Jacob Schulman
Jacques Schulman was a Dutch numismatist who served as president of the International Association of Professional Numismatists from 1953 to 1961. His Handboek van de Nederlandse munten introduced a classification system for Dutch coinage, known as the Schulman number, that remains in international use.
Background
Schulman came from a family of numismatists. His grandfather Jacob Schulman established a coin trading business in Amersfoort in 1880, holding his first public auction in 1889. The firm moved to the Keizersgracht in Amsterdam in 1902 and later relocated to the Jan Luijkenstraat, where it remains active.Jacques studied at the Cabinet des Médailles, the École du Louvre, the Sorbonne, and the British Museum. During World War II, his uncle Maurits Schulman was deported and killed at Sobibór extermination camp. Jacques continued operating the Amsterdam business throughout the occupation, and expanded it after the war.
Career and recognition
Schulman helped establish the IAPN in 1951 and served as its president from 1953 to 1961, followed by a term as treasurer. He co-founded the first Dutch numismatic circle in Amsterdam and the journal De Geuzenpenning.In 1976, the Royal Dutch Numismatic Society elected him an honorary member. He received the Knight of Orange-Nassau for his contributions to numismatics as a scholarly field.
''Handboek van de Nederlandse munten''
During the German occupation, Schulman began compiling data on Dutch coinage, drawing on records his family had kept since the late nineteenth century. He published the first edition of his Handboek van de Nederlandse munten 1795–1945 in 1946. The catalogue went through five editions, with the final one covering coins through 1975.The Handboek assigned each Dutch coin type a reference number. These Schulman numbers became the standard citation method for post-1795 Dutch numismatics and continue to appear in auction catalogues and scholarly literature worldwide.