Drebbel, the Movie:    A ‘bold’ mind.  Cornelis Jacobszoon Drebbel (1572 - 1633)

                                                                                                                                   

Born-probably- in 1572 in the picturesque city of Alkmaar in North-Holland, where he grew up. Visited the Latin school of Rector Potter for several years. Alkmaar, in 1573 was the first city in the Low countries, that resisted a siege of the Spaniards. From 1598,

Drebbel registered several patents. The Staten General (Staten Island in NY was named after this institution) granted him a patent for a pump and a clock with perpetual motion. In 1602, he patented an improved chimney-design. Later in life Drebbel designed and built many innovations such as the microscope, an incubator, a solar energy system for London, air conditioning, etc. He was a genius with Measurement & Control Systems and Optics. Cornelis Drebbel and his family lived in various places in Europe.

 

During his lifetime, the Seven United Provinces (now The Netherlands) were at war with the Spaniards; a war that lasted 80 years and resulted in the official founding of a new country : The Netherlands- unofficially in 1579 when the Provinces declared themselves independent from Spain with the Union of Utrecht. Officially and recognised internationally in 1648 with the Peace of Westphalia. In the period 1606-1608 groups of Puritans leave England for Amsterdam to flee Anglican intolerance; finally they settle in Leiden. Leaving in 1620 for New England, because they do want their children to grow up in (too) tolerant Netherlands. Henry Hudson, an Englishman sailing for the Dutch enters, in 1609, Manhattan Harbor on the ship Halve Moon. Plymouth in New England, established by these Puritans sponsored by Virginia Company

 

New Amsterdam, in 1624, established by Dutch West India Company. 1664: New Amsterdam ceded to the English, the name changed to Fort James and then New York. On November 5 1626, Pieter Schagen from Alkmaar sends a letter to the States General in which he describes the situation of New Amsterdam and he announces that the island of Manhattan has been purchased from the Indians for goods worth sixty Dutch guilders.

 

 

                              

Fort Amsterdam
now New York

 

 

 

  1626, Letter of Pieter Schaghen from the city of Alkmaar about the purchase of Manhattan from the Indians

  

 

In 1590, Drebbel moved to Haarlem and became an apprentice at the Academy of the engraver Hendrick Goltzius and writer/painter/humanist Carel van Mander. There, he met his future wife, Sophia Goltzius, a sister of Hendrick. They marry in 1595 and get two sons and two daughters.

 

NPG 520In 1604, Cornelis Drebbel, his wife Sophia and their children leave for England. Probably invited by James VI the Stuart king of Scotland, who became King James I of England as successor of the Virgin Queen Elizabeth. Drebbel was invited because of his fame as technical innovator and builder of a Perpetuum Mobile that 'worked' through shifts in air temperature and pressure. The statesman and philosopher, Francis Bacon was quarter-maker, member of the commission, that investigated, at the order of James I-VI whether Eltham Palace will be suitable for the household of an ‘important stranger’. Bacon and Drebbel probably co-operated in London. Francis wrote’ the book The Advancement of Learning’ in 1605. In it, he introduces his famous project for the promotion of scientific progress, the Great Instauration. And Nova Atlantis, an utopian society with many innovations. Cornelis Drebbel constructions and innovations are mentioned in these books.

 

 I have taken all knowledge to be my province   Francis Bacon (1561-1626)

 

In his years at the Jacobean court, Drebbel is one of the tutors of Prince Henry, the son of James. As ‘court engineer for special effects’, he is involved in the masquerades, that are played at the Globe Theatre and at the court. Reluctantly, James ‘borrows’ Drebbel to Rudolph II, the Holy Roman Emperor, and Cornelis and his family spent 2 years at the court in Prague (1610 - 1612). He is back in England in1613.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


                                                                                                                        

 

Cornelis, Renaissance man, is an experimenter and empirist in the best Baconian tradition. Maybe he wasn’t a ‘real’ scientist, more a ‘vernufteling’. Drebbel, inventor, engineer, practicing technologist, resembles Thomas Edison. Active and creative: Drebbel constructed the first microscopes with two sets of convex lenses, with which 'new worlds' were discovered. The lenses were made with his lens-grinding machine.

 

He improved the telescope. His sons in law sold these devices throughout Europe. He manufactured and sold ‘laterna magica’ and camera obscura with a lens in the aperture, that projected images and which were used by Dutch painters like Vermeer. Based on his knowledge of ‘regulation’ of air, he developed a kind of’ thermometer, improved the barometer and ovens, furnaces, and incubators, that worked with a thermostatic regulator that controlled the air temperature. He made a clavecimbel that played on the rays of the sun or the heat of King James' hand and was able to let it rain, made artificial lightning and thunder on command. Developed and applied air conditioning: ‘the court that attended that demonstration fled because of the cold inside the demo-room; while –mid July- it was hot outside. His two sons-in-law started in Stratford-at-Bow-on-Lea, a dying business, based on his invention.

