Category Archives: Netherlands

Delft and Middelburg, Netherlands

26 September, 2023

The drive from Amsterdam to Delft is only about an hour so we don’t check out of our Amsterdam hotel until nearly midday. On the outskirts of Delft we refuel the car and stop off at a laundromat to do the weekly wash. Yes, we find another Speed Queen and manage to complete the laundry while we had a coffee at a nearby cafe.

Washing day in Delft.

The outskirts of Delft are a bit run down and it resembles a Turkish town rather than a Dutch one. Luckily we are only in town for two nights so we have a full day to check out the Old Town and visit the Delft Museum tomorrow.

Dixi dunnies on the move.

We are staying at the Shanghai Hotel which is supposed to be 4 star. It appears to have been originally built for Chinese tourists but now owned by an Indian family who have allowed the hotel to get very tired and it definitely lacks basic maintenance. At least the parking is free. WiFi is really patchy and not reliable enough to download any photos so the blog will have to wait until our next stop in Middelburg.

The Shanghai Hotel, Delft.

The hotel still has a Chinese-run restaurant on the mezzanine floor so we will probably try that out tonight. If it is really bad we have a Scottish franchise just around the corner… you know the franchise… McDonalds.

The food in the hotel restaurant is expensive for Chinese food but certainly edible. I manage to spill half my dinner down my freshly-washed and ironed polo shirt so Lynn made me hand wash it back in our room.

Washing my shirt….again!

27 September, 2023

As we are only staying 2 nights in Delft we have today to do the sights. We drive into town and park beside the Royal Delft Museum/Factory.

At the Delft Ware factory in Delft.

The Koninklijke Porceleyne Fles (known as Royal Delft) is the only remaining factory of c. 32 earthenware factories that were established in Delft in the 17th century.

At the beginning of the tour is an introductory film about the history of porcelain in the Netherlands, starting with a cache of Chinese porcelain on a Portuguese ship being ‘liberated’ by the Dutch and auctioned off, thereby the blue and white Chinese porcelain becomes very popular.

A tulip vase and a porcelain tile version of the “Night Watch” in the background.

Then the Dutch East India Company decided to trade in it and existing Dutch pottery factories chose to copy the pieces from China and to reproduce and sell them to the domestic market.

“De Porceleyne Fles” ( The Porcelain Bottle) was founded in 1653 by David Anthonisz. v. d. Pieth, at the Oosteinde in Delft. After 1750, the factory was successively owned by Christoffel van Doorne, his son Pieter van Doorne and Jacobus Harlees. The latter reintroduces the jar in the trademark for the first time in 70 years. It has remained part of the trademark ever since.

After Harlees decreased in 1786, the company was owned by his son Dirck Harlees. He then sold it to Henricus Arnoldus Piccardt, who was succeeded in 1849 by his daughter, Geertruida Piccardt who helped reduce its debt by introducing fireproof bricks.

Royal Delft tableware for the Royal Family.

The Dutch potteries faced competition from Wedgwood and the English so decided to emulate them by producing better products for cheaper. During 1876-1844 Delft engineer, Joost Thooft becomes the new owner, purchasing the factory from Geertruida Piccardt, introduces the current trademark and aims to revive the production of Delft Blue.

Courtyard displaying architectural ceramics.

1878-1930 Leon Senf becomes one of the most important designers after his apprenticeship with important painter Cornelius Tulk.

The four stages of production.

1895 saw the creation of the Building Ceramics Department after which the factory received many important orders for architectural ceramics including one for the Peace Palace in The Hague.

In 1900 Porcelyne Fles won the Grand Prix for its piece at the World Exposition in Paris. ‘Royal’ was awarded in 1919 as a sign of appreciation. 1978 saw the introduction of Black Delft in celebration of the factory’s 325th anniversary with the introduction of Jubilee to celebrate its 350th anniversary in 2003. 2008 a takeover and expansion culminating in the opening of the Royal Delft Experience in 2012.

Hand painting the Delft vases.

About 1.5 hours later we drive to 1 of 3 underground parking garages in Delft and make our way to the Eastern Gate (Oostpoort).

One of the many canals in Delft.

The Eastern Gate is an example of Brick Gothic northern European architecture and was built in the 1400s. Originally the walls of Delft had 8 gates and were the only ways to access the city.

Inside the Eastern Gate of Delft.

The gates along with the city’s canals and walls provided excellent defenses against hostile attacks. In fact, it was because of Delft’s strong defenses that, in 1572, William of Orange chose Delft as his base of operations.

Outside the Eastern Gate.

Around 1510 the towers were enhanced with an additional octagonal floor and high spires. To this day, the Gate still has a gate and drawbridge.

From the Gate we walk a couple of blocks to Beestenmarkt – you guessed it, a former cattle market which operated from 1595 to 1972. In 1969 the livestock market was relocated to a special hall but in 2001 the foot-and-mouth disease crisis marked the end of the market.

Canals covered in green vegetation.

Nowadays, the Beestenmarkt is a very popular social gathering and meeting area with numerous cafes, bars and restaurants plus trees that provide shade in summer months. Since 2001 the square has been used every winter as an ice-skating rink.

Beestenmarkt.

A block further on is the Markt. Dating back to the 12th century, de Markt is one of the largest and oldest market squares in Europe. The square is bordered by the Nieuwe Kerk (New Church) and the City Hall of Delft. Thursday is the main market day with 150 stalls actively selling cheese, fish, veggies, bread, nuts and other foods.

Delft City Hall.

Delft’s City Hall is a Renaissance-style building designed by Hendrick de Keyser after its predecessor the old, medieval building burnt down in 1618. Formerly used as the city’s government buildings, today it has fewer official functions. Marriage ceremonies have been happening here for centuries, even today. In fact, Johannes Vermeer registered his marriage with Catherine Bolnes here.

Later in the 18th century the building housed the gold and silversmith guild and pharmacist guilds. The City Hall tower was built around 1300. The tower has decorative clock faces and bells. It once functioned as a prison where Balthasar Gerards was imprisoned here prior to his execution for assassinating William of Orange.

Nieuwe Kerk (New Church).

Opposite City Hall is the Protestant Church, Nieuwe Kerk (New Church). In 1584 William the Silent was entombed here in a mausoleum designed by Hendrick and Pieter de Keyser. Since then members of the House of Orange-Nassau have been entombed in the royal crypt, including Queen Juliana and her husband Prince Bernhard in 2004. The church itself is an elaborately designed architecture with 22 columns surrounding the marble tomb of William of Orange.

The Royal Deflt shop and the cheese shop.

Many artisanal shops surround the Markt selling porcelain, cheese, sweets, writing equipment, Outside the market’s perimeter are pubs, cafes and open air terraces.

Leaves are starting to change with Autumn.

Our next stop is the Old Church. To get there we cut through a passageway which has some street art portraying Delft.

Street Art in Delft.

Then walking down Papenstraat we come across a Mosaic of Delft on a wall.

3D Ceramic model of the Old Town.

Which, when viewed up close is actually in 3D with both flat and raised buildings interspersed among the thousands of mosaic squares.

