-
Pieter van Ruijven.
Dissius died in 1695, and his
collection was
auctioned off in
Amsterdam the
following year.
Jacob Abrahamsz.
Dissius was
baptised on 23...
- and the
estate was then
inherited by her
husband Jacob Dissius and his
father Abraham Dissius.
Maria Simonsdr de
Knuijt married Pieter Claesz van Ruijven...
- 1696, from the
estate of
Jacob Dissius (1653–1695). It is
widely believed the
collection was
originally owned by
Dissius' father-in-law,
Pieter Claesz...
- Painting;
perhaps it was
Jacob Dissius. It can not be
determined with
certainty whether the
painting is
quoted in the
auction Dissius of 1696 as "Portrait of...
- children. The van
Ruijven estate was
inherited by
Jacob Dissius and his
father Abraham Dissius. As sti****ted in Magdalena's will,
Abraham was to inherit...
- Ruijven,
until 1682; her widower,
Jacob Dissius,
until 1695. The
painting is
thought to have been part of the
Dissius sale of May 16, 1696 (No. 38, 39 or...
-
Ruijven (1655–1681), and
certainly to Van Ruijven's son-in-law,
Jacob Dissius (1653–1695),
whose estate sold it with
other paintings by the
artist in...
- his wives.
Three Vermeer paintings were
described as "tronies" in the
Dissius auction of 1696,
perhaps including the Girl with a
Pearl Earring and the...
-
registered as the "widow of
Johan Vermeer". Van Ruijven's son-in-law
Jacob Dissius owned 21
paintings by Vermeer,
listed in his
heritage in 1695.
These paintings...
-
Vermeer works sold on May 16, 1696, in
Amsterdam from the
estate of
Jacob Dissius (1653–1695). It
received 155 guilders,
considerably above the
prices fetched...