- Joan Huydecoper II
Joan Huydecoper van Maarsseveen II (21 February 1625 - 1 December 1704) was the eldest son of
burgomaster Joan Huydecoper van Maarsseveen I and the brother-in-law of the collectorJan J. Hinlopen and the sheriffJacob Boreel . He wasmayor of Amsterdam for 13 terms between 1673 and 1693. Unlike most mayors, he did not live at the Golden Bend, but on Lauriergracht in theJordaan , whereGovaert Flinck ,Johannes Lingelbach ,Jurriaen Ovens , who painted his portrait, the art-dealerGerrit van Uylenburgh enMelchior de Hondecoeter also lived.When Huydecoper left on the
Grand Tour in 1648 his father wanted to keep a firm grip on his 23-year-old son. He required him to be more studious, more thrifty, and demanded a complete list of names of the people with whom he associated. His father encouraged him to be thrifty and cut back on expenses. [Roberts, B. (1998) Through the keyhole. Dutch child-rearing practices in the 17th and 18th century. Three urban elite families, p. 133.] In 1655 he went with his father on a diplomatic mission to thePrince-elector Frederick William of Brandenburg . Back home Johan married his first cousin, Sophia Coymans which tied another knot to that wealthy banker family. [Roberts, B. (1998) Through the keyhole. Dutch child-rearing practices in the 17th and 18th century. Three urban elite families, p. 52.] In 1660 he was invited twice by the Princess Royale for dinner; in September he went toScheveningen to see her leaving. In 1660Amalia of Solms-Braunfels and her daughters paid him a visit.For years Huydecoper kept a diary, writing about his life, mentioning smoking his pipe, visiting his favourite tavern, the visitors and the many presents, the upbringing of the children, but also intimate details of his prurience, the quarrels and clashes with the family and in-laws.
In 1666, he became an administrator of the
Dutch East India Company . During the Year of Disaster in 1672 when the office of stadholder was re-inststed by the 21-year-oldWilliam III of Orange , Johan Huydecoper had the political tides on his side. He was aligned by marriage with the politically influentialGillis Valckenier , who jumped on the Orangist bandwagon in the summer of 1672. [Roberts, B. (1998) Through the keyhole. Dutch child-rearing practices in the 17th and 18th century. Three urban elite families, p. 53.] The year after he was appointed for the first time as aburgomaster . Huydecoper had himself painted byJurriaen Ovens . Already in 1675 he had an argument with thestadholder . In December 1676 he skated fromMaarssen toBaambrugge and back. In 1679 he refused to ever visit his mother-in-law again for dinner on Sundays. He did visitAntonie van Leeuwenhoek in Delft, and looked through his microscope at "tiny creatures".Jacob Boreel , his brother-in-law and the ambassador in Paris, was visited by two of his children. [RAU 67, Fa Huijdecoper nr. 58 & 59.]Being an amateur botanist himself, he kept
melon s at his countryhouse in Maarssen along the riverVecht . He received many plants, animals and birds fromCape of Good Hope ,Mauritius ,Madagascar ,Ceylon ,Ternate andJava , e.g.parakeet s,parrot s,flying lizard s andchameleon s. [Smit, P & A.P.M. Sanders & J.P.F. van der Veen (1986) Hendrik Engel's Alphabetical List of Dutch Zoological Canbinets and Menageries, p. 132-133.] In 1681 he became a Councillor in theAdmiralty of Amsterdam . In 1682 Joan Huydecoper andJan Commelin took the initiative in establishing a new Hortus Medicus in Amsterdam. It differed from the herb garden at the Binnengasthuis insofar as it also grew ornamental plants and would function as a Hortus Botanicus. In 1689, the year after theInvitation to William Huydecoper refused to send recommendations for new appointments in thevroedschap to the stadholder and in between King of England. In 1690 he,Nicolaes Witsen and his brother-in-lawJacob Boreel were involved in a case withRomeyn de Hooghe , accused of espionage, incest, sodomy and selling pornographic engravings.On January 16, 1697 he and his nephew
Jacob J. Hinlopen spent one evening withPeter the Great , who was more than 2,08 m tall. The czar was about to leave for England. When two huge glasses were filled, Huydecoper decided to leave, but was caught and brought back to the table. Huydecoper feared for his life, sitting between the czar andFranz Lefort .ources
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