A town in miniature on the wall.

Founded in 1246 and sandwiched between Oude Delft and Voorstraat is the Old Church (Oude Kerk) nicknamed Oude Jan (Old John) and Scheve Jan (Skewed John), a Gothic Protestant church most famous for its 75-metre high leaning tower. Approximately 400 people are entombed in this church.Among them are Johannes Vermeer and the inventor of the microscope, Anthony van Leeuwenhoek.

The Old Church (Oude Kerk) in Delft.

Opposite is the Museum Het Prinsenhof.The Prinsenhof (The Court of the Prince) is an urban palace that dates back to the Middle Ages. It was here that William of Orange successfully fought against the Spanish occupation in the 16th century. William of Orange moved into the Saint Agatha cloister in 1572, later to be renamed the Prinsenhof and later still it became the Museum.

The Museum.

In 1584 William was murdered in the Prinsenhof by Balthasar Gerards. Established in 1911 the building now houses the municipal museum and displays a collection of Dutch Golden Age paintings, a history of Prince William of Orange and the creation of the Dutch Republic, 17th century art and the city’s famous Delftware tradition.

Cold drink at the Museum.

Here we sit for a while in the shady gardens behind the museum before we walk back to the parking garage and return to the hotel. As the Scottish restaurant is only a few steps away, we’ll forgo another expensive Chinese meal and head there instead for tonight’s dinner.

28 September, 2023

This morning, on our way to Middelburg, we’re going to go via The Hague which is only a 20-minute drive from Delft.

Although it’s 19 Deg C. it’s overcast and cool when we arrive and park the car at Plein 1813, next to the Nationaal Onafhankelijkheidsmonument (honestly!).

The National Monument in the middle of the square commemorates the victory over Napoleon, the end of the French period in the Netherlands, the independence and the foundation in 1813 of the Sovereign Principality of the United Netherlands, the predecessor of the United Kingdom of the Netherlands and the current Kingdom of the Netherlands. The monument was unveiled on November 17, 1869 by Prince Frederik of the Netherlands. The whole is a design by architect WC van der Waeyen Pieterszen and sculptor Jan Jozef Jaquet.

Independence Monument.

After a 12-minute walk we arrive at the object of our visit: The International Court of Justice, seated in the Peace Palace.

The International Court of Justice (ICJ) is one of the six principal organs of the United Nations (UN). It settles disputes between states in accordance with international law and gives advisory opinions on international legal issues. The ICJ is the only international court that adjudicates general disputes between countries, with its rulings and opinions serving as primary sources of international law (subject to Article 59 of the Statute of the International Court of Justice).

The ICJ consists of a panel of 15 judges elected by the UN General Assembly and Security Council for nine-year terms. No more than one judge of each nationality may be represented on court at the same time, and judges collectively must reflect the principal civilizations and legal systems of the world. Seated in the Peace Palace in The Hague, Netherlands, the ICJ is the only principal UN organ not located in New York City. Since the entry of its first case on 22 May 1947, the ICJ has entertained 186 cases through January 2023. Its official working languages are English and French.

The Hague International Court of Justice.

While circumnavigating the Court, we walk past a building which houses, amongst others, the Australian Embassy.

The Australian Embassy in The Hague.

Leaving The Hague, the A4 takes us past Rotterdam Port and what seems like endless kilometres of oil and gas pipes, tanks and towers.

Industrial Rotterdam outskirts.

After going through 2 tunnels – the Benelux Tunnel and the Botlek – the N57 takes us SW to Rijksweg, across the island of Neeltje Jans to the delightful village of Oostkapelle.

Tide management gates.

The village was first mentioned in 1162 as Hoostcapelle, “eastern chapel”. It developed as a circular church village in the Early Middle Ages on a ridge. Oostkapelle was home to 818 people in 1840. In the 20th century, Oostkapelle started to develop as a holiday resort and spa town, due to its vicinity to the dunes and the North Sea.

Dorpskerk Oostkapelle – Protestant Church

Along the western coast of Zeeland are sandy beaches which are backstopped by a very high dyke.  On the landward side are small car parks that appear at regular intervals, right next to a very steep set of stairs scaling the dyke.

Stairs to the top of the Dyke.

Although there is nobody in the car park they charge a fee to park here in the middle of nowhere.

Bikes on Dykes.

On the other side is a small road, next to either a sandy beach or, near the lighthouse (Vuurtoren Noorderhooft), rocks that have been covered in bitumen, down to the sea. Ugh!

Lighthouse on the sea wall & bitumen beach.

Opposite that lighthouse, from on top of the dyke a village can be seen far below – Westkapelle – which is dominated by a tall tower with a light on top.

Lighthouse and windmill below sea level.

Westkapelle is on the westernmost tip of Walcheren and is surrounded by the sea on three sides. On 3 October 1944, the dyke to the south of town was destroyed by British bombers – an event still known in Westkapelle simply as “‘t Bombardement” (“the Bombardment”) – to flood the German occupation troops in Walcheren and so make liberation easier. 180 inhabitants were killed in the bombing and the village was all but wiped off the face of the earth by the bombs and the incoming sea. On 1 November 1944, during the Battle of the Scheldt British and Norwegian commandos performed an amphibious landing on the northern and southern edges of the gap made in the dyke. During these landings, only six people remained in the village; the rest of the survivors had been evacuated to other villages nearby. It took until 12 October 1945, more than a year later, to finally close the gap in the dyke.

Westkapelle has two active lighthouses. The oldest lighthouse (Vuurtoren ‘t Hoge Licht) , built 1458–1470, 52 m (171 ft) tall, visible from 28 nautical miles (52 km; 32 mi) and standing prominently at the entrance to the village, is the remainder of a church that burned down in the 18th century. In 1818 the light was added to the top. The other one (Vuurtoren Noorderhooft), standing on the outer slope of the dyke, was built in 1875 of cast iron, is only 16 m (52 ft) tall and has a visibility range of 13 nautical miles (24 km; 15 mi).

Vuurtoren ‘t Hoge Licht.

Together they form leading lights, that lead vessels coming from the northern part of the North Sea into the narrow and busy shipping lane directly under the south west coast of Walcheren, that brings them into the Scheldt estuary and towards the ports of Flushing, Terneuzen, Ghent (via the Ghent–Terneuzen Canal) and Antwerp.

Another traditional windmill.

Heading south on the N288 towards Fort Rammekens, we come across several laybys reserved for tractors.

By 2.15 pm we arrive at Fort Rammekens, the oldest existing sea fort in Western Europe. Fort Rammekens is a Dutch fort near Ritthem, at the mouth of the former Welzinge canal, which provided access to the port of Middelburg, a few kilometres east of Vlissingen on the Western Scheldt. Originally the fort was also called Zeeburg. Until the French period, the fort stood half in the open sea and there were buildings on it.

Tractor lane on the highway.

