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| Countries of the World |
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| AREA |
33,939
sq km (13,104 sq miles). |
| POPULATION |
15,517,000 (1996). |
| POPULATION DENSITY |
457.2 per sq km. |
| CAPITAL |
Amsterdam., Seat of
Government: The Hague. |
| CAPITAL
POPULATION |
724,096 (1994)., 445,279
(1994). |
| GEOGRAPHY |
The Netherlands shares
borders to the south with Belgium and to
the east with Germany, while the North Sea
lies to the north and west. Large areas
of The Netherlands have been reclaimed from
the sea and consequently one-fifth of the
country lies below sea level. The country
is flat and level and is criss-crossed by
rivers and canals. Areas reclaimed from
the sea, known as polders, are extremely
fertile. The landscape is broken by the
forest of Arnhem, the bulb fields in the
west, the lakes of the central and northern
areas, and coastal dunes that are among
the most impressive in Europe. |
| GOVERNMENT |
Consitutional monarchy
since 1848. Head of State: Queen Beatrix
Wilhelmina Armgard since 1980. Head of Government:
Prime Minister, elected for a four-year
term. Wim Kok (Partij van de Arbeid - Labour
Party) si nce 1994. |
| LANGUAGE |
Dutch is the official
language. English, German and French are
widely spoken foreign languages. |
| RELIGION |
38% Roman Catholic,
30% Protestant; 26% do not profess any religion. |
| STANDARD
TIME |
GMT + 1 (GMT + 2 from
last Sunday in March to Saturday before
last Sunday in October). |
| ELECTRICITY |
220 volts AC, 50Hz.
2-pin European-style plugs are in use. |
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| COMMUNICATIONS |
Telephone: Full IDD
is available. Country code: 31 (followed
by 20 for Amsterdam, 10 for Rotterdam and
70 for The Hague). Outgoing international
code: 00. Telephone information is given
in French, English and German. The cheap
rate is from 2000-0800 Monday to Friday.
Calls can be made from public booths or
post offices. Most booths only accept cards,
which can be bought at post offices, VVV
offices, and shops displaying the PTT-telephone
card poster; and sometimes coins (25 cent,
G1 and G2.5). Fax: Services are widely available
and are also provided by some hotels. Telegram:
Facilities are available at all main post
offices; telegrams can also be sent directly
from telephone kiosks. Post: Stamps are
available from all post offices as well
as from tobacconists and kiosks selling
postcards and souvenirs. Mail within Europe
takes approximately five days. Post offices
are open 0900-1730 Monday to Friday. Some
post offices in major towns are also open
on late shopping nights (Thursday or Friday
night) and 1000-1300 Saturday. There are
all-night post offices in Amsterdam (Nieuwezijds
Voorburgwal, behind the Royal Palace) and
Rotterdam (Coolsingel). Press: The main
newspapers are De Telegraaf, De Volkskrant,
Het Algemeen Dagblad and NRC Handelsblad
(an evening paper). Foreign newspapers are
widely available. Amsterdam was founded
at the end of the thirteenth century, by
the side of a dam on the river Amstel, hence
its name, a derivative of the original Amsteldam.
From the very beginning, Amsterdam and water
were inextricably linked. The first inhabitants
settled here owing to the prevalence of
fresh water in the area. Exemption from
paying tolls on Dutch waterways enabled
the locals to make a living from fishing
and trade, with the city's wealth reaching
a peak in the Golden Age of the seventeenth
century. The city's intimate relationship
with water is no longer so dramatic, but
visitors are likely to notice the water
within minutes of arrival. In total, there
are now 160 canals, measuring 75.5km (47
miles) in length and covering an area of
171 hectares (423 acres). Of course, visitors
are just as likely to encounter water in
the form of rain: a near constant in Amsterdam.
The oldest part of the city is Nieuwmarkt.
Around it lie the first canals - Herengracht,
Keizersgracht and Prinsengracht - which
were built to protect the city against invasion.
Later, when Amsterdam became Europe's leading
trade centre (with links to 625 foreign
harbours), the canals were useful transport
paths. Ocean-going ships would dock in the
harbour and smaller boats would carry the
goods to the warehouses along the canals.
The prosperity of the Golden Age was accompanied
by a political and religious tolerance that
was unprecedented at the time. As a result,
Amsterdam became a magnet for those who
had been driven from their own countries;
Flemish, Walloon and French Protestants,
and Jewish merchants from Spain, Portugal
and Central Europe flocked to the city.
That tolerant stance continues into the
present day; certain 'coffee shops' are
allowed to sell soft drugs and the thriving
sex industry is legal, with prostitutes
paying taxes along with city bankers. But
although Amsterdam is famous worldwide for
its liberal attitudes, they do not play
an overbearing part in the life of the city.
Much more dominant is Amsterdam's cultural
life. The city, once home to great artists
such as Rembrandt and Van Gogh, boasts around
42 museums (including the well-known Rijksmuseum),
41 art galleries, 65 concert halls and theatres
- all this in a city centre that is so compact
it can be crossed on foot in less than an
hour. Dutch architecture is also impressive.
While many of the houses are narrow-fronted
merchants' homes fronted by traditional
Dutch ornamented gables and dating back
to the seventeenth century, there are also
some stunning twentieth-century buildings.
Architects such as H P Berlage (De Beurs,
the commodity exchange), Michel de Klerk
(the 'Amsterdam School' of architecture)
and Aldo van Eyck have earned Amsterdam
an international reputation for modern masterpieces. |
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