English Royal Collection, removed by King William III (1650–1702) for the Palace of Het Loo, Apeldoorn, The Netherlands, before 1702
At Het Loo until 1713
recorded in the valuation, 6–7 December 1712, as hanging in the great gallery, no. 87 (as Rubens)
in the list by Robert du Val, 1713, with inventory number ‘N 47’ (as Van Dyck)
and in the estate inventory, 8 April 1713, as hanging in the picture gallery, no. 856 (as Van Dyck)
Sold privately in August 1713 by Jan van Beuningen to an unknown person for 800 guilders
Count Alessandro Contini, Rome (as Van Dyck)
With Howard Young, New York, 1926 (as Van Dyck)
William T. Fisher, Detroit
William A. Fisher, Detroit (as Van Dyck), bequeathed by him and his wife toThe Detroit Institute of Arts (F60.5), from 1960 until 2002, when deaccessioned
New York, Christie's (‘Property of the Detroit Institute of Arts, sold to benefit the Acquisitions Fund’), 25 January 2002, lot 9 (as studio of Sir Anthony van Dyck)
Private collection, Ireland
From whom acquired by the present owner.