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Willem Anne Lestevenon


Anne Willem Lestevenon van Berkenrode (born in Paris on October 14, 1750 and died at La Ferté-Gaucher on October 4, 1830) was a Dutch politician and art collector.

Willem Anne Lestevenon was born in Paris, where his father, Mattheus Lestevenon, was an ambassador of the United Provinces to the King of France. In 1760 he was sent to Leiden to study law. Upon graduation in 1768 he became bailiff of the town and Barony of Breda. Ten years later, he moved to Haarlem and was appointed to the city's vroedschap and joined the Teylers Second Society (1780), where he supported Martinus van Marum's utilitarian approach of the natural sciences as he expected these sciences to be fundamental for the recovery of Haarlem's textile industry. Lestevenon was sent to the States from Holland in 1783 and then to the States General of the United Provinces in the following year.

In July 1785, the States designated him on a special mission to Marie-Christine von Habsburg-Lorraine, governor of the Austrian Netherlands to solve the problems which had started with the Kettle War, resulting in the Treaty of Fontainebleau (1785).

Lestevenon was an ardent supporter of the Batavian patriots, leading William V of Orange to the sack. In February 1788 Lestevenon lost all his functions and traveled to Rome, where he bought a collection of mainly Italian drawings by masters like Michelangelo, Raphael, Guercino, Salvator Rosa, Claude Lorrain and Hendrick Goltzius, formerly owned by Livio Odescalchi and Christina I of Sweden, now in the Teylers Museum (1700 drawings), the Louvre, the British Museum and the MET.


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