Model van een gedeelte van een samengestelde scheepskameel

anoniem, ca. 1697 - ca. 1718

Gepolychromeerd model van een gedeelte van een samengestelde scheepskameel, geschilderd in de kleuren zwart, wit en rood. Het is een deel met langsscheeps waterdicht schot, strekkende over twee pompen, twee braadspillen, twee spuien voor het vollopen en twee luiken. De achterkant kan geopend worden en toont de kokers waardoor de takels van de braadspillen naar de onderzijde van de kameel worden geleid, de pomp en de spui.

  • Soort kunstwerkdemonstratiemodel
  • ObjectnummerNG-MC-22
  • Afmetingencapsule: hoogte 33,5 cm x breedte 97 cm x diepte 48,5 cm, model: hoogte 9,7 cm x breedte 13,1 cm x diepte 11,2 cm
  • Fysieke kenmerkenhout, messing en touw

anonymous

Model of Part of a Composite Ship Camel

? Italy, Italy, c. 1697 - c. 1718

Provenance

…; 's Lands Werf (Navy dockyard) Amsterdam, 18 April 1798;1HNA 2.01.29.02 Dept. Marine, Aanhangsel I, inv. no. 20, La. K3 no. 7. Ministerie van Marine (Department of the Navy), The Hague, 1837;2After the death of Asmus in 1837 models from his private collection remained in the Navy Model Room in The Hague and were henceforth considered an integral part of the collection of the Department of the Navy. transferred to the museum, 1883

Object number: NG-MC-22


Entry

Polychromed wooden construction model of a part of a composite ship camel, painted black, white and red.

The model is a section of a ship’s camel that includes a longitudinal bulkhead, two pumps, two windlasses, two hatches and two cocks for flooding. The back can be opened in order to reveal the pump and the cock and the wooden casings through which the tackles of the windlasses run to the bottom of the camel.

It is probably this model that Dockyard Superintendent Jochem Pietersz Asmus (1755-1837) mentions in a list of objects that had been transferred to him by his predecessor Jan Binkes in 1798.3HNA 2.01.29.02 Dept. Marine, Aanhangsel I, inv. no. 20, La. K3 no. 7. This is an independent section of a composite camel, which consisted of several such sections linked together. The Italian engineer Vincenzo Coronelli (1650-1718) invented this improvement of the ship’s camel after his visit to Amsterdam in 1697.4M. Marzari, Progetti per l’imperatore. Andrea Salvini ingegnere a l’arsenal 1802-1817, Trieste 1990, p. 97. The advantage of Coronelli's camels was that one could construct them in any size by linking separate sections.


Literature

J.M. Obreen, Catalogus der verzameling modellen van het Departement van Marine, The Hague 1858, no. 22; J.C.d.B., ‘Scheepskamelen’, Opbouw. Maandblad van en voor het personeel der Nederlandsche Vereenigde Scheepsbouw Bureaux 9 (1963), pp. 1-2 1963; M. Marzari, Progetti per l’imperatore. Andrea Salvini ingegnere a l’arsenal 1802-1817, Trieste 1990, p. 97; G. Boven and A. Hoving, Scheepskamelen & waterschepen. ‘Eene ellendige talmerij, doch lofflijk middel’, Zutphen 2009, p. 69


Citation

J. van der Vliet, 2016, 'anonymous, Model of Part of a Composite Ship Camel, Italy, c. 1697 - c. 1718', in J. van der Vliet and A. Lemmers (eds.), Navy Models in the Rijksmuseum, online coll. cat. Amsterdam: https://data.rijksmuseum.nl/20053183

(accessed 12 December 2025 13:50:20).

Footnotes

  • 1HNA 2.01.29.02 Dept. Marine, Aanhangsel I, inv. no. 20, La. K3 no. 7.
  • 2After the death of Asmus in 1837 models from his private collection remained in the Navy Model Room in The Hague and were henceforth considered an integral part of the collection of the Department of the Navy.
  • 3HNA 2.01.29.02 Dept. Marine, Aanhangsel I, inv. no. 20, La. K3 no. 7.
  • 4M. Marzari, Progetti per l’imperatore. Andrea Salvini ingegnere a l’arsenal 1802-1817, Trieste 1990, p. 97.