JC
Jan Campert
Celebrity
Birth Date: Aug. 15, 1902
Birth Time: 5 a.m.
Birth City: Spijkenisse, South Holland, Netherlands
Leo
Degree : 21º24'39.64"
Sun Sign*
Sagittarius
Degree : 12º45'11.72"
Moon Sign
Mula
Pada : 4
Nakshatra
Leo
Degree : 0º33'38.32"
Ascendant
Updated at Apr 25, 2024
Created by admin.astronidan
JC
Aug. 15, 1902
5 a.m.
Spijkenisse, South Holland, Netherlands
Celebrity
Leo
Degree : 21º24'39.64"
Sun Sign*
Sagittarius
Degree : 12º45'11.72"
Moon Sign
Mula
Pada : 4
Nakshatra
Leo
Degree : 0º33'38.32"
Ascendant
Updated at Apr 25, 2024
Created by admin.astronidan
Welcome to Jan Campert's Kundali Profile page! This page is a hub for exploring the astrological reports, calculations, and different versions of Jan Campert's Kundali (if available). You can also discover associated life events, attributes, and Kundalis of other persons associated with Jan Campert.

Available Reports

Astrological reports assoicated with this Kundali

Kundali Details

Birth details and configuration for astrological analysis

Birth Details

Gender Male
Weekday Friday
Date Aug. 15, 1902
Time 5 a.m.
Daylight Saving No
City Spijkenisse, South Holland, Netherlands
Geo-location 51ºN50'42.0",
Timezone Europe/Amsterdam

Residence Details

City Spijkenisse, South Holland, Netherlands
Timezone Europe/Amsterdam

Time/Correction

Time (Europe/Amsterdam) Aug. 15, 1902, 04:40:28 AM
Time (UTC) Aug. 15, 1902, 04:40:28 AM
Time (LMT) Aug. 15, 1902, 04:57:47 AM
Time (Julian) 2415976.69476852
LMT Correction 0.2886 Hrs
Ayanmsha True Chitra - 22º28'47.03"

Birth Place

Birth location on map - Lat: 51ºN50'42.0" Lon: 4ºN19'45.01"

Life Attributes

List of attributes/tags and tag associated with this kundali.

