Jacob Andries van Braam | |
Term Start: | 1808 |
Term End: | 1811 |
Successor: | Abolished |
Office1: | Raad van Indië |
Term Start1: | 16 January 1819 |
Term End1: | 13 May 1820 |
Predecessor1: | New creation |
Successor1: | Hendrik Jan van de Graaff[1] |
Alongside1: | Godert van der Capellen, Herman Warner Muntinghe, Petrus Theodorus Chassé, Reinier d'Ozy |
Birth Name: | Jacob Andries van Braam |
Birth Date: | 26 January 1771 |
Mother: | Ursula Martha Fact |
Father: | Jacob Pieter van Braam |
Profession: | VOC Chief merchant |
Mawards: | is not set --> |
Awards: | is not set --> |
Jacob Andries van Braam (Chin-Surah, Houghly, Dutch Bengal, 26 January 1771 – Batavia, 12 May 1820) was a Dutch Dutch; Flemish: opperkoopman (chief merchant) of the VOC and member of the High Government of the Dutch East Indies.
Van Braam was the son of Jacob Pieter van Braam, and Ursula Martha Fact.He married Ambrosia Wilhelmina van Rijck in Batavia on 5 April 1800. She died in Batavia 2 October 1864.[2]
Van Braam went with the VOC embassy of his uncle Andreas Everardus van Braam Houckgeest, together with Isaac Titsingh, and Chrétien-Louis-Joseph de Guignes, to the court of the Qianlong Emperor in 1794–1795 to Peking to keep him company. In 1800 he was the external regent of the almshouses in Batavia and of the pennists' institution, and from 1803 to 1807 he was chief merchant and harbormaster in the city. In 1808 he became the first president of the high court of the Emperor of Solo, and president of the Council of the Indies (succeeding Arnold Adriaan Buyskes).[3] In 1810, as president of that Council, he suppressed riots by acting on behalf of Governor-General Herman Daendels, who was in the vicinity with troops, to send an ultimatum to the Sultan of Djokja, who on 31 December 1810 was deposed. In 1809 also, he was awarded the commandership in the Order of the Union. In 1811, in his house in Batavia, Daendels took his leave from the (French) government, and the new Governor General Janssens. Van Braam himself resigned on 18 September 1811, after the French capitulation to the British. He left Batavia on 18 February 1812 and was in November of that year in London.[2] After the restoration of Dutch authority in August 1816 he was charged by the Commissioners-General of the Dutch East Indies in 1817 and 1818 with the re-takeover of the Dutch colonial possessions in Dutch Bengal and Dutch Coromandel. For that journey he bought a ship for his own account at a cost of 70,000 rijksdaalders, which shows that he was not lacking for money. He placed the authority in these Indian possessions in the hands of the Resident, at Chin-Surah, Van Overbeek At the forming of the new High Government of the Dutch East Indies in 1819 he was appointed a member of it; however, he died soon after.[4]