Martin Holtzhey

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Martin Holtzhey
Portrait of the medallist Martin Holtzhey, obverse. Silver, 1729. Holtzhey produced this medal to advertise his work and name.
Born1697
Died1764 (aged 66–67)
ChildrenJohann and 1 other son
Portrait of the medallist Martin Holtzhey, reverse. Silver, 1729. View of the skyline of Amsterdam with Holtzhey's coin press.
Allegorical depiction of Martinus Holtzhey as "muntmeester" of Gelderland, 1749
New year's medal, 1754
Commemorative medal for Martin Holtzhey. Silver, 1764. An angel is depicted carrying the portrait of Martin Holtzhey up to heaven. On the globe the three provinces in which Holthey has lived and worked are indicated (Holland, Gelderland, Zeeland). The three plants represent his three children. The inscription reads Tandem parta Quies : He has finally found peace.

Martin Holtzhey (1697 – 1764), was an 18th-century German medallist and mint master, active in the Netherlands.

Biography[edit]

He was the father of the medallist Johann Georg Holtzhey.[1] He worked in The Hague, Amsterdam, Harderwijk, and Middelburg.[1] In 1722, he joined the Lutheran church of Amsterdam and he married there in 1725, the same year that he entered the silversmith's guild.[2] The next year his son Johann Georg was born, and in 1636 his youngest son Martin Jr. was born.[2] He started striking medals for special occasions and made a name for himself among collectors in this way, making medals for major events, to mark an anniversary, or simply to herald in a new year. Examples are his 1736 medal in honor of the 200th anniversary of Menno Simons leaving the Catholic faith,[3] and his 1740 medal in celebration of the 300th anniversary of Laurens Janszoon Coster's discovery of moveable type. When Holtzhey struck such "historical medals", he often included a paper explaining the symbolism he used on them, a tradition that was continued later by his son Johann Georg.[2] His medals were popular with wealthy followers of the enlightenment, such as Pieter Teyler van der Hulst. The medals in his collection are among the few items collected by Teyler himself that are still part of the inventory of Teylers Museum today, such as his 1736 medal struck for completing the Lutheran church of Rotterdam.[4]

In 1749, he handed his Amsterdam workshop over to his son Johann Georg when he moved to Harderwijk to become mint master of Gelderland.[2] He commemorated this with a medal in his own honor.[2] In 1755, he commemorated himself again on the occasion of his 25th anniversary of striking historical medals. He published a catalog of them for his collectors, assisted by his son Johann Georg called Catalogus der medailles of gedenkpenningen betrekking hebbende op de voornaamste historien der Vereenigde Nederlanden.

Story of the mysterious 'Zeeuwse duit'[edit]

In 1754, he became mint master of Zeeland in Middelburg.[1] This is the same year that a strange penny piece was coined in Middelburg known as the "Ementor duit". It was possibly a joke played by Holtzhey's assistant, his son Martin jr. who assisted his father until he took over his position as mint master. The coat of arms of Zeeland include a lion half under water. The motto is 'Luctor et Emergo', or "I struggle and emerge". In the year 1754 the new duits were coined with 'Luctor et Ementor', or "I struggle and go under", which would imply the lion is drowning rather than emerging from the floods.[5][6]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c Martin Holtzhey in the RKD
  2. ^ a b c d e article[permanent dead link] G. van der Meer, De medailleur Martinus Holtzhey in Teylers Museum magazine 15 (1987), pp.9-12
  3. ^ Print of the Menno Simons medal in the RKD
  4. ^ Picture of the 1736 Lutheran church medal, with a skyline of Rotterdam on the Teylers Museum website
  5. ^ article[dead link] from the coin magazine Beeldenaar Archived 2012-07-30 at archive.today
  6. ^ Zeeland duit Archived 2013-10-31 at the Wayback Machine story
  • New Year's medal by Martin Holtzhey in 1746] in the Nederlands Gevangenismuseum via the Geheugen van Nederland]