Built in 1547 by order of Mary of Hungary who as governor of the Netherlands, it’s task was to protect and control the busy shipping routes to Middleburg, then the largest merchant city in the Northern Netherlands and Antwerp. Italian engineer Donato de Boni di Pellizuoli was responsible for its design. It was built over the former seawall and given a diamond shape with a bastion facing the Westerschele. The fort played an important role in the 80 Years’ War between 1560 and 1575 changing hands several times. On 8 February 1574 the transfer of the city of Middelburg was signed here by Cristobal de Mondragon and Willem van Oranje. The sea fort was abolished as a fortress in 1869 but remained in use as a power magazine. Today it’s a museum.

The old defense Fort now behind a Dyke.

We drive into the medieval section of Middelburg where our hotel, the Boutique Hotel Roosevelt, is located.

The hotel is located in a 1950s monument by architect JF Berghoef and is located on the Burg of Middelburg. It is named after the former president of the United States with Zeeland ancestors, Franklin D. Roosevelt.

The Roosevelt Hotel in Middelburg.

In early 2015, architectural firm ESTIDA completed the interior of hotel. The starting point for the design and implementation was the elegant style of the 1930s and 1940s, the period of Roosevelt’s presidency.

A striking detail in the use of color is the color aquamarine, President Roosevelt’s favorite color. The hotel complements this 1930s zeitgeist by, for example, using the CO Bigelow soap that Eleanor Roosevelt used.

In 2016 the hotel was officially opened by the grandchildren of Roosevelt. The Roosevelt family was originally from Zeeland and Middelburg is the capital of Zeeland.

The glockenspiel tower next door.

Next door to the hotel is Nieuwe Kerk (New Church), part of the former Abbey of Middelburg. Next to the church is the Koorkerk (Choir Church) and the Lange Jan tower. On the half hour we are treated to a melody of bells from the tower – which actually sounds like “We wish you a merry Christmas” – followed by the appropriate number of bongs for the hour.

The Hotel bar and restaurant.

Once we check in we need to park our car at an underground parking garage, 6 minutes’ walk away. Walking back to the hotel we check out the historic city centre and Thursday’s market in the large market square.

Our room at the Roosevelt.

Tonight we will be having dinner in the hotel restaurant. The menu is limited but it will have to do. Turns out the food is delish!

29 September, 2023

Aahh…a sleep-in. We had elected to break our fast at 9:30 am and so get to enjoy some extra shut-eye. The overcast morning and rain also helped.

Breakfast is served at our table, rather than the dreaded buffet. It’s so nice to be waited on and to be offered a ‘high tea’ version of breakfast.

Breakfast in the Hotel.

I have spent the entire morning trying to get car insurance for the Insignia. Again the Department of Making things more difficult than necessary has been at work. Car insurance is compulsory in the UK but it is both expensive and difficult to buy. So many rules and conditions that seem to contradict each other.

After a morning of ‘admin’ stuff including trying to get car insurance for the Insignia, we head outside and are reminded that we are increasingly on the wrong side of the autumn equinox. Brrr! A cold breeze whips the skeins of yellowed leaves along the cobble stones.

Nieuwe Kerk (New Church).

We walk around the outside of the Nieuwe Kerk and into Abdijplein, what would have been the former Abbey’s inner square.

The 16th century brass canon with a 20th century twist.

Along one side of the square is the Zeeuws Museum which moved to this location in 1972. Its collection is about the province of Zeeland and includes Zeeland tapestries, the historical collection of the Royal Zeeland Society of Sciences, porcelain from the Bal collection, Zeeland fashion and regional dress and the collection of contemporary art.

The Zeeuws Museum.

Coming full circle we enter the New Church. Its lofty space is surprisingly empty except for an exceptional-looking organ. The current Van Leeuwen organ was built in 1954, to replace the Kam organ that was lost in May 1940 due to war.

Organ builder Willem van Leeuwen from Leiderdorp built a completely new interior in the old case in 1954. The organ case comes from the Duyschot organ (1693), which served in the Oude Lutherse Kerk in Amsterdam until 1884. Before it moved to Middelburg, it was housed in the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam.The pipework of the Duyschot organ was lost in 1884.

In 2001 the organ case, the painted shutters and the sculpture were restored and in 2004 Flentrop Orgelbouw in Zaandam performed a major restoration.

The Van Leeuwen Organ, New Church.

Between the 2 churches is the Lange Jan tower and the Wandelkerk (Walking Church), where the 17th century tomb for admirals Johan and Cornelis Evertsen by the famous sculptor Rombout Verhulst are located. Both brothers were killed in 1666.

Evertsen Brothers’ tomb.

Back outside we head for a Reigerstraat looking for a restaurant for tonight. At the corner of the church precinct and Reigerstraat is an amazing florist shop – selling fresh and ‘real-looking’ artificial blooms and an astonishing array of vases.

Huis van Bloemen.

Inside is a riot of colours, fragrances and textures.

Huis van Bloemen – interior.

Reigerstraat houses a variety of restaurants and has a canopy of greenery and gorgeous Asian lanterns – just like Hoi An, Vietnam!

Reigerstraat.

From Reigerstraat we walk down Lange Delft back to the Market Square where the Stadhuis (Town Hall ) is located in all its splendour and is considered one of the finest gothic buildings in the Netherlands.

Construction began in 1452 and was supervised by several generations of the Flemish family of architects, the Keldermans. Completed in 1520, the town hall received a facade with gothic windows, red-white shutters, smaller turrets and 25 statues of Zeeland’s counts and contesses of the time.

The building has one main tower which the Middelburgers call ‘Malle Betje’ – a mocking name due to the fact it used to run behind the town’s other clock tower, the ‘Lange Jan’.

Like most of the old town centre, the town hall suffered German bombardments. Old paintings and documents were lost and only the exterior remained. A large restorative campaign started which lasted until late in the 20th century.

Town Hall.

By preevening (pre-evening) the clouds have dispersed and the sun is shining. We plan to head out to find a simple restaurant somewhere near the market square.

Lynn has soup and I have fish and chips for dinner and we follow this up with a shared waffle and strawberries.

30 September, 2023

Another sunny day as we head out to see what goes on in Middelburg on a Saturday.

As we walk from the market square down ?, one of the radiating streets from the square, we see an interesting building at its end but across the Binnengracht canal.

All we can discover is that it houses a restaurant and the Schuttershof Filmtheater.

Schuttershof Filmtheater.

Returning to the town hall square there is a smaller market on here today, offering only food.

Cheese stall – Saturday morning food market in the square.

The afternoon is spent at the hotel finalising our car insurance then we head out to find a restaurant for dinner.

We find a pub in Plein 1940 but it is fully booked inside, so we have to make do with an outside table. It turns out it is a lot more chilly than we were expecting but the waitress kindly gives us a couple of blankets. Just the ticket!

Dinning Al Fresco in the late chilly evening.

As I head back to the hotel, Lynn takes some photos of the city’s illuminated landmarks.

Evening lighting of the Town Hall.

The clear night sky, cool air and magnificent subjects enable brilliant illuminations.

Lange Jan Tower at night.

