. ["Kohier Personeele Quotisatie, wijk 14, nr 3930"] On 8 May 1744, at 73, he was made
lieutenant-admiral of theAdmiralty of the Noorderkwartier , jumping a rank as he never had been avice admiral . Other officers protested at his appointment. After years of illness, he died at 78 and his funeral, as described by Braatbard, was an event of the first order, with the procession lasting three and a half hours. ["De Zeven Provincien in Beroering. Hoofdstukken uit een Jiddische kroniek over de jaren 1740-1752 van Abraham Chaim Braatbard". J.M. Meulenhoff (1960).]References
External links
* [http://www.bma.amsterdam.nl/adam/nl/huizen/kloof95.html BMA on Kloveniersburgwal 95]
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