Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Jean Pierre Moquette

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Name
  
Jean Moquette


Awards
  
Order of Orange-Nassau

Jean Pierre Moquette wwwpuntstempelsnlmoquettemoquetteart1jpg

Born
  
1856
Goor, Netherlands

Occupation
  
Bookkeeper Researcher Stamp dealer Coin dealer

Died
  
1927, Sawah Besar, Jakarta, Indonesia

Jean Pierre Moquette (July 5, 1856 – February 26, 1927) moved from the Netherlands to Java in 1873. He worked as a bookkeeper at the sugar plantation and factory 'Kremboeng', in Sidoarjo near Surabaya. He was also stamp and coin dealer in Surabaya. He became known for the alterations of stamps and postal stationery. Besides philately, numismatics and his bookkeeping work in the sugar business, he was a researcher in the field of sugar cane. For his research of cane sowing and crossing he was in 1898 appointed Officer of the Order of Orange-Nassau. In 1900 he founded the Indonesian Numismatic Cabinet in which he was active as curator. In the early 1900s he did ethnographic and historical research for which in 1924 he was appointed correspondent for the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences in Amsterdam.

Contents

The Dutch Tropen Museum has a painting of Moquette by Jan Pieter Veth.

Philatelic creations

Starting with a handmade postmark Moquette soon produced elaborate cachets, overprints and postal stationery. He sold his items to collectors and some stamp dealers like Jean-Baptiste Moens. When the Dutch Indies U.P.U. foreign postal card rate was reduced to 7 1/2 cents on 1 April 1879 the 12 1/2 cent card was redundant. Moquette provided a two line overprint in blue green reading '5 cent' and sent the cards to Europe for sale as a new surcharge variety. The Belgium dealer Moens was one of those to handle these cards and sold some of them in 1883 to collector Philipp von Ferrary. After 1890 there are no new records of Moquette creations.

Postal stationery is known with the cachet 'Forwarded by Moquette Ketegan Soerabaja', little is known however about forwarding activities of Moquette.

Indonesian Numismatic Cabinet

In 1900 he founded the Indonesian Numismatic Cabinet in which he was active as curator. He wrote the numismatic standard work "The coins of the Indies" which was published in the years 1906-1910 in the Journal of the Batavian Society of Arts and Sciences, and articles on the Hindu coins of Java.

Ethnographic and historical research

In the early 1900s Moquette did ethnographic and historical research on Muslim tomb inscriptions and the ancient history of North Sumatra and the Malay peninsula. On 24 April 1924 he was appointed correspondent for the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences in Amsterdam for the "Afdeling Letterkunde" (department of literature).

References

Jean Pierre Moquette Wikipedia