1 October, 2023

It is forecast to get to around 23 Deg C today so after breakfast we head out to check out the flea market set up in the square this morning. This is probably the last really warm and sunny day this autumn so I take advantage and dress in my shorts and a polo shirt for this morning’s walk around town.

The Flea Market in the Market Square.

This market square sure gets a good workout – Thursday market, Saturday food market, Sunday flea market – which is great to see.

Goods on offer range from jewellery to records, binoculars, cameras, toy cars, embroidery, dolls, pictures, glassware, crockery, cutlery, cookware, old medical equipment, wooden skates – you name it, it seems to be for sale here, all with a Dutch influence.

Checking out a fake Rolex.

As it is such a nice day we decide to go to Cafe Bommel which is on the edge of the square for a coffee in the sun. Unlike last evening which was decidedly cool, we are soon baking in the sun.

Stopping for a coffee in the sunshine.

There is supposed to be a jazz concert at our hotel this afternoon so we plan to be back by early afternoon so that we can get a seat at the session.

Noticeboard at the hotel.

Just after the scheduled starting time of 2:30 pm the Desa Session Band takes to the stage in the hotel’s shady courtyard.

We are treated to an hour of jazz, with the occasional song, before they take a half-hour break.

Jazz on a sunny Sunday afternoon in our backyard.

Then they return for another hour during which a woman from the audience is invited to take to the stage where she very credibly sings a couple of songs, one using the scat technique.

What a pleasant way to spend a Sunday afternoon. We’ll probably go out for ice cream this evening before we retire. We are driving to Ghent, Belgium tomorrow.

Leeuwarden & Amsterdam, Netherlands

19 September, 2023

Today we have a 240 kms trip ahead of us as we drive from Bremen into the Netherlands. We leave Bremen at 11:45 am and drive into an overcast and very windy day with the occasional downpour.

Leaving Germany for The Netherlands.

Instantly we know we have left Germany – the landscape is decidedly flat and there are double vowels everywhere.

What’s your point?

Not to mention the odd ‘traditional’ windmill amongst the stands of modern wind turbines.

Definitely in The Netherlands.

Neither of us had been to northern Netherlands before, hence the decision to visit Leeuwarden. Co-incidentally, we discover that Anne and Jurgen’s daughter, Nicola, studied wildlife management here.

Not far to go to Leeuwarden.

Around 2.30 pm we arrive in Leeuwarden at our accommodation which is located on the edge of the old town.

Staying at the Mayor’s House.

Our B&B is the former home of one Wilco Julius van Welderen Baron Rengers (1835-1916) during his period as City Councillor of Leeuwarden from 1867-77. He later became Mayor of the city and Member of the First and Second Houses of Parliament.

In our room, the Royal Salon, there is a large portrait of him over the marble fireplace.

We are on the ground floor with a view to the outer city and also onto the narrow lane that leads to the old town and canals. Our parking is free (for a change) and easy to access behind the building.

Our large room and large bed in Leeuwarden.

Just as we venture out to do a quick recce of the town, it starts to rain, but the quaintness of the town distracts us from the inclement weather.

The builder should have gone to Specsavers.

Like Bremen, the old town is on an island created and surrounded by a defensive moat, and it is also bisected by several canals. In the main old town square Lynn notices that the Specsavers building is not quite square and leans to the left. She makes the comment that perhaps the builder should have gone to Specsavers. LOL.

Quaint downtown Leeuwarden.

The region has been continuously inhabited since the 10th century. It came to be known as Leeuwarden in the early 9th century AD and was granted city privileges in 1435. It is the main economic hub of Friesland, situated in a green and water-rich environment. Built on reclaimed land, half the province is below sea level. Leeuwarden is a former royal residence and has a historic city centre, many historically relevant buildings, and a large shopping centre with squares and restaurants. Leeuwarden was awarded the title European Capital of Culture for 2018.

The exotic dancer Mata Hari was born in this city. So was the painter Lawrence Alma-Tadema, who added his middle name to his surname to be an early entry in alphabetical catalogues, and his fellow artist M. C. Escher. The town also has a link with Rembrandt: his first wife, Saskia van Uylenburgh, born in 1612, was the daughter of a local grandee.

Internationalism is deeply-ingrained here. From Maria Louise of Hesse-Kassel (1688-1765), is descended every crowned head in modern Europe, including the late Queen Elizabeth II. Twice regent, Maria-Louise designed her own unostentatious, elegant palace, which dominates the fine main street to the light and airy Grote Kerk, where she is buried.

20 September, 2023

Would you believe it’s 9.30 am before we wake this morning? That’s about 12 hours’ sleep. We must have been more tired than we thought!

There are numerous cafes near our B&B so we walk to the nearest. No guns this morning but toys of another persuasion!

Really? And on the way to breakfast.

Keeping to the erotic theme, after breakfast we visit a statue of Mata Hari which is located outside the house where she was born.

Mata Hari, pseudonym of Margaretha Geertruida (Griet) Zelle (Leeuwarden, August 7, 1876 – Vincennes, October 15, 1917), was a Frisian exotic dancer and lady-in-waiting. During the First World War she was recruited as a spy. However, she was accused of double espionage and shot by the French. The question of whether she was really a double agent is still a matter of debate and has contributed to her legend.

The birth place of Mata Hari.

We then walk across the island and over the moat to a round-a-bout at the end of Harlingerstraatweg to view an uncolourful monument to – naturally – the Friesian cow.

The Holstein Friesian is an international breed or group of breeds of dairy cattle. It originated in the Dutch provinces of North Holland and Friesland and in Schleswig-Holstein in northern Germany. It is the dominant breed in industrial dairy farming worldwide, and is found in more than 160 countries. It is known by many names, among them Holstein, Friesian and Black and White.

And the birth place of the Fresian cow as well.

On our way to a viewing some interesting sailing vessels moored along the moat, the roadway starts to lift in order to let a number of pleasure boats move from one section of the moat to another.

Letting the boats through the canal.

Moored along the moat (Noorderstadsgracht) on the other side of the road there is a long line of what appear to be flat-bottomed sailing ships. These were built mainly for use in the Wadden Sea and the English Channel.

This ship type has no beam keel but characteristic of these vessels are the two leeboards and the extremely low draft of around 1-1.5 metres allowing sailing at low tide on large parts of the Wadden Sea. Usually built between 7 and 30 m in length they have 1 to 3 masts.

In the province of Friesland, flat-bottomed barges (mostly tjalks and prams) were used to transport their cargo (peat, fertilizer, sand) through shallow channels from Friesland to Westland and Randstad.

Canal barges that are now houses.

Nearby is Oldehove, a leaning and unfinished church tower in the medieval centre of Leeuwarden. Oldehove is also the name of an artificial mound on which the late 9th century church dedicated to Saint Vitus was built. It is over 39 metres tall and 1.99 metres off plumb.

Another leaning tower.

