(1) Zij is getrouwd met Pieter van der Hoeven.
This was a marriage "by proxy", in other words Maria was in Batavia (where she had been living with her uncle, a Dr Bol) while her new husband was elsewjere in the Dutch East Indies (possibly Timor?)
Zij zijn getrouwd op 11 oktober 1881 te Batavia, Dutch East Indies, zij was toen 22 jaar oud.
(2) Zij is getrouwd met Theodorus Azon Louis Jacometti.
Zij zijn getrouwd op 5 november 1884 te Loemadjang, Dutch East Indies, zij was toen 25 jaar oud.
Kind(eren):
Maria left Holland on January 13, 1879, aged 19, for Batavia in the Dutch Est Indies, where she joined the household of her uncle (a brother of her mother), Doctor Bol. Dr Bol was a head of the "Geneeskundige Dienst" (Medical Service) in Batavia.
She soon met Captain Pieter van der Hoeven, a ship's captain with the Holland America Line who had gone to the Dutch East Indies "for health reasons". He eventually became harbour master in Timor.
They married by proxy in Batavia on October 11, 1881, not long after Maria's 22nd birthday. They had no children.
Maria apparently returned to Zaltbommel in The Netherlands after the death of her husband because the municipal records in Zaltbommel suddenly show her in December 1884 as having notified the council offices that she was leaving, back to Batavia. When exactly - or why - she had left Indonesia to return to Holland is not known, all we know is that at the end of 1884 she was once again on her way to Batavia.
The story was that she had been asked by her brother-in-law (later to be her second husband), Theodoor Azon Jacometti, to help him look after his two children after Maria's younger sister Johanna Petronella Adriana ("Jeannette") had died in 1883. However, the only children that the records show Theodoor Azon Jacometti to have had were born in 1887 and 1888 respectively and are in fact Maria's children, not Jeannette's.
She shows up as "Mevrouw (Mrs) M. Jacometti" in May 1890 when she is listed as a passenger on board the 'CONRAD' which left Amsterdam on May 10, 1890, destination Batavia, although she apparently took the train to Genoa and boarded the ship there. The ship's passenger list shows her as being accompanied on that trip by one child (not known which one) as well as her sister, Agnes Maria Dolphina Naessens.
Maria became mentally ill in Batavia, when exactly we don't know, but she returned to Holland where she was admitted to the "Meer en Berg" psychiatric institution in Santpoort (Bloemendaal). She never recovered and spent the rest of her life in institutionalised care.
We know that on December 31, 1921, she was transferred to psychiatric institution in Vught, where she remained until her death 18 years later, aged 79.
All in all, it is easy to conclude that Maria's life had not been a happy one.
Her death certificate was, for some reason, only issued a month later, on 27 July 1939, in Amersfoort, certificate number 317.
Maria Dionijsia Johanna Naessens | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
(1) 1881 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
(2) 1884 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Theodorus Azon Louis Jacometti |
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