Passions

Sexuality | Extremes in quantity

Vocation

Writers | Columnist/ journalist Writers | Detective/ Mystery Writers | Poet

Lifestyle

Social Life | Misfit

Notable

Famous | Other Famous

Life Story

Story of person and major life events assoicated with this Kundali

Dutch journalist, poet, writer and resistance member in Word War 2. Campert was the son of Petrus Remco Campert (b. 15 June 1874, Leiden - 8 October 1921, West Kapelle), a family doctor in Spijkenisse and Johanna Maria Anna van Hall (b. 1871). He followed the Higher Civic School (HBS) in Vlissingen (1915-1918) and the two year school for Trade and Commerce. From 1919 to 1926 he worked for an commercial bank, but in 1926 he changed to journalism working for local newspapers around Den Haag. In the twenties he also started to publish poetry, and in the thirties fiction. He co-authored detectives. During the second world war he was active in the Dutch resistance, both in words (remarkable war poetry) and in deeds. He smuggled around 20 Jews via Belgium to the Vichy route, but he was caught on 21 July 1942 near Baarle-Nassau when smuggling the 21 year old Jew Frans van Raalte to Belgium. Both of them and his companion Martien Nijkamp were taken prison. Van Raalte committed suicide the same day. Campert was send successively to the prison of Breda, concentration camps in Haaren, Amersfoort, Buchenwald/Dachau and at last (nov-jan 1943) to Neuengamme. According to the official Neuengamme concentration camp record he died 12 January 1943 13h30 in Neuengamme as a result of pleurisy. Other sources (Gerrit Kleinveld citing Jan van Bork in the NRC of 19 Febr 2005) stated that he was murdered by Dutch prisoners, because they accused him of betrayal of others in exchange for a better personal treatment. An investigation of the city of Den Haag refuted this accusation and concluded that the cause of death was tuberculosis that in turn was the result of the bad treatment and malnourishment in the German concentration camps. His most famous and after the war by the Dutch people iconified Song of the Eighteen Dead was first published in the illegal paper Vrij Nederland. It was written after the execution of fifteen resistance fighters and three February strike participants on 13 March 1941 at the now for the Dutch sacred Dead Remembrance place Waalsdorpervlakte. An illustrated version of it was illegally distributed in the spring of 1943 by Geert Lubberhuizen for 5 guilders a piece. 15,000 of them were sold by the illegal press and the money was used to hide and support Jewish children. The poem "De achttien dooden" is still often read on the Fourth Day of May, the day the Dutch people remember their second world war victims by hanging their flags half-mast high (Remembrance of the Dead). On the following Fifth Day of May (10/1), they celebrate their liberation by the Allied Forces. The poem of The Eighteen Dead starts with: "A cell is but six feet long and hardly six feet wide, yet smaller is the patch of ground, that I now do not yet know, but where I nameless come to lie, my comrades all and one, we eighteen were in number then, none shall the evening see come." In 1948 the Jan Campert price for poetry was named after him. Personal Jan Campert had the reputation of being a womaniser and a drinker. He had high ideals and problems with his work as a clerk. He was married twice and tried without success to play the role of an honourable family man. But he had a careless bohème style of living, that he called "slordig" and irresponsible sometimes. He married twice but had much more relations. From 8 Feb 1928 (The Hague) till their divorce on 19 Dec 1932 (The Haque) he was married to the actress Wilhelmina (Joeki) Broedelet (The Haque, 4 Oct 1903 — Amsterdam, 3 July 1996), from whom he got a son, the poet and writer Remco Campert (1929). From 16 Sept 1936 till 16 Jan 1939 he was married to writer Clara Eggink (no children). He also lived and worked together with writer Willy Corsari. But he had not a good feeling about it. In one of his last poems, Journaal XVI in "Huis en herberg" (House and shelter, 1941) he referred to the died poet Hendrik Marsman who wished a great poetical life: "Te erkennen te hebben gefaald, niet eens meeslepend en groot, is alle winst die ik heb behaald. Wie weet slaag ik in de dood." (To acknowledge of having failed [in this life], was all the gain I met. Maybe I succeed in death). Link to Dutch Wikipedia

Life Events

List of life events assoicated with this Kundali profile
S.No. Event Type Event Date Event Description
1

Published/Released

March 1, 1941

Work : Published/ Exhibited/ Released 5 March 1941 in Amsterdam (De achttien dooden) .

2

Published/Released

March 15, 1942

Work : Published/ Exhibited/ Released 15 March 1942 in Den Haag (Dichterschap en verantwoordelijkheid) .

S.No. Event Type Event Date Event Description
1

Marriage

Feb. 1, 1928

Relationship : Marriage 8 February 1928 in Den Haag (Joeki Broedelet) .

2

Divorce

Dec. 19, 1932

Relationship : Divorce dates 19 December 1932 in Den Haag .

3

Marriage

Sept. 16, 1936

Relationship : Marriage 16 September 1936 (Clara Eggink) .

4

Divorce

Jan. 16, 1939

Relationship : Divorce dates 16 January 1939 .

S.No. Event Type Event Date Event Description
1

Institutionalized

July 21, 1942

Social : Institutionalized - prison, hospital 21 July 1942 in Baarle-Nassau .

S.No. Event Type Event Date Event Description
1

Child Adopted

July 28, 1929

Family : Adopted a child 28 July 1929 at 3:00 PM in Den Haag (Remco Campert) .

S.No. Event Type Event Date Event Description
1

War or Terrorism

Jan. 12, 1943

Death by War or Terrorism 12 January 1943 at 1:30 PM in Neuengamme Concentration Camp (KZ Neuengamme) .

S.No. Event Type Event Date Event Description
1

Other Family

Jan. 1, 1943

Other Family 6 January 1943 in Neuengamme Concentration Camp (Last letter written: asked his mother to send him warm clothes) .

Calculations & Features

Calculation and analytics assoicated with this Kundali