In 1529, Jacob van Aaken started the construction of this leaning, crooked and ultimately unfinished tower. The intention was that a new church would be built next to the Oldehove to replace the old St. Vitus Church, but this never happened. The tower should have been more than 120 meters high. Things were not going well for master builder Jacob van Aaken, because the tower collapsed during construction. An attempt was made to continue laying bricks perpendicularly on the crooked substructure, but unfortunately this was without the desired result. In 1532, Jacob van Aaken was dismissed and replaced by Cormelis Frederiks. Construction stopped in 1533 and never resumed. The tower has never had any special functions, yet the tower has become one of the most important symbols of the city of Leeuwarden.

Adjust the inside floors rather than fix the lean.

Leeuwarden, like most of the European towns we’ve visited so far, is also dedicated to the cyclist, with pedestrians being marginalised. Cars in the narrow lanes are the least of a pedestrians problems. Cyclists everywhere and even worse… silent electric motorcycles. Watch your step at all times.

The only bike in this town that won’t try to run you down.

Walking past the cinema and the theatre we come across these 2 plastic, outdoor “pissoirs” which accommodate 4 users each – thankfully not at the moment! We must be getting closer to Paris.

No privacy in these privvies.

Every winter, skaters are poised for news that the ice on canals between the 11 cities of Friesland is, at every point, at least 15cm thick. Then, at only a day’s notice, 30,000 participants assemble for the 200km race from city to city, starting and ending at Leeuwarden. Or they would do, but rising temperatures mean that the last such event was in 1997; since the launch of the Elfstedentocht in 1909, the race has been staged only 15 times. Even the last sharp winter – remember the Beast from the East? – could not bring about a race to open Leeuwarden’s year as capital of culture. And so the city chain has been marked instead by the commissioning of 11 fountains, one in each city of the skaters’ route. Leeuwarden’s, opposite the railway station, shows two children’s faces in oversized profile, and the water takes the form of a mist.

Entitled ‘Love’ it consists of two 7-meter-high sculptures of a boy and a girl. They appear to be looking at each other, but their eyes are closed and their facial expressions are serene.

Usually, but not today, a 2-metre-high mist hangs around them. According to the artist, Plensa, ‘They dream, for children the future is a dream full of promises.’ The Spanish artist got his inspiration for the mist fountain when he saw the mist above the Frisian fields early in the morning. ‘In Friesland,’ he said, ‘the water comes from the ground.'”

Modern sculpture near the railway station.

Along the southern moat (Zuiderstadsgracht), there continues long lines of moored flat-bottomed sailing ships.

Yet more canals.

Just over the road from our B&B is the Library, the former city gaol.

The city gaol now the Library.

Walking back into the old town we come to the original Stadhuis (Town Hall).

The original 18th century City Hall.

And, next door, its contemporary.

The 20th Century City Hall.

But, in the middle of the square is a small garden which seems to be a monumental garden dedicated to William of Orange.

Wilhelminaboom – a monumental garden to William of Orange.

As it turns out, William of Orange lived in the building to the right of the garden below, previously the Royal Residence, now the Het Stadhouderlijk Hof.

Het Stadhouderlijk Hof Hotel.

William IV, Prince of Orange (September 1, 1711 – October 22, 1751), was the first Hereditary Stadtholder of The Netherlands. he was born in Leeuwarden, the son of Johan Willem Friso, Prince of Orange, head of the Frisian branch of the House of Orange-Nassau, and of his wife Marie Luise of Hesse-Cassel. He was born six weeks after the death of his father.

William succeeded his father as Stadtholder of Friesland and also, under the regency of his mother until 1731, as Stadtholder of Groningen. In 1722 he was elected Stadtholder of Guelders. In 1733 William was named a knight of the Order of the Garter. On March 25, 1734 he married Princess Anne, daughter of King George II of Great Britain and Caroline of Ansbach. In 1739 William inherited the estates formerly owned by the Nassau-Dillenburg branch of his family, and in 1743 he inherited those formerly owned by the Nassau-Siegen branch of his family.

In April 1747 the French army entered Flanders. In an effort to quell internal strife amongst the various factions, the States-General of the Netherlands appointed William to the hereditary position of General Stadtholder of all seven of the United Provinces. William and his family moved from Leeuwarden to The Hague.

Which means we have come full circle as far as William is concerned, having visited the Museum of Orange Heritage in Sloan’s House, Loughall, County Armagh on 27 January, 2023 – the museum being dedicated to the Orange Order since its inception in Ireland in 1795.

Typical narrow and picturesque streets of Leeuwarden.

On our way back to the B&B we pass by De Waag, the weighing house. The oldest mention of a weighing house in Leeuwarden dates from 1483 and it is assumed that there was a weigh house in Leeuwarden as early as the fourteenth century.

The weighing house mentioned in 1483 probably stood just east of the current building. The weighing house that stands on Waagplein today was built around 1590. At that time it was mandatory for a market trader to have his goods weighed at the weighing house. This obligation mainly applied to (wholesaler) traders in meat and dairy. Today it is a lunch cafe.

De Waag.

Tonight we are trying one of our host’s restaurant recommendations: Dax Gastrobar on Grote Hoogstraat. And it appears that Ruthger puts his money where his mouth is – as we go to sit down he and his partner are seated next to us and are in the middle of their meal.

21 September, 2023

We have now been on the road for one year. Inflation and a very poor exchange rate to the Australian Dollar has so far made this past year about 50% more expensive than our first 2-year trip to Europe in 2014/2015. We are about to have to buy more Euros and the exchange rate has dropped a further 10% to 0.60. This further supports our reason for early retirement as I would hate to be just starting out on our 10 year travels.

It is raining again this morning so we sleep in again until after 9:00 am. After a light breakfast in our room and coffee and cake at a local bakery I head back to finalise the blog while Lynn goes to the Fries Museum (as in Friesland).

On my return our B&B host lets me know that they did my washing and returned it to our room and replaced our towels. No wonder this place gets a 9.3 rating.

The Fries Museum was founded in 1881 and In the early decades this local museum on the Turfmarkt was focussed on typical Hindelooper goods and other Frisian curiosities that had been collected by the local preacher-writer Joost Hiddes Halbertsma.

A further important boost to the collection occurred when William III of the Netherlands bequeathed many portraits from the collection of the Stadhouderlijk Hof.

Fries Museum.

The Frisian architect Abe Bonnema initiated the new building. When he died in 2001, he left 18 million euros to the Museum. The new museum on Wilhelminaplein was designed by Hubert-Jan Henket. On 13 September 2013, the building was opened by Queen Máxima.

The Museum’s collection consists of 1 million objects and is dedicated to arts, crafts, and history from the years 1200 to 2000.T It has won the Global Fine Art Award which is sometimes nicknamed the Museum-Oscar.

The Museum has 3 floors of exhibits: the current highlight being the Christoffel and Kate Bisschop exhibition – advertised by a massive 3-floor drop poster in the museum entrance space.

Poster advertising the main exhibit.

On the 1st floor is everything Friesland. One is the iconic Hinderloopen Room. Apparently the Frisian town of Hinderloopen used to be a real metropolis. On their trading trips Hinderloopers brought furniture from Amsterdam, fabrics from India and porcelain from China and incorporated these into their homes and colourful traditional dress.

The Hinderloopen Room.

