Two Views of Dutch East India Company Trading Posts: Lawec in Cambodia and Banda in the Southern Moluccas

attributed to Johannes Vinckboons, c. 1662 - c. 1663

From 1609 the East India Company was sailing to Lawec, near Phnom Penh. There the company purchased provisions, such as rice, butter, pork, and lard, for Batavia. Banda supplied mace and nutmeg. In 1621, Governor-General Coen punished the island for trading with other countries: all fifteen thousand islanders were killed or driven away. The ‘slaughterer of Banda’ founded nutmeg parcels, heavily guarded by forts

  • Artwork typepainting
  • Object numberSK-A-4475
  • Dimensionsheight 97 cm x width 140 cm
  • Physical characteristicsoil on canvas

Identification

  • Title(s)

    • View of the Dutch Settlement at Lawec in Cambodia
    • Two Views of Dutch East India Company Trading Posts: Lawec in Cambodia and Banda in the Southern Moluccas
  • Object type

  • Object number

    SK-A-4475

  • Description

    Gezicht op de Hollandse nederzetting op Lawec in Cambodja. Enkele omheinde langwerpige gebouwen op een groot vlak omheind terrein aan de oever van een rivier.

  • Inscriptions / marks

    inscription: ‘De Logie Op Lawec’


Creation

  • Creation

    • painter: attributed to Johannes Vinckboons
    • painter: anonymous, Northern Netherlands [rejected attribution]
  • Dating

    c. 1662 - c. 1663

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Material and technique

  • Physical description

    oil on canvas

  • Dimensions

    height 97 cm x width 140 cm


This work is about

  • Person

  • Subject

  • Place

  • Period

    1660 - 1670


Acquisition and rights


Documentation

  • Documentatiemap Schilderijen: inventariskaart, conditierapport 1998, aantekeningen R. van Luttervelt (voor 1963).


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