Hi Anne,
The deed (or link) is missing... :(
This is a deed from 1658 concerning Adriaentje Jansdr van der Ijssel (van Dijssel).
Does it confirm she became co-owner of the Moriaanshooft factory in Delft? Possibly with Jan Aelbrechtsz Groenlant?
Did she buy a share or did she inherit it from her deceased husband Claes Jansz van Straten?
Many thanks as always for any enlightenment on this document.
very best wishes
Anne
Hi Anne,
The deed (or link) is missing... :(
Oh dear-sorry about that...
Hopefully the link is attached now.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.12115/NL-DtAD5709532
Thanks for letting me know Rene :-)
Anne
Dear Anne,
Thanks; the link referred however to another deed, but I found the correct one: https://hdl.handle.net/21.12115/NL-DtAD183546877
Indeed, Jan Aelbregtsz Groenland sells half of the pottery, half of the pottery shop and the rear part of the house these are in to Adriaentge Jansdr vander IJssel, who was acting on her own behalf and will own this herself (so not included in any marital goods)
There are some specific conditions in this deed:
- the housing part will be rented out to another party, the rent revenues will be shared between Jan and Ariaentgen
- a very specific condition is that Jan should blind the windows of his part of the house that have a direct view into the shop
- if either of them would be willing to sell his/her part of the house, the other has the first right to buy that part for the original sum
- the sale in this deed was for 1000 guilders (the amount of 1500 guilders has been crossed out)
Oh no! Sincere apologies Rene. It's very kind of you to correct my mistake- much appreciated, thank you :-)
Does it give a name to the pottery or location?
The specific conditions are very interesting. I particularly like the reference to provide privacy for the shop.
warmest best wishes
Anne
Anne
zei op donderdag 12 februari 2026 - 15:03