 

And - most spectacular - he ‘sailed between two waters’; In 1620 he made a trip with his submarine from the Towerbridge to Greenwich, with help of a fiery spirit (oxygen) to keep the crew of 12 oarsmen alive. Drebbel probably found a way to make oxygen from heating saltpeter. In 1662 Robert Boyle (1627-1691), one of the founders of modern chemistry and the Royal Society, wrote that he had spoken with 'an excellent mathematician', who was still alive and had been on the submarine, who said that Drebbel had a 'chemical liquor' that would replace that 'quintessence of air' that was able to 'cherish the vial flame residing in the heart'.

 

 

Drebbel, aged around 55 years.

 

 
 

 

During 1626 to 1628, after the death of James, Drebbel worked for the Office of Ordnance of the British Navy.

He manufactured floating ‘petards and firebombs, that were used by the military on the relieve of the French Huguenots under siege at La Rochelle.  In his final years, he was involved in a drainage project in East Anglia.

From 1629 until his death in 1633, he earned a living by keeping an alehouse.

 

Drebbel died in London on November 8, 1633.

 

http://sites.google.com/site/aboutdrebbel/_/rsrc/1224666799640/drebbel-in-beeld/Portret-door-Antoon-van-Dyck/AvD.jpg?width=400The Hermitage in St. Petersburg owns a portrait by Anthony van Dijck. This might be Cornelis Jacobszn, painted around 1623/33 in London.

 

In 1998, on the moon at -40,9 degrees latitude and 49 degrees longitude in the Clementine system, a crater with a diameter of 30 km is named Drebbel: one of the first Dutchmen on the moon. A nice token of his immortality. In Disney World in Orlando, at Epcot in the Pavilion the Living Seas, a picture of Drebbel and his sub-marine were at the entrance, now replaced by Nemo and his friends. Drebbel also figures in Startrek, the four Musqueteers and an episode of Sealab.

 


 

Suggested Episodes in ‘a’ film / multi-media project:  ‘The past is prologue’[1]  

From alchemy to the new sciences; the road to enlightenment and
the Industrial revolution                                                                                                                                                   

 

Episode 1:        1572 Drebbel is born in a violent society. the Seven United Provinces are at war with the Spaniards, August 23 or 24, 1572 the Bartholomew’s-night or Parisian Blood Wedding in Paris. The fall of Harlem and the siege and liberation of the city of Alkmaar from the Spanish army.

 

Episode 2:        The citizens of Alkmaar and surroundings start a wave of innovations. Mapping, measuring, mills, etc.  Wilhelm von Nassau murdered, Schagen the poet, etc. Haarlem; humanism, Coornhert, Carel van Mander, Goltzius, visit of Leicester, Drebbel marries Sophia Goltzius, etc.

 

Episode 3:        England in 1604: James VI – I arrives in London, Shakespeare, Jonson, Donne, Constantijn Huygens, Stevin, Maurits, Oldebarneveldt, Bacon, Sonoy

 

Episode 4:        Prague, Tycho Brahe, Kepler, Dr. Dee, perpetuum mobile, Rudolph II

 

Episode 5:        England again: death of Prince Henry, submarine, microscope, visits of Constantijn Huygens, Francis Bacon,

 

Episode 6:        France: de Peiresc, Rubens, Kircher,

 

Episode 7 :       England: Buckingham, Gerbier, battle at La Rochelle, Cambridge

 


 

Market: European broadcasting potential as Drebbel and his family lives and travels throughout Europe; Also interesting for USA audience: Leyden and Pilgrim fathers, Governor Winthrop in Connecticut, New Amsterdam, etc.

 

Subsidies ?   www.stimuleringsfonds.nl  European Union has an innovation program named Artemis. Budget € 1,5 bn. Drebbel, as a European ‘Edison’ might act as a catalyst for such program.

 


 

 
January 2007, written by: Hubert van Onna, Luiveland 20, 1861 JD Bergen, The Netherlands

Drebbologist            [email protected] Tel; 0031-653 996 111   www.drebbel.net



[1] Citation from the play, The Tempest by Shakespeare. Probably inspired by the

essay of Drebbel: About the Nature of the Elements and how they cause Wind, etc.