Photographs printed from glass negatives show the transition from traditional ways. Here the Osinga family in front of their barn, 1911. All but one of the girls are wearing traditional dress with headpieces.

Osinga Famiy, 1911.

Of interest is a portrait of Egbert Roels Kuipers and Jantje Tjeerds Wiegersma commissioned by their sons and painted by Piet Mondrian in 1901 – not a straight black line nor primary colour in sight!

Portrait painted by Mondrian, 1901.

Besides a photograph, only 3 things of Mata Hari’s are on display: her tiara and breast plate.

Parts of Mata Hari’s costume.

In the 18th century millions of paint-decorated tiles and dishes left the Frisian potteries in the village of Makkum and the cities of Harlingen and Bolsward to be shipped all over the world.

Frisian tiles, 1760.

In only a few years after his emigration to London, Lawrence Alma-Tadema’s start as a painter of life-like paintings of scenes from the classical world began to rise. Sir Laurence Alma-Tadema (1836–1912), who was born in the Frisian town of Dronrijp, painted this scene in 1881. He called it Amo te ama me, ‘I love you, so love me too.’

Amo Te Ama Me, 1881.

Between 1920-30 Tjerk Bottema liked to play with shapes and here he reduced the farms, cattle and trees to the mere basics by leaving out as much detail as possible.

How many cows?

Having seen the tower a couple of days ago, it’s fascinating to see it depicted in 1809 by Nicolaas Baur. Skating is an age-old tradition long before 1809 when the whole of the City of Leeuwarden turned out to see the skating race for young, unmarried women.

View on the Westersingel, Leeuwarden, Nicholaas Baur, 1809.

The 2nd floor is dedicated to the main exhibition. The collection delves into the personal life and art of Christoffel and his English wife Kate Bisschop-Swift and shows how the Frisian artist used the past as a great inspiration for the present (1828-1904), in particular incorporating Hinderlooper daily life and artifacts – his trademark.

The Wedding Day (Hindelooper Interior), c. 1871.

Sharing the 2nd floor is also the Resistance Museum showing the impact of WWII on Friesland. Chillingly, a photo of Nazi-occupied Leeuwarden on 3 April 1943.

Leeuwarden, 3 April 1943.

Finally, the top floor is dedicated to contemporary artists in an exhibition entitled: “Seeds of Memory”.

Interwoven History, Mercedes Azpilicueta, 1981.

Here an incredible tapestry by Mercedes Azpilicueta (Argentina, 1981) using fruits and weeds, ear irons and silver bowls, writers and poets to interweave people, plants and objects in a rewritten history of the Frisian Orangewoud estate which has been home to workers, poets, rebels and the royal family.

Tapestry detail.

Walking home Lynn detours via Grote of Jacobijnerkerk – the Great or Jacobin Church.

In 1245 followers of Saint Dominicus – Dominicans or Jacobins – founded a monastery in Leeuwarden. Building of the monastery church began around 1275 and finished around 1300. A large part of the original building still exists. In 1580 the last roman catholic sermon was held and from then on the church became strictly protestant.

Jacobin Church.

In 1588 the wife of the first Frisian stadtholder (governor) Willem Lodewijk of Nassau, Anna of Orange, daughter of prince William of Orange (William the Silent) was buried in the chancel. During 2 centuries, the church was the burial place of the Frisian stadtholder family, the ancestors of the royal family.

Restored wooden tomb of Anna of Orange.

During the French Revolution in 1795 these remains were destroyed for the most part. However, in 1948 the crypt was restored on the occasion of the 50th anniversary of the reign of Queen Wilhelmina. Only the black marble crest of arms on the wooden tomb are remains of the original monument for Anna of Orange by the Flemish artist, Johan Schoorman.

Orange Entrance at the back of the Church.

The famous Orange Entrance on the outside (above which a little tree with orange apples can be seen) was also restored at that time in 1948. This was the private entrance used by the governors to access the chancel and their ‘bench’ opposite the pulpit.

5 minutes’ walk from the B&B is the Kanselarij (Chancellery). The Chancellery for the Court of Friesland was built between 1566-1571 and displays late-Gothic elements. The statue of Charles V on the top gable presides over the administrative, legal and military powers. The facade also has statues of the Seven Virtues and prosperity.

The Chancellery.

Construction concurred with the beginning of the revolt against Spanish rule, resulting in financial shortages with the south extension not being built. The Renaissance-style balcony with its double stairway and heavy parapet dates from 1624.

The Court was disbanded in 1795, after which the building was used as a law court, military hospital, barracks and prison. In 1895 it housed the Provincial Council Archives and Library. In 1995 it became part of the Fries Museum.

22 September, 2023

Today continues to be cool (16 Deg. C) windy, overcast and raining for our 1.45 hour drive to Amsterdam.

Driving to Amsterdam.

We drive along the A31 which takes us past Harlingen on the coast, down through Zurich and onto the A7 – the Afsluitdijk – where it joins North Holland. On the seaward side of the road is a high dyke.

Hope someone has a finger in the dyke during these repairs.

The Afsluitdijk (“Shut off Dyke”) is a major dam and causeway in the Netherlands. It was constructed between 1927 and 1932 and runs from the village of Zurich in Friesland provice to Den Oever in North Holland province, over a length of 32 kms, a width of 90 metres and an initial height of between 6.7-7.4 metres. It is a fundamental part of the larger Zuiderzee Works, damming off the Zuiderzee, a salt water inlet of the North Sea, and turning it into the fresh water lake of the IJsselmeer.

Pumping the water out of the locks.

Increases to the height of the Afsluitdijk have been made several times since 1958, when height increases were undertaken during regular maintenance periods as a result of the North Sea Flood of 1953, with the section between the Stevinsluizen and Lorentzsluizen sluice complexes seeing the crest level raised to 7.8 metres. Major upgrade works commenced in 2019 which will see a further increase in the height of the dam, by approximately 2 metres.

The countryside continues to be flat, although with more trees in North Holland, and the traditional windmills replaced by rows of wind turbines marching across the terrain..

Full power on a windy day.

We arrive at the hotel, on the north side of Amsterdam around 1:00 pm. Apparently there is a conference on at the event space next door so the hotel is booked out with lots of young ones. While we wait for our room to be ready we park the car underground and sit in the lobby.

View from our hotel window.

The location of the hotel is on the Motorkanaal and across the IJ river from Central Station and the old town centre. Its location also makes it easy to access from the motorway and provides good but expensive parking. Although it would have been desirable to stay in historical accommodation in town, there was no parking available. Plus we are only 10 minutes’ walk to the Noorderpark Metro station and 15 minutes’ walk the free ferry that crosses to Central Station.

Lauren arriving at the hotel.

Just before our room becomes available at 3:00 pm we see Lauren, Lynn’s friend from NYC, walk through the front door. We last saw Lauren when we visited her in NYC about 4 years ago. She happened to be in Norway so when she realised we would be here in Amsterdam made sure she spent some days with us before her flight back to NYC on Monday.

