Jan J. Hinlopen was born as the son of the merchant
Jacob J. Hinlopen (1582–1629), who traded spices and
ship chandlery. The family origins were in
Brabant, then the
Southern Netherlands. After
Antwerp had been occupied by the Spanish, Protestants, who did not want to convert to Catholicism, were ordered to sell their homes and immoveable possessions and depart. Within four years many Flemish cities lost half of their population emigrating to the north. It is possible the family moved in an earlier stage to the North and in 1572 escaped from
Naarden, where all the inhabitants were killed in a massacre. Anyhow, the new immigrants lived in a house on the
Nieuwendijk, named "
Hinlopen" and very close to the harbour. The name of house has to do with
Hindelopen, the small town in the North, producing many skippers and sailors. After coming of age, Jan J. Hinlopen lived with his brother
Jacob J. Hinlopen on the
Leliegracht at the corner of the
Keizersgracht, not far from their parents, who moved to
Herengracht. The brothers made money from a cloth business in
Warmoesstraat and through building cheap housing in the
Jordaan. When their mother died in 1652, the daughter of a
Haarlem brewer and burgomaster and herself the owner of a brewery, the Hinlopen brothers inherited a mansion designed by
Philips Vingboons, nicely situated in the woods between
Baarn,
Soest and
Hilversum.
Career Wishing to make a career in city politics, Jan enrolled in the
civic guard as an
ensign in 1651-1653 and in 1655. He served under captain
Gerrit Reynst, also an art collector. When the new
town hall was opened on 29 July, Jan was participating in a parade on
Dam Square; he wrote that three
salvos were discharged, but not that his brother
Jacob was sent out of the city for a day. In 1656 he was appointed as a city official in the
Nieuwe Kerk. He resigned within a few months, when he was appointed as an administrator in the townhall. In the
schutterij Jan was promoted
lieutenant. On 1 February 1661 Jan was elected as
schepen. He may have witnessed the unveiling of Rembrandts' painting
The Conspiracy of Claudius Civilis in the town hall, as well as its removal a couple of months later. On 3 April 1657 Jan J. Hinlopen married Leonore Huydecoper of Maarseveen (1631–1663), the daughter of a rich mayor,
Johan Huydecoper van Maarsseveen and an art lover. There is a sketch by her father for the arrangement of the chairs for the main room in his house on
Singel.
Jan Vos the local theatre director, gave five performances including accompanying poems for the occasion. Every show consisted of at least thirty to forty scenes portrayed in an allegorical manner, for example on the despairs of Amsterdam during the
plague epidemic in the years 1652-1657: (1661). Gift by
J. Pierpont Morgan in 1917
Family Jan and Leonore had four children: • Jacob (20 October 1658 –
Lage Vuursche, 12 July 1664), • Johanna Maria (16 April 1659 – 15 June 1706), •
Sara (12 June 1660 – 16 June 1749) and • Geertrui (1 January 1662 – 14 August 1663). Jan Hinlopen made distinct notes as to time of birth and date of baptism in the
Westerkerk, at what time they were born and on which day they were baptized in the
Westerkerk. His diary becomes dramatic when Jan J. Hinlopen lost his youngest daughter developing
measles and his wife having a miscarriage after seven months. The next day, on 29 October, around ten in the evening the baby was carried to the church by his servant Jan, accompanied by two other men, most probably the undertakers. On 1 November his wife Leonora died at 5.30 in the morning, having been ill for seven days. His only son Jacob died at Pijnenburg, when his father was not present. On 6 January 1665 Jan remarried to
Lucia Wijbrants in the
Nieuwe Kerk. At some time Hinlopen moved from a house in Doelenstraat, which he rented from
Pieter Carpentier, to house on
Kloveniersburgwal, opposite
Jan Six. He was living next to his brother,
Jacob J. Hinlopen, then a superintendent of a nearby elderly peoples home. Lucia gave birth to a stillborn child on 11 November 1665. In 1666 he commissioned a painting from
Bartholomeus van der Helst of Lucia, himself and the hunting dogs, but showing his deceased first wife and children in the background. Jan J. Hinlopen, rather stockily built, died at the age of forty. He was buried in the
Oude Kerk on 10 September 1666, next to his first wife and their baby. == Hinlopen's collection of paintings ==