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Museum Geelvinck-Hinlopen

Museum Geelvinck Hinlopen
Hgr-voor.jpg
The museum viewed from the Herengracht
Museum Geelvinck-Hinlopen is located in Amsterdam
Museum Geelvinck-Hinlopen
Location in Amsterdam
Established c. 1687 (building)
Location Keizersgracht 633
Amsterdam, Netherlands
Coordinates 52°21′51″N 4°53′28″E / 52.36417°N 4.89111°E / 52.36417; 4.89111Coordinates: 52°21′51″N 4°53′28″E / 52.36417°N 4.89111°E / 52.36417; 4.89111
Type Art museum
Public transit access Tram line 16, 24, or 25
Website www.geelvinckhinlopenhuis.nl

Museum Geelvinck Hinlopen was situated from its opening 1991 till the end of 2015 in a canal-side mansion, the Geelvinck Hinlopen Huis in Amsterdam, the Netherlands. This patrician mansion, close to the Rembrandtplein, was built for Albert Geelvinck (1647-1693) and Sara Hinlopen (1660-1749), then in an attractive and new laid-out section of the city towards the Amstel. In the year 1687 the couple moved into this double wide house, with storage rooms in the cellar, under the attic and in the warehouse on Keizersgracht 633, now the entrance.

The canal mansion 'Geelvinck Hinlopen Huis' is now closed for the public, because the museum (including the rosarium) has moved to new premises. In Spring 2017 the museum opens its new premises in the historic mansion 'De Wildeman' in Zutphen.

Albert Geelvinck came from the upper class Geelvinck family, who had acquired their wealth through merchant shipping to Spain, Africa, Surinam and the West Indies. Sara Hinlopen came from a family of originally Flemish cloth merchants, private investors and in an early stage involved in the governing the city and the Dutch East India Company. Both families belonged to the regents of Amsterdam. The republican Geelvincks delivered five burgomasters (mayors) in the 17th and 18th century. They too served in the Admiralty of Amsterdam, Dutch West India Company or the Society of Surinam.

Sara became an orphan at the age of six. Then she and her sister Johanna were raised by a stepmother Lucia Wijbrants. Because the cooperation did not work out well, they moved in with Jacob J. Hinlopen, their uncle, in 1672. Keen on leaving the house, she married in 1680 the fifteen-year-older lawyer Albert Geelvinck. A few months before the girls came by lot in the possession of the paintings by Rembrandt, and Gabriel Metsu, collected by their father Jan J. Hinlopen.


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