After we all unpack we meet up in the bar for celebratory drinks and snacks. We decide to check out the ‘hood for restaurants only to find that, surprisingly, there aren’t that many about. There is one on the waterfront called the Lowlander Botanical Bar & Restaurant which we discovered, once seated, is vegetarian so we just have an expensive starter and leave.

Banksy-style warehouse graffiti art work near the restaurant.

After getting some supplies at the supermarket across the road we decide to eat at the hotel restaurant, only to find that they are only serving rudimentary mains tonight such as hamburgers, fish and chips and pizza. The reason being that the kitchen is serving refugees tonight, in the section next to us, and actually their grub looks pretty good! So we share an antipasta platter and retire upstairs to catch up over a glass of wine and dessert.

23 September, 2023

The weather forecast for today is supposed to be cool, wet and windy so Lynn reschedules our walking tour to the same time tomorrow. Instead we walk the 15 minutes to the ferry, getting drenched on the way, and arrive 5 minutes later near Central Station.

Waiting for the Ferry to Central Station.

Here we buy a 48-hour unlimited rail, bus and metro ticket for each of us then promptly catch a No. 17 tram to Koningsplein to visit the flower market.

Clearing weather on way to flower markets.

Apparently the market is the only floating flower market in the world. The sellers’ stalls stand on houseboats and evoke the old days when the market was supplied by boat.

End of flower season but lots of bulbs.

Tulips, naturally, are the predominant flowers for sale – be that bulb, fresh or wooden varieties – plain or frilled, and even black ones (“Queen of the Night”). Bulbs are even ready to post home.

Still plenty of colour.

Also for sale are conifers, sunflowers and dried flowers. Interspersed with the flower stalls are the ubiquitous souvenir stalls and some cheese shops.

Munttoren.

The market is on the Singel canal between Koningsplein and Muntplein where the Munttoren (“Mint Tower”) is located and where the Amstel river meets the canal.

Originally the tower was part of the Regulierspoort, one of the main gates in Amsterdam’s medieval city wall. The gate, built in the years 1480s, consisted of two towers and a guard house. After the gate went up in flames in a 1618 fire, only the guard house and part of the western tower remained standing. The tower was then rebuilt in Amsterdam Renaissance style in 1620 with an eight-sided top half and elegant open spire featuring four clock faces and a carillon.

Mint Tower refers to the fact that the guard house on the side of it was used to mint coins in the 17th century. In the Rampjaar (“year of disaster”) of 1672, when both England and France declared war on the Dutch Republic and French troops occupied much of the country, silver and gold could no longer be safely transported to Dordrecht and Enkhuizen (where coins were normally minted), so the guard house of the Munttoren was temporarily used to mint coin.

The present guard house is not the original medieval structure but a 19th-century fantasy. The original guard house, which had survived the fire of 1618 relatively unscathed, was replaced with a new building during 1885–1887 in Neo-Renaissance style.

The Rijksmuseum.

To replace our walking tour we opt to visit the Rijksmuseum instead as the Van Gogh Museum is sold out today and tomorrow. Both Lynn and Lauren have been to the Rijks before, but I haven’t.

I quite enjoy it as it has quite a variety of material on display arranged according to the periods of 1600-1650, 1700-1800, 1950-2000 plus special collections. The items range from the paintings of Dutch masters – most notably Rembrandt’s “Night Watch” – Delftware, Meissen, jewellery, furniture, arms, model ships to a library.

Portrait of Emperor Napoleon I, Baron Gerard, Paris, 1805-1815.

A nice surprise is stumbling across a painting of Napoleon that we also saw in the museum in New Orleans. State portraits, such as this painting, were distributed throughout the French empire. Napoleon initially reigned in the Netherlands though his brother, Louis. In 1810 he took personal control and made the Netherlands part of France.

Self-portrait, Vincent Van Gogh, 1887.

Despite not being able to visit the Van Gogh Museum we get to see one of his self portraits. Vincent moved to Paris in 1886, after hearing from his brother Theo about the new, colourful style of French painting. Wasting no time, he tried it out in several self-portraits. He did this mostly to avoid having to pay for a model. Using rhythmic brushstrokes in striking colours, he portrayed himself here as a fashionably-dressed Parisian.

Today, the “Night Watch” can’t be viewed up close as it is behind glass. The aim of the project, “Operation Night Watch” is to conserve the painting for the future. The research began in summer 2019 and is continuing in full view of the visiting public in a specially-designed glass chamber.

The Night Watch, Rembrant van Rijn, 1642.

Rembrandt’s largest and most famous painting was made for one of the three headquarters of Amsterdam’s civic guard. These groups of civilian soldiers defended the city from attack. Rembrandt was the first to paint all of the figures in a civic guard piece in action. The captain, dressed in black, gives the order to march out. The guardsmen are getting into formation. Rembrandt used the light to focus on particular details, like the captain’s gesturing hand and the young girl in the foreground. She was the company mascot. The nickname Night Watch originated much later, when the painting was thought to represent a nocturnal scene.

Unfortunately the magnificence of the Night Watch has been diminished as it suffered several indignities in its 377-year history: in 1715, Rembrandt’s large-scale painting was cut down in order to fit a new room when it was transferred from a militia headquarters in Amsterdam to the city’s Town Hall. Originally 400 cm x 500 cm (13’1″ x 16’4″) in size, the still enormous painting now measures 3.6 metres × 4.4 metres (11’9″ feet × 14’5″).

To see what it might have looked like, adjacent to it in the Museum is this painting a year later in 1643 by Bartholomeus van der Helst entitled: “Militia Company of District VIII under the Command of Captain Roelof Bicker”.

Like “The Night Watch”, this painting was made for the great hall of the Kloveniersdoelen in Amsterdam. Van der Helst did not line up the more than 30 archers in a static row but positioned the ones in the lightest clothing in front at reglar intervals. Its dimensions are – height: 235 cm (7’8″); width: 750 cm (24’7″).

van der Helst’s 1643 Militia painting.

After 2 hours of walking around the Museum I need a rest so we decide to take the Tram and Metro back to the hotel for a 2-hour break. Lauren and I hardly get on the tram when the driver takes off like Daniel Ricciardo resulting in both of us falling backwards and squashing a couple of other passengers!

Time to head back into town to make our 5:45 pm time slot at the Restaurant Max. We get drenched again walking to the Metro station but at least it is a 5 minute shorter walk than to the ferry.

Heading back to town via the Metro.

At last, the weather starts to clear once we are in town and for our short walk to the restaurant.

The weather is finally clearing.

Lauren has chosen Restaurant Max for its high rating on TripAdvisor for “the best place to eat Indonesian food in Amsterdam”. Apparently, an Indonesian “rice table” is a quintessential Dutch dining experience.

Rice Table dinner at Max’s.

Lynn tells me she is experiencing deja vu. When she first traveled to Amsterdam in 1985 the tour guide said that he would take her group to “the best food in Amsterdam.” Here she was expecting Dutch food, only to find they end up at an Indonesian restaurant which, of course, would more likely be available in Australia than Dutch.

Walking back to the tram at twilight.

