Agatha Deken was born in 1741. In 1745, after her parents died, she went to live in the 'Oranje Appel' orphanage in
Amsterdam, where she remained until 1767. After leaving the orphanage she served in several families and later started a business in coffee and tea. In 1769 she joined the
Baptist community in Amsterdam. At the age of 29 she moved in with her friend Maria Bosch as a nurse. Maria Bosch died in 1773. In 1775, Deken published the collection of poems
Stichtelijke gedichten, which she had written together with Maria Bosch. 1776 saw the beginning of a correspondence between Aagje Deken and
Betje Wolff, who had already published several works by that time. In October of that year they met for the first time. After the death of Betje's husband, the two women lived together. In September 1777 they published their first joint work:
Brieven ('Letters'). In 1781 Deken inherited a sum of 13,000 guilders, and they went to live in a mansion in
Beverwijk. They published the successful novel
Sara Burgerhart and
Historie van den heer Willem Leevend. Not quite at ease with the political situation in the Netherlands, when the
Patriot faction lost power, they moved to
Trëoux in
Burgundy in 1788. In 1789
Wandelingen door Bourgogne ('Walks in Burgundy') appeared. In financial straits, they returned to the Netherlands in 1797 and lived in The Hague. Aagje Deken died on 14 November 1804, nine days after Betje Wolff. Both were buried in
Scheveningen. ==References==