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Portrait of Cornelis Jansz Hartigsvelt, Director of the Rotterdam Chamber of the Dutch East India Company, elected 1639

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Summary

Portret van Cornelis Jansz Hartigsvelt (voor 1586-1641), gekozen in 1639. Buste in ovaal naar rechts. Onderdeel van een reeks portretten van de bewindhebbers van de Rotterdamse Kamer van de Verenigde Oost-Indische Compagnie, vervaardigd voor het Nieuw Oost-Indisch Huis uit 1698 aan de Boompjes te Rotterdam.

Spanish collar, ruff or gorgera first appeared about 1560, and was at first open at the neck. After 1570 it becomes closed. It was gradually increasing in diameter reaching 25-30 cm, and by the 1580s the collar became known as the “millstone” or “cartwheel” which required a supporting frame. The collar was made from layers of plaited linen or lace. The Dutchwoman Dangen van Pless at the court of the English Queen Elizabeth I introduced starch that was initially yellowish, which made the collars creamy. Some tinted them with saffron in a golden hue and dyed them with natural dyes in pink or lilac colors. The rigidity of gorgera forced its owner to keep his posture, and for his impracticality, ruff became a symbol of wealth and status and contributed to the spread of the fork, the use of which made it possible to protect the collar from soiling with food. Gorgers were banned in Spain by King Philip IV. Spain was involved in endless wars against the growing Protestant world and in desperate need for cash. Philip announced an austerity program, condemned extravagance, and introduced the concept of simple, pragmatic living. Forcing people to live pragmatically was fairly difficult. Eventually, the inquisition found a way - it banned the ruffed collars and starch, as a "tool of the devil". Alquacils, inquisition enforcers of justice, were armed with scissors and prowled the streets of Madrid enforcing the ban. Shops were raided and gorgera merchandise burned. By the middle of the 17th century, ruff had decreased in diameter and almost did not use starch. The fashion lingered longer in the Dutch Republic, where ruffs can be seen in portraits well into the seventeenth century. In Germany and Flanders, ruff was worn until the beginning of the 18th century. In the 18th century, it remained for a long time among the Jews as an obligatory part of the costume.

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paintings canvas oil paint paint oil on canvas pieter van der werff dutch east india company cornelis jansz hartigsvelt rotterdam chamber high resolution portrait painting collection rijksmuseum dutch east indies dutch paintings ruff man portrait ruff collar elections politics and government political campaigns portrait paintings rijksmuseum netherlands
date_range

Date

1698
collections

in collections

Ruff, Gorgera, Spanish Collar

Western, Central, Northern Europe fashion popular from the mid-16th century to the mid-17th century.
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Source

Rijksmuseum
link

Link

https://www.rijksmuseum.nl/
copyright

Copyright info

Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedication ("CCO 1.0 Dedication")

label_outline Explore Rotterdam Chamber, Pieter Van Der Werff, Dutch East India Company

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paintings canvas oil paint paint oil on canvas pieter van der werff dutch east india company cornelis jansz hartigsvelt rotterdam chamber high resolution portrait painting collection rijksmuseum dutch east indies dutch paintings ruff man portrait ruff collar elections politics and government political campaigns portrait paintings rijksmuseum netherlands