? Commissioned by or for Constantijn Huygens (1596-1687), Plein, The Hague; ? his son, Constantijn Huygens II (1628-97), with the house on Plein, The Hague;{Leerintveld 1988, p. 100.} ? his son, Constantijn Huygens III (1674-1704), with the house on Plein, The Hague;{Leerintveld 1988, p. 101.} ? his mother, Susanna Rijckaert (1642-1712), with the house on Plein, The Hague;{Leerintveld 1988, p. 101.} ? her sister-in-law, Susanna Huygens (1637-1725), with the house on Plein, The Hague;{Leerintveld 1988, p. 101.} ? her daughter, Philippina Doublet (1672-1746), with the house on Plein, The Hague;{Leerintveld 1988, p. 101.} ? her daughter, Susanna Louisa Huygens (1714-85), with the house on Plein, The Hague;{Leerintveld 1988, p. 103.} ? her estate inventory, The Hague, 31 March 1786 (‘De vinding van Moses’);{GAH, NA 3520, notary Lambertus Sijthoff, no. 72; see also Van der Veen 1993, pp. 156-58.} ? purchased by Jacob Verheije van Citters (1675-1739), with the house on Plein, 12 February 1787;{Leerintveld 1988, p. 106.} purchased by Jonkheer Johannes Goldberg (1763-1828), with the house on Plein, The Hague, 15 April 1800;{Van der Haagen 1928, p. 37.} description of his house on Plein, The Hague, 1827, as an overdoor by [Jacob van] Spreeuwen;{Transcribed in Van der Muelen 1889, p. 76.} purchased by the State, with the house on Plein, The Hague, 5 January 1829;{Van der Muelen 1889, p. 72.} transferred to the Nederlandsch Museum voor Geschiedenis en Kunst, The Hague (inv. no. 116), 1874; transferred to the museum, as J.G. van Bronckhorst, February 1885
Bibliography and list of abbreviations for the provenance (pdf)