Hofje van Noblet
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The Hofje van Noblet is a hofje in Haarlem, the Netherlands.
It was built in 1761 from the legacy of Leonard Noblet and his sisters Sara en Geertruida.
The houses in the hofje are built in the garden of the house of the Noblet family, Haerlem en Spaargesigt. The father of Leonard, Elezar Noblet, bought it in 1737. The Noblet family originally came from Amsterdam.
Because Leonard, Sara and Geertruida had no legal heirs, they decided to construct a common last will. They wrote that they wanted to found a hofje, and that the governors of the nearby Hofje van Staats would be the executors of their will.
The hofje was build with 20 houses. Ten for women from Haarlem, on the east-side of the hof, and ten for women from Amsterdam, at the west-side. The women living there had to be at least 50 years old, should have been single their whole life and had to have been member of the Nederduits Gereformeerde Kerk, an old name of the Dutch Reformed Church.
A part of the original house of the Noblet family serves as the house of the supervisor of the hofje, another part is the official housing of the governors of the hofje (who are also the governors of the Hofje van Staats).
The main entrance of the hofje is located at the Nieuwe Gracht and there is a back entrance at the Parklaan. When the hofje was build that was not the Parklaan, but the Achter Nieuwe Gracht, a canal. The entrance to the old house of Noblet family is located at the Hooimarkt.
The hofje has been renovated in 1992, when the amount of houses was reduced from 20 to 16 to allow for bigger houses.
Address: Nieuwe Gracht 2
[edit] References
- Haarlems hofjes, Dr. G. H. Kurtz, Schuyt & Co C.V., Haarlem, 1972, ISBN 90-6097-027-6
- Door gangen en poorten naar de hofjes van Haarlem, L. Peetorn and L. van der Hoek, Stichting Uitgeverij Barabinsk Leiden, 2001, ISBN 90-73983-17-7