Rembrandt
15 July, 1606
Full Name: Rembrandt Harmenszoon van Rijn; Profession: Dutch Golden Age painter, printmaker, and draughtsman, a Baroque master renowned for psychologically complex portraits, biblical and historical scenes, and innovative use of light and shadow; Nationality: Dutch; Born: 15 July 1606; Birthplace: Leiden, Dutch Republic (present-day Netherlands), a major town in the province of Holland that nurtured many of the leading figures of the Dutch Golden Age; Generation: 17th‑century Dutch Golden Age / Baroque generation, central to the flourishing of European art and often described as one of the greatest storytellers in the history of painting; Chinese Zodiac: Wood Dog, based on the Chinese lunar year 1606 being classified as a Wood Dog year in specialized calendrical tables. Zodiac Sign: Cancer, as all individuals born on 15 July fall under the Cancer sun sign in Western astrology; Age in 2026: 420 (hypothetical age if living, calculated from his 1606 birth year). Marital Status: Married Saskia van Uylenburgh in 1634, widowed after her death in 1642, and subsequently in a long-term domestic partnership with Hendrickje Stoffels that functioned as a de facto marriage in social and emotional terms; Children: Four children with Saskia between 1635 and 1641, of whom three died in infancy and only their son Titus reached adulthood, plus a later daughter, Cornelia, born from his relationship with Hendrickje Stoffels, with Titus briefly marrying and having a daughter before his own early death that deepened Rembrandt’s later-life financial and emotional troubles; Description: Widely regarded as one of the greatest artists in history and a towering figure of the Dutch Golden Age, Rembrandt transformed European art through hundreds of paintings, etchings, and drawings that explored biblical narratives, mythological episodes, portraiture, and everyday life with unprecedented emotional depth, technical mastery, and narrative power; his innovative handling of chiaroscuro and his compassionate attention to ordinary faces earned him a reputation as “one of the great prophets of civilization,” while his personal story—marked by the early loss of multiple children, the death of Saskia, an extravagant lifestyle that led to bankruptcy, and a late period of introspective self-portraits and quietly spiritual scenes—has become a paradigmatic example of the artist as both visionary genius and vulnerable human being whose work continues to influence painters, printmakers, and viewers centuries after his death. Cause of Death: Died in Amsterdam on 4 October 1669, with historians generally attributing his death to natural causes in old age, since surviving contemporary records do not specify a precise medical diagnosis or a dramatic external cause.