Trip (noble and patrician family)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jacob Trip (1575–1661), painted by Rembrandt van Rijn , National Gallery , London , ca.1661
Portrait of Margaretha de Geer, painted by Rembrandt van Rijn, National Gallery, London, circa 1661
Alijdt Adriaensdr, Elias Trip's second wife, painted by Rembrandt van Rijn
Portrait of Sophia Trip (1614–1679), wife of Johannes Coymans (1591–1657), painted by Bartholomeus van der Helst (1645)
Maria Trip (1619–1683), painted by Rembrandt van Rijn

Trip is the family name of a family of Dutch merchants, regents and administrators from the Golden Age and the following 18th century .

history

The origins of the family are in Zaltbommel in the 15th century. The foundation of the Trip family's financial wealth was created by the brothers Elias (1570–1636) and Jacob Trip (1575–1661) with the trade in cannons (they also took over iron foundries in Sweden ) and ammunition . During the Eighty Years' War , Trip also sold weapons to Spain , the enemy of the Netherlands. This financial and social rise also brought her to the government in her hometown of Amsterdam, as well as to the then highest regent circles of the De Graeff and the Bicker family . From the second half of the 17th and during the 18th century, various family members took part in the city ​​government of Amsterdam . The family's motto was: Ex bello pax ( From the war of peace ).

In 1815 (1817) the Trip family was introduced to the new Dutch nobility with the title Jonkheer . The gender still exists today in numerous branches.

Trippenhuis

The brothers Louis (1605–1684) and Hendrick Trip (1607–1666) had Justus Vingboons (1620 / 21–1698), the younger brother of Philips Vingboons , build a large house for their families in Amsterdam , the Trippenhuis . The construction costs at that time of around 2.6 million guilders corresponded to 700 times the annual income of a bricklayer in the 17th century, which was viewed by strict Calvinists as a blasphemous extravagance.

In the 19th century, this building temporarily housed the Rijksmuseum . The impressive house at Kloveniersburgwal 29 in Amsterdam has been home to the Royal Dutch Academy of Sciences KNAW since 1812 . The Trippenhuis is in the top 100 Dutch cultural monuments .

Tribe list

  • Elias Trip (1570–1636), married to Maria de Geer and in 1611 to Alijdt Adriaensdr; he traded in West African countries for over twenty years
    • Sophia Trip (1614–1679), married to Johannes Coymans (1591–1657)
    • Maria Trip (1619–1683), married to Balthasar Coymans (1589–1657) and to Pieter Ruysch
    • Adriaan Trip (1620–1684), married Adriana de Geer
      • Louis Trip (1654–1698), husband of Johanna Margaretha de Geer (1648–1680)
      • Joseph trip (1656-1716), married to Elisabeth Beerta Gockinga (1657-1711), appeared as a founder of a family branch in Groningen in appearance
    • Jacomina Trip (1622–1678), was married to Joseph Coymans
    • Jacobus Trip (1627–1670), lawyer, husband of Elisabeth Bicker and Margaretha Munter (1639–1711)
      • Jan Trip van Berckenrode (1664–1732), married in 1690 to Margaretha Cesilia Nijs, and in 1713 to Elisabeth Thiellens, Mrs. van Berkenrode ; Trip was mayor of Amsterdam for 13 years , wind lifter of the Dutch East India Company (VOC) and director of the Suriname law firm
        • Jan Trip de Jonge (the boy) (1691–1722), married Petronella van Hoorn in 1715
        • Jacobus Trip (1695–1729), married to Elisabeth Thielens and then to Agatha Maria Pancras
          • Jan Corver Trip (1720–1739), his aunt Sara Maria Trip (1693–1721) was married to Jan Corver (1688–1719)
      • Lucas Trip (October 21, 1666– November 15, 1734), was married to Elisabeth Calkoen and the owner of the long house Meervliet near Velsen . In 1720, 1732 and 1734 Trip was mayor of Amsterdam
        • Dirck Trip (1691–1748), Lord von Groet since 1730, Mayor of Amsterdam for the years 1735, 1742, 1748 and 1742, councilor of the Admiralty of Amsterdam at the consultation of his father-in-law Lieve Geelvinck , was married to Christina Eijgels Agatha Levina Geelvinck , Trip was valid as the richest Amsterdam citizen and owned the country house Waterland
        • Cornelis Trip (1695–1753), the landlord of Goudriaan and Langerak, was married to Maria le Seutre, he was a mayor of Amsterdam and between 1733 and 1748 director of the Suriname Society; he lived in the town houses at Herengracht 52, 54, 56 and 97, Keizersgracht 71, 73 and 127; in 1748 he was a member of the Amsterdam vroedschap
          • Lucas Cornelisz Trip (1720–1752), married Jacoba Margaretha van Hoven; was Schepen from Amsterdam and director of the Suriname Society (1749–1751); owned the townhouses in Amsterdam's Herengracht near the "Korsjessteeg", Herengracht 539, 609 and Keizersgracht near the "Gouden Ketting"
      • Jacobus Trip (1671–1728), married to Jacoba Margaretha Klopper; Councilor in the Admiralty of Amsterdam
  • Jacob Trip (1575–1661), in 1603 he married Margaretha de Geer
    • Jacob Trip (1604–1681), married Johanna Godin
    • Louis Trip (1605–1684), married Emerentia Hoefslager
    • Hendrik Trip (1607–1666), was married first to Cecilia Godin and then to Johanna de Geer
    • Elisabeth Trip (1615–?)
    • Maria Trip (1617–1672), married Jacob Reepmaker de Jonge in 1644.
    • Margaretha Trip (1618–?)
    • Samuel Trip (1622–1668)

Individual evidence

  1. (en) The Trip Family Tree
  2. (nl) Buitenplaatsen in Kennemerland ( Memento from July 20, 2006 in the Internet Archive )
  3. (nl) Heren van Holland ( Memento from February 22, 2016 in the Internet Archive )

Web links

Commons : Trip (noble and patrician families)  - collection of images, videos and audio files