Cornelis Bicker
Cornelis Bicker van Swieten, heer van Swieten, was an Amsterdam regent of the Dutch Republic during the Golden Age. He traded in sugar, was a governor of the Dutch West India Company and director of the Wisselbank. As oneof the most influential members of the "Bickerse league" he became burgomaster and schepen of Amsterdam, hoogheemraad of the Hoogheemraadschap van Rijnland and a counsellor of the States of Holland and West Friesland at The Hague.
Cornelis Bicker, together with his brother Andries Bicker and his cousin Cornelis de Graeff, was one of the main initiators for a peace with Spain in the Eighty Years' War and for the participation of the Dutch provinces in the Peace of Münster.
Life
Cornelis Bicker was the youngest son of Gerrit Bicker and Aleyd Andriesdr Boelens Loen. In 1617 Cornelis Bicker married Aertge Witsen, daughter of merchant and burgomaster Gerrit Jacobsz Witsen. They had five children:- Margaretha Bicker van Swieten, ⚭ with Gerard van Hellemond and afterwards with Cornelis Geelvinck, burgomaster of Amsterdam
- Alida Bicker van Swieten, ⚭ with Lambert Reynst, burgomaster of Amsterdam
- Elisabeth Bicker van Swieten, ⚭ with her uncle and cousin Andries de Graeff, statesman, burgomaster of Amsterdam
- Maria Bicker van Swieten, ⚭ with Gerbrand Ornia
- Gerard Bicker (I) van Swieten, Rekenmeester van Holland en West-Friesland ⚭ married three times: I. with his grand cousin Alida van Papenbroek ; II. with his cousin Cornelia Bicker ; III. with Jkvr. Catherine van Sypesteyn.
Career
In 1617 Cornelis Bicker and his wife settled at Singel 130 in Amsterdam, in a canal house which his family sold in 1767. In 1622 he became bewindhebber of the Dutch West India Company and also held several directorships, such as of the Wisselbank from 1625-1633. He was one of the investors in draining the Bijlmer. In 1627 he chartered a ship on Arkhangelsk.In 1632 he bought the Swieten estate and manorhouse from Hugo Cuyk van Mierop - from these he later derived his noble title. In 1634 he was appointed a captain in the schutterij. In 1641 Jacob Bicker succeeded him at the Wisselbank. In 1628, 1635, 1637, 1638, 1642 he was appointed schepen.
Cornelis Bicker was member even of the "Bickerse league", which included his brothers Andries, Jacob, Jan, and their distant cousins, the brothers Roelof, Jacob and Hendrick Jacobsz Bicker. They opposed the stadtholder Frederick Henry, Prince of Orange, who intended the centralize the five admiralties, which would cause the Admiralty of Amsterdam to lose influence.
During the 1640s, the republican elite of the province of Holland, the brothers Cornelis, Andries, Jacob and Jan Bicker, Jacob de Witt and the brothers Andries and Cornelis de Graeff advocated an end to the Eighty Years' War with the Kingdom of Spain and a reduction in land forces. This ongoing state of war prevented the economic growth and social development of the Republic of the United Netherlands. Also, this state of war strengthened the atadtholder's power as commander-in-chief of the armed forces, something the Republicans did not want. This intensified the conflict between them and the stadtholder Frederick Henry of Orange and the Reformed Hollands.
In 1647 he became a deputy for East Friesland at the States General.
In February 1651 he was sent to the States of Holland for three years. He was burgomaster of Amsterdam in 1646, 1650 and 1654. Cornelis Bicker was buried in Amsterdam's Nieuwe Kerk.
During the 1640s, the influence of Andries Bicker, his family and the city grew even greater as the end of the Eighty Years' War drew nearer. Amsterdam's trade interests pointed in the direction of peace and she was able to push through under Bicker's leadership. The position of the Bicker family was then more powerful than any generation of mayors before or after them. In 1648, due to the immense political pressure from the entire Bicker-De Graeff Clan the United Netherlands entered into peace negotiations with Spain in order to end the Eighty Years' War with the Peace of Münster.