Hij is getrouwd met (Niet openbaar).
Zij zijn getrouwd op 18 juli 1621 te Amsterdam, hij was toen 34 jaar oud.
Kind(eren):
The buyer, Jan Valcksz. de jonge (II), may be the son of the cloth dealer Jan Valcksz. (I) who paid a tax of 18 f. in 1585 at which time he lived on the Nieuwen Dijck. He bought a lot outside the Jan Rodenpoort on 12 October 1600 (Van Dillen, Amsterdam in1585, p. 109.) The presumed son of Jan Valcksz. I was called de jonge at the time of the present sale but was known as Jan Valcksz. de oude when he died some before 21 February 1634, when Jan Valcksz. de jonge (III), heir of Jan Valcksz. de oude (II), transferred some property (NA 595, not. 464, Not. Lamberti). It was presumably Jan Valcksz. II who was married to Grietie Jacobs Vinken. Their daughter Aefjen Jans Valck married Jan Claesz. (Coelick) on 18 July 1621. Jan Claesz. was buried on 13 May 1625. When his posthumous daughter Jannetie was baptized on 12 October 1625, Jacob Vallicksz. (probably of R 22128) was a witness (De Navorscher 55(1905), 219). Jan Claesz. Coelick was the brother of Aeltje Claes who married Hendrick Woutersz. Tholincx in 1623. Her manuscript notes on the family were published in De Navorscher 55(1905), pp. 216-222). Her sister Jannetje Claes married Adriaen Jacobsz. van Leeuwarden on 2 June 1604. Jan Valcksz. II invested 2,400 f. in V.O.C. shares on behalf of Cornelis Bas in Alkmaar and 3,000 f. on behalf of Pieter (Jacobsz.) Bas (1563-1633) in the first subscription of 1602 (Van Dillen, Het oudste aandeelhoudersregister, pp. 184 and 205). Jan Valcksz. II paid a tax of 125 f. in 1631, at which time he lived on the O.Z. Voorburgwal (East side). Lijsbeth Jan Valxsz. paid a tax of 250 f., living on the O.Z. Achterburchwal (West side) (Kohier, fol. 173vo and 175, p. 40). In 1635, Jan Valcksz. II was living by the St. Jansbrugh (R 24466). This would seem to be consistent with his address in the 1631 Kohier when he was living on the O.Z. Voorburchwal near St. Jansstraet. It is possible, however, that the individual who invested in V.O.C. shares was the father of the one who paid the tax in 1631 . It may also be the first Jan Valcksz.de jonge who freighted a ship to fetch salt in Portugal in 1602 (Winkelman, Bronnen voor de geschiedenis van de Nederlandse Oostzeehandel R.G.P. 184(1983), pp. 108-9). In 1628, Jan Valcksz. (probably II) signed the Remonstrant petition of that year. In 1615, an individual named Jan Valcksz. appeared as the guardian of Maritgen Muller, the sister of the engraver Jan Muller, together with Jan Muller, at the request of her brother Adriaen Muller, regarding some debts that the latter had contracted (Oud Holland, 3(1885), p. 270.) This individual may be our buyer Jan Valcksz. II.
De getoonde gegevens hebben geen bronnen.