Needless to say, the food is exquisite, along with the 2 bottles of rioja!

17th century buildings in the old town.

The walk back to the metro is very pleasant. The tourist have gone home and the twilight seems to bring out the colours of the buildings and flowers along the canals. It seems that the rainy weather has passed for the time being.

24 September, 2023

Today’s weather forecast for a sunny day with temperatures around 20 Deg. C delivers.

The Royal Palace, Dam Square.

We take the Metro direct to Rokin then walk back towards the meeting point for our walk at Beursplein past Dam Square.

While we wait for the appointed hour of 2:00 pm we have a coffee in the sunshine from the Grand Cafe and in front of the Amsterdam Stock Exchange – appropriate, given the shared experience of the 3 of us having worked in investment/banking over the years.

The Amsterdam Stock Exchange.

Our walking tour group is around 13 strong lead by a vivacious Amsterdammer named Esi.

Almost like Venice.

After a brief history of the Netherlands and Amsterdam we walk past the Damrak and head immediately towards the Red Light District. Disappointingly, “there’s nothing to see here!”

De Wallen – red light district wares on show.

Nearby we arrive at the Waag, a 15th-century building on the Nieuwmarkt in the centre of Amsterdam. It was originally a city gate. The current name refers to its later function as a weighing house. The building has had a range of other functions, including guildhall, museum, fire station and anatomical theatre where Rembrandt initially used to draw pictures depicting surgical and anatomical procedures.

De Waag.

Some of the canals have houseboats on them ranging from barges to a shed on a raft. There are around 2400 houseboats within the Amsterdam city centre, all connected to services, and quite a few are rented out as holiday lets.

Leafy canal suburb with houseboats.

Next we swing by Waterlooplein where we learn that during WWII this area was the Jewish Quarter. Towards the end of the war all the houses were deserted and as the remaining locals were freezing to death, they scavanged as much furniture and wooden building materials as they could to burn to keep warm. At the end of the war the shells of houses were demolished so now the area has more modern housing.

Here Esi offers us all an Amsterdam treat: Stroopwafels. Yum!

Esi our tour guide.

Walking towards the University we walk past a building which has the Amsterdam coat of arms on it which we had also previously seen on a flag: 3 white Xs on a red and black background. According to one theory, the crosses symbolize the three plagues that hit Amsterdam, namely water, fire and the plague. However, this symbolism is also attributed to the colors: red is fire, white is water and black is plague.

The Amsterdam emblem.

In a University building, which was once a hospital, we stop in a long passageway which is now a second-hand book market.

Second-hand book market in the old hospital.

Lastly, we arrive at Dam Square where Its notable buildings and frequent events make it one of the best-known and most important locations in the city and the country. Today there seems to be a rowdy demonstration taking place.

Dam Square.

On the west end of the square is the neoclassical Royal Palace, which served as the city hall from 1655 until its conversion to a royal residence in 1808. Beside it is the 15th-century Gothic Nieuwe Kerk (New Church). The National Monument, a white stone pillar designed by J.J.P. Oud and erected in 1956 to memorialize the victims of World War II, dominates the opposite side of the square. Also overlooking the plaza are the NH Grand Hotel Krasnapolsky and the upscale department store De Bijenkorf. These various attractions have turned the Dam into a tourist zone.

Tourists canal boats.

After our tour we decide that a canal boat ride would give us another perspective on the city so we walk the short distance to the Damrak basin and jump on a 1-hour cruise. You can’t visit Amsterdam without a canal cruise.

Resting on the canal tour.

The boat turns right into Oosterdok then right again into Oudeschans past the Montelbaanstoren.

Tight squeeze under bridges.

The Montelbaanstoren is a tower from 1516 at Oudeschans 2. The name arose because the Duke of Alva (Alba) wanted to build a castle near this tower and gave this castle the name Monte Albano . The tower was then called “Monte-Albaens-tooren”, which was popularly corrupted to Montelbaanstoren. The tower is nicknamed Malle Jaap , because the bells of the tower once started playing spontaneously at irregular times.

Montelbaanstoren.

Montelbaanstoren was built after an attack by the Duke of Gelre on the Lastage (during which it was completely burned down) as a watchtower over the Zuiderzee. For this purpose, a new canal was dug on the east side, the current Oude Schans. Where it approached the IJ, a watchtower was erected as part of the fortifications of Amsterdam.

In 1606 the tower lost its function. A decorative crown in Renaissance style was then placed on it, designed by city architect Hendrick de Keyser. Rembrandt, who lived nearby, drew the tower in 1644, but without De Keyser’s superstructure.

Nice place to live.

At the end of Oudeschans we turn left into the Amstel River then immediately right into Herengracht where we get to see the view of “7 bridges in a row”.

Seven bridges in a row.

We cruise the full extent of Herengracht until we turn right into Brouwersgracht then left into the lock at Singel.

City Flood Locks.

This brings us to Open Havenfront where we cruise past Centraal Station then back into the Damrak basin.

Central Station.

Must be time for dinner so we walk to the nearby red light district once again but this time we walk down that passageway. Only 1 sex worker is in her window, clad in mismatched bra, knickers and high heels and perched on a stool.

Conveniently, Chinatown (or in the case of Amsterdam, China Street) borders the district so we pick one restaurant out of several on Zeedijk and order some dim sum and a pot of Chinese tea.

Chinese for dinner?

Some unusual plates on the menu including cold jellyfish, steamed cattle organs and steamed cow stomach in black bean sauce – for the adventurous!

25 September, 2023

Lauren must depart the hotel at 8:00 am for her noon flight to NYC so we need to meet her downstairs at 7:50 am.

Sunrise.

This means that I am up in time to see today’s sunrise! Big hugs, au revoirs, we wave her off in her taxi and hit the breakfast buffet.

Saying goodbye to Lauren.

Since we are so far behind in our blog writing we plan to spend the remainder of the day catching up. Tomorrow morning we leave Amsterdam for a short drive to Delft which is just outside The Hague. It is only about a half hour drive away so we will call into a laundromat on the way.

After a long day catching up on the blog and other “admin” stuff we decide to just go to the hotel restaurant for dinner. On the day we arrived at the hotel we had planned to have dinner in the same restaurant but found that the restaurant only had veggie burgers and rubbish pizzas as they were feeding a bunch of refugees (who looked over fed, wore designer clothing, had iPhones and could afford to buy cigarettes).

The hotel restaurant was advertising their proper menu on the room TV but when we go downstairs they again tell us that they are busy feeding the refugees and that nothing is available for hotel guests. WTF! Again the “refugees” were hoeing into some excellent looking burritos, nachos, and chicken dinners. I would be more than happy to be able to access their menus but no, nothing is available to hotel guests.

Since there are no restaurants in this area we have to go over to the supermarket and buy soggy baguettes for dinner. Now, I am not against looking after legitimate refugees but there is no wonder that we get “refugee fatigue” when they get priority at our expense when they are definitely not seriously struggling. Time that these guys go home and fix their domestic “issues” there. There were no children or single mothers in this group just young adults looking for a free handout.