Pieter Cnoll

Portrait of Pieter Cnoll with his Eurasian wife Cornelia van Nieuwroode and his family 1665, by Jacob Jansz. Coeman.

Pieter Cnoll, also Pieter Knoll (1672), was a Dutchman who became Director General in Batavia. He married Cornelia van Nijenroode, an Indo Eurasian who was the daughter of Cornelis van Nieuwroode (also Cornelis van Nijenroode, former VOC Opperhoofden in Japan in 1623-1631) with a Japanese woman named Surishia.[1][2] His family was depicted in a painting by Jacob Coeman.

Cnoll and Cornelia had 10 children, only one of whom, a boy, survived to adulthood. When Cnoll died in 1672, he left full possession of his wealth to his wife Cornelia.[2]

Cornelia remarried in 1675 at the age of 46, this time with an Dutchman named Johann Bitter, but the marriage was unhappy and she filed for divorce. She finally died in 1692 in Holland, where she was advocating for the divorce.[2]

Notes

  1. Taylor, Jean Gelman. "Meditations on a Portrait from Seventeenth-Century Batavia" in Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 37, no. 1 (February 2006): p. 33
  2. 1 2 3 Interracial intimacy in Japan: western men and Japanese women, 1543-1900 by Gary P. Leupp p.116
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