Il est marié avec Sara Lindes.
Ils se sont mariés environ 1586.
Enfant(s):
Found in "Studia Rosenthaliana" DS 135 N4S7 Volume 12, July 1978, page 173. ("History of the Jews of the Netherlands Antilles" page 992), it would seem that he was also known as Sebastian. He was a shipping merchant who is named in numerous deeds in Studia Rosenthaliana. The first Jew buried in the first jewish cemetery in the Netherlands, Groet near Almaar in 1602 and inaugurated after the new sites official 1616 opening. But by 1626 the remains of 74 Groet burials had been transferred to Ouderkerk, in actual use since 1614 and the oldest European Jewish cemetery still in use. May also have been know as Sebastian Pimentel. A substantial Sephardic merchant who settled in Amsterdam before the arrival of the first group which came directly from Portugal was Garcia Pimentel (Mordechai Abeniacar), who arrived probably from Venice in 1596 and who traded with Lisbon, North Africa and Levant. He would have been familiar with formal Judaism of Venice and Levant where he had lived for some time. The Pimentels were an extremely prominent Sephardic family in Venice and Constantinople where one of Garcias brothers was a Rabbi and probably played a major role in the early judaization of the Marrano immigrants in Amsterdam. Sephardic Immigration Into The Dutch Republic, 1595-1672, Jonathan Israel) to:
Sara Lido (Lindez), Source Monis Family, Source The Monis Family. Also known as Lianor Guttieres & Sara Abeniacar. Can be found in "Studia Rosenthaliana" DS 135 N4S7 Volume 12, page 173. "American Jewish Archives" volume XLIV Spring/Summer, 1992 Number 1, Page 105.
From Gallia Hoz in Geni.com:
Notarial Records from Amsterdam's Portuguese Jewish Community. No. 55 (1599, March 17, Not. Arch. 83, fol. 37v-38v, Not. Jan Fransz. Bruyningh.) Power of attorney granted by Garcia Pimentel to Jan Jansz. Klinckhamer of Danzig, to secure from Hans de Volts settlement of what is owing to him. Garcia Pimentel, merchant of Amsterdam, grants power of attorney to Jan Jansz. Klinckhamer, merchant and burgher of Danzig, or his agent, to have seized the merchandise, claims and credits of Hans Volts (Vols), held by Philippus Asueres or others who conducted any administration or management for Volts, in order to be able to recover in this way the claim he has on Volts. (1)
(1) From the deed of 18 March 1599, fol. 41 of the same protocol it appears that Hans Volts is not present in his residence in Amsterdam and is rumoured to be insolvent.
Alias Garcia Pimentel:
Garcia is onder verschillende namen bekend. In de Studia Rosenthalia worden veel daden van hem als scheepshandelaar genoemd. Hij was de eerste jood die in Groet bij Alkmaar begraven werd in 1602. In 1626 is hij met 74 andere stoffelijke resten verplaatst naar Ouderkerk aan de Amstel.
Voordat de eerste groep joden uit Spanje/Portugal arriveerde was Garcia al een gesetteld persoon in Amsterdam. Waarschijnlijk kwam hij uit Venetie in 1596 en handelde hij met Portugal, de Levant en Noord-Afrika.
De Pimentels waren een zeer vooraanstaande pamilie in Venetie en in Constantinopel. Garcia had een broer die Rabbi was, die een vooraanstaande rol speelde in de judeicatie van de Marrano´s in Amsterdam.
Zijn vrouw Sara Lido (Lindez) is ook bekend als Leonora Guttieres en ook als Sara Abeniacar (Bron: de Monis familie).
TRADUCCION:
García es conocido por una variedad de nombres. En la Studia Rosenthalia se mencionan muchos de sus actos como comerciante de barcos. Fue el primer judío en ser enterrado en Groet cerca de Alkmaar en 1602. En 1626 fue trasladado con otros 74 restos a Ouderkerk aan de Amstel.
Antes de que llegara el primer grupo de judíos de España/Portugal, García ya era una persona establecida en Amsterdam. Probablemente vino de Venecia en 1596 y negoció con Portugal, el Levante y el norte de África.
Los Pimentel eran una familia muy importante en Venecia y Constantinopla. García tenía un hermano que era rabino, que jugó un papel destacado en la judeiZación de los marranos en Amsterdam.
Su esposa Sara Lido (Lindez) también es conocida como Leonora Guttieres y también como Sara Abeniacar.
(Fuente: la familia Monis).
Communities of port Jews and their contacts in the Dutch Atlantic World
Article in Jewish History · June 2006
Wim Klooster
Clark University
78 PUBLICATIONS 84 CITATIONS
The conversos who traded and traveled in the Portugal-Brazil-
Amsterdam triangle helped create the premier Dutch commercial
circuit in the Atlantic world. These merchants included some of the earliest Sephardi settlers of Amsterdam, such as Manoel Rodrigues Vega and Garcia Pimentel, who arrived, respectively, from Antwerp and Venice in the mid-1590s. Their commercial contacts extended to Portugal, Brazil, North Africa, Spain, England, the Atlantic islands, and the Levant. Manuel`s brother, Pedro Rodrigues Vega, who moved from Antwerp to Amsterdam in 1599, soon left for Bahia. There he bought a sugar plantation and sent cargoes of sugar and ginger to
Manoel in Amsterdam.15 And in the year 1618 alone, Paulo de Pina imported cargoes, no doubt principally sugar, from Brazil on five different ships, three Dutch and two Portuguese.
15. Christopher Ebert, BDutch trade with Brazil before the Dutch West India Company, 1587Y1621,^ in Johannes Postma and Victor Enthoven, ed., Riches from Atlantic Commerce: Dutch Trans-Atlantic Trade and Shipping, 1585Y1817 (Leiden/Boston: Brill, 2003), 49Y73, esp. 66; Daniel M. Swetschinski, BKinship and commerce: The foundations of Portuguese Jewish life in 17th-century Holland,^Studia Rosenthaliana 15 (1981): 52Y74, esp. 63Y64.
Garcia Pimentel y Gomes de Orta | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
± 1586 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Sara Lindes |
Les données affichées n'ont aucune source.