


© Nomos AG
Medal - Death of Admiral Maarten Tromp
1653 yearSilver | 70.26 g | 73 mm |
Location | Dutch Republic (Netherlands) |
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Type | Medals › Commemorative medals |
Year | 1653 |
Composition | Silver |
Weight | 70.26 g |
Diameter | 73 mm |
Shape | Round |
Technique | Cast |
Orientation | Medal alignment ↑↑ |
Demonetized | Yes |
Updated | 2024-11-14 |
Numista | N#187339 |
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Rarity index | 97% |
Reverse
Naval battle with ship sinking in the foreground.
Lettering: Waarom doet muller Tromp door kunst van goudt en silver leeven: om dat hy d'yser eew door krygsdeugd heeft verdreven den 10 aug 1653
Translation: Why does the art of Muller make Tromp live in gold and silver? Because he chased out the age of iron by military honor on 10 August 1653
Engraver: Wouter Muller
Edge
Plain
Comment
M.I. I, 404, no 35 and pl. XXXVI, 6. TMNK 00594-00595. Van Loon II, p. 364, 3. Milford Haven I. 542Maarten Tromp was one of Holland's greatest naval heroes. His father was a sea captain who was killed by pirates when Maarten was 12. The young boy was on board and attempted to convince the crew to keep fighting: in the end he was captured by the pirates and sold into slavery. He was freed two years later and returned to the sea, only to be captured again by the Barbary pirates. He was released again in 1622 and joined the Dutch navy, rising through the ranks until he became commander of the Dutch fleet. He was killed by a musket shot in 1653, during the Anglo-Dutch War of 1652-1653. The medal is by Wouter Muller, who was one of the Dutch masters of the curious cast technique used to make this medal - a mode of manufacture that resulted in some of the finest Dutch medals of the 17th century.