Adrianus Bonebakker (Tiel, 27 May 1767 – Amsterdam, 31 March 1842) was a Dutch goldsmith, silversmith and jeweller.
[1] Bonebakker was baptised as the son of Anthonij Bo[o]nebakker (1730-1797) and Maria Cornelia van Oosterhoudt (1734-1820) in Tiel on 31 May 1767.
Bonebakker partnered up with Diederik Lodewijk Bennewitz to take over a well-known Dutch gold, silver and jewellery shop in 1802, the Peirolet brothers’ business.
Although he was registered as a silversmith, Adrianus Bonebakker is not known to have produced any of his own work, according to the Dutch Institute for Art History.
A second set of keys to Amsterdam were produced in 1811 and handed to Napoleon Bonaparte on 9 October of that year.
This gift consisted of a 419-piece dinner service, an important part of which can still be admired in the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam.