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Amsterdam

Amsterdam (/ˈæmstərdæm/ AM-stər-dam, UK also /ˌæmstərˈdæm/ AM-stər-DAM,[9][10] Dutch: [ˌɑmstərˈdɑm] (listen), lit. The Dam on the River Amstel) is the capital and most populous city of the Netherlands, with The Hague being the seat of government. It has a population of 919,845[11] within the city proper, 1,457,018 in the urban area[6] and 2,480,394 in the metropolitan area.[12] Located in the Dutch province of North Holland,[13][14] Amsterdam is colloquially referred to as the "Venice of the North", for its large number of canals, now designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site.[15]

Amsterdam
From top down, left to right: Keizersgracht, canal in the Centrum borough, the Royal Concertgebouw and Rijksmuseum
Nicknames: 
Motto(s): 
Heldhaftig, Vastberaden, Barmhartig (Valiant, Steadfast, Compassionate)
Location of Amsterdam municipality
Amsterdam
Location within the Netherlands
Amsterdam
Location within Europe
Coordinates: 52°22′22″N 04°53′37″E / 52.37278°N 4.89361°E / 52.37278; 4.89361Coordinates: 52°22′22″N 04°53′37″E / 52.37278°N 4.89361°E / 52.37278; 4.89361
CountryNetherlands
ProvinceNorth Holland
RegionAmsterdam metropolitan area
City HallStopera
Boroughs
Government
 • BodyMunicipal council
 • MayorFemke Halsema (GL)
Area
 • Municipality219.32 km2 (84.68 sq mi)
 • Land165.76 km2 (64.00 sq mi)
 • Water53.56 km2 (20.68 sq mi)
 • Randstad3,043 km2 (1,175 sq mi)
Elevation−2 m (−7 ft)
Population
 (October 2022)[5]
 • Municipality919,845
 • Density5,277/km2 (13,670/sq mi)
 • Urban
1,457,018
 • Metro region
2,480,394
 • Randstad
8,116,000
DemonymAmsterdammer
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Postcode
1000–1183
Area code020
GeoTLD.amsterdam
Websitewww.amsterdam.nl
Click on the map for a fullscreen view

Amsterdam was founded at the mouth of the Amstel River that was dammed to control flooding; the city's name derives from the Amstel dam.[16] Originally a small fishing village in the late 12th century, Amsterdam became a major world port during the Dutch Golden Age of the 17th century, when the Netherlands was an economic powerhouse. Amsterdam is the leading center for finance and trade, as well as a hub of production of secular art.[17] In the 19th and 20th centuries, the city expanded and many new neighborhoods and suburbs were planned and built. The canals of Amsterdam and the 19-20th century Defence Line of Amsterdam are both on the UNESCO World Heritage List. Sloten, annexed in 1921 by the municipality of Amsterdam, is the oldest part of the city, dating to the 9th century. The city has a long tradition of openness, liberalism, and tolerance.[18] Cycling is key to the city's modern character, and there are numerous biking paths and lanes spread throughout the entire city.[19][20]

Amsterdam's main attractions include its historic canals; the Rijksmuseum, the state museum with a vast collection of Dutch Golden Age art; the Van Gogh Museum; the Dam Square, where the Royal Palace of Amsterdam and former city hall (stadhuis) are located; the Amsterdam Museum; Stedelijk Museum, with modern art; Hermitage Amsterdam, the Concertgebouw concert hall; the Anne Frank House; the Het Scheepvaartmuseum, the Heineken Experience, the Natura Artis Magistra; Hortus Botanicus, NEMO, the red-light district and many cannabis coffee shops. The city is also well known for its nightlife and festival activity; with several of its nightclubs (Melkweg, Paradiso) among the world's most famous. Primarily known for its artistic heritage, elaborate canal system and narrow canal houses with gabled façades; well-preserved legacies of the city's 17th-century Golden Age, and the establishment of the Van Gogh Museum, displaying the work of the famous Dutch modern artist, have attracted millions of visitors to Amsterdam annually.

The Amsterdam Stock Exchange is considered the oldest "modern" securities market stock exchange in the world. As the commercial capital of the Netherlands and one of the top financial centres in Europe, Amsterdam is considered an alpha world city by the Globalization and World Cities Research Network. The city is also the cultural capital of the Netherlands.[21] Many large Dutch institutions have their headquarters in the city, including: the Philips conglomerate, AkzoNobel, Booking.com, TomTom, and ING.[22] Many of the world's largest companies are based in Amsterdam or have established their European headquarters in the city, such as leading technology companies Uber, Netflix and Tesla.[23] In 2022, Amsterdam was ranked the ninth-best city in the world to live in by the Economist Intelligence Unit[24] and 12th globally on quality of living for environment and infrastructure by Mercer.[25] The city was ranked 4th place globally as top tech hub in the Savills Tech Cities 2019 report (2nd in Europe),[26] and 3rd in innovation by Australian innovation agency 2thinknow in their Innovation Cities Index 2009.[27] The Port of Amsterdam is the fifth largest in Europe.[28] The KLM hub and Amsterdam's main airport, Schiphol, is the busiest airport in the Netherlands, the third busiest in Europe, and the 11th busiest airport in the world.[29] The Dutch capital is considered one of the most multicultural cities in the world, with at least 177 nationalities represented.[30] Immigration and ethnic segregation in Amsterdam is a current issue.[31]

A few of Amsterdam's notable residents throughout its history include painters Rembrandt and Vincent van Gogh, seventeenth-century philosopher Baruch Spinoza, and the Holocaust victim and diarist Anne Frank.

History

Prehistory

Due to its geographical location in what used to be wet peatland, the founding of Amsterdam is later than other urban centers in the Low Countries. However, around the area of what later became Amsterdam, farmers settled as early as three millennia ago. They lived along the prehistoric IJ river and upstream of its tributary Amstel. The prehistoric IJ was a shallow and quiet stream in peatland behind beach ridges. This secluded area was able to grow into an important local settlement center, especially in the late Bronze Age, the Iron Age and the Roman Age. Neolithic and Roman artefacts have also been found in the prehistoric Amstel bedding under Amsterdam's Damrak and Rokin, such as shards of Bell Beaker culture pottery (2200-2000 BC) and a granite grinding stone (2700-2750 BC),[32][33] but the location of these artefacts around the river banks of the Amstel probably point to a presence of a modest semi-permanent or seasonal settlement. Until water issues were controlled, a permanent settlement would not have been possible, since the river mouth and the banks of the Amstel in this period in time were too wet for permanent habitation.[34][35]

Founding

The origins of Amsterdam is linked to the development of the peatland called Amestelle, meaning 'watery area', from Aa(m) 'river' + stelle 'site at a shoreline', 'river bank'.[36] In this area, land reclamation started as early as the late 10th century.[37] Amestelle was located along a side arm of the IJ. This side arm took the name from the eponymous land: Amstel. Amestelle was inhabited by farmers, who lived more inland and more upstream, where the land was not as wet as at the banks of the downstream river mouth. These farmers were starting the reclamation around upstream Ouderkerk aan de Amstel, and later at the other side of the river at Amstelveen. The Van Amstel family, known in documents by this name since 1019,[36] held the stewardship in this northwestern nook of the ecclesiastical district of the bishop of Utrecht. The family later served also under the count of Holland.

A major turning point in the development of the Amstel river mouth was the All Saint's Flood of 1170. In an extremely short period of time, the shallow river IJ turned into a wide estuary, which from then on offered the Amstel an open connection to the Zuiderzee, IJssel and waterways further afield. This made the water flow of the Amstel more active, so excess water could be drained better. With drier banks, the downstream Amstel mouth became attractive for permanent habitation. Moreover, the river had grown from an insignificant peat stream into a junction of international waterways.[38] A settlement was built here immediately after the landscape change of 1170. Right from the start of its foundation it focused on traffic, production and trade; not on farming, as opposed to how communities had lived further upstream for the past 200 years and northward for thousands of years.[39] The construction of a dam at the mouth of the Amstel, eponymously named Dam, is historically estimated to have occurred between 1264 and 1275. The settlement first appeared in a document from 1275, concerning a road toll granted by the count of Holland Floris V to the residents apud Amestelledamme 'at the dam in the Amstel' or 'at the dam of Amstelland'.[40] This allowed the inhabitants of the village to travel freely through the County of Holland, paying no tolls at bridges, locks and dams.[41] This was a move in a years-long struggle for power in the area between the count of Holland and the Amstel family who governed the area on behalf of the bishop of Utrecht.[42] By 1327, the name had developed into Aemsterdam.[43][44]

Middle Ages

 
The Oude Kerk was consecrated in 1306 AD.

The bishop of Utrecht granted Amsterdam city rights in either 1300 or 1306.[45] In 1345, what is known as Eucharistic miracle in Kalverstraat rendered the city an important place of pilgrimage until the Protestant Reformation.[46] During the heydays of the Stille Omgang, which the expression of the pilgrimage,[47] up to 90,000 pilgrims came to Amsterdam. In the 21st century, this has reduced to about 1,000.[48] From the 14th century on, Amsterdam flourished, largely from trade with the Hanseatic League. From the 15th century on the city established an independent trade route with the Baltic Sea in grain and timber, cutting out the Hanseatic League as middlemen, which drastically reduced costs and laid the foundation for Amsterdam as the staple market of Europe.

Conflict with Spain

 
Amsterdam citizens celebrating the Peace of Münster, 30 January 1648. Painting by Bartholomeus van der Helst

The Low Countries were part of the Hapsburg inheritance and came under the Spanish monarchy in the early sixteenth century. The Dutch rebelled against Philip II of Spain, who led a defense of Catholicism during the Protestant Reformation. The main reasons for the uprising were the imposition of new taxes, the tenth penny, and the religious persecution of Protestants by the newly introduced Inquisition. The revolt escalated into the Eighty Years' War, which ultimately led to Dutch independence.[49] Strongly pushed by Dutch Revolt leader William the Silent, the Dutch Republic became known for its relative religious tolerance. Jews from the Iberian Peninsula, Protestant Huguenots from France, prosperous merchants and printers from Flanders, and economic and religious refugees from the Spanish-controlled parts of the Low Countries found safety in Amsterdam. The influx of Flemish printers and the city's intellectual tolerance made Amsterdam a center for the European free press.[50]

Center of the Dutch Golden Age

 
Courtyard of the Amsterdam Stock Exchange by Emanuel de Witte, 1653. The Amsterdam Stock Exchange was the first stock exchange to introduce continuous trade in the early 17th century.[51]

During the 17th century, Amsterdam experienced what is considered its Golden Age, during which it became the wealthiest city in the Western world.[52] Ships sailed from Amsterdam to the Baltic Sea, the Caribbean, North America, and Africa, as well as present-day Indonesia, India, Sri Lanka, and Brazil, forming the basis of a worldwide trading network. Amsterdam's merchants had the largest share in both the Dutch East India Company (VOC) and the Dutch West India Company. These companies acquired overseas possessions that later became Dutch colonies.

Amsterdam was Europe's most important hub for the shipment of goods and was the leading financial center of the western world.[53] In 1602, the Amsterdam office of the Dutch East India Company became the world's first stock exchange by trading in its own shares.[54] The Bank of Amsterdam started operations in 1609, acting as a full-service bank for Dutch merchant bankers and as a reserve bank.

Beginning during this period, Amsterdam also became involved in the trade in African slaves. The city was a major destination port for Dutch slave ships beginning in the 17th century, which lasted until the United Netherlands abolished the Dutch involvement in the trade in 1814 under pressure by the British government. Amsterdam was also a member of the Society of Suriname, an organization founded to oversee the management of Surinam, a Dutch slave colony. On 1 July 2021, the mayor of Amsterdam, Femke Halsema, apologized for the city's involvement in the African slave trade, which had contributed to the city's wealth.[55][56]

Decline and modernization

Amsterdam's prosperity declined during the 18th and early 19th centuries. The wars of the Dutch Republic with England (latterly, Great Britain) and France took their toll on the city. During the Napoleonic Wars, Amsterdam's significance reached its lowest point, with Holland being absorbed into the French Empire. However, the later establishment of the United Kingdom of the Netherlands in 1815 marked a turning point.

 
View of Vijzelstraat looking towards the Muntplein, 1891

The end of the 19th century is sometimes called Amsterdam's second Golden Age.[57] New museums, a railway station, and the Concertgebouw were built; in this same time, the Industrial Revolution reached the city. The Amsterdam–Rhine Canal was dug to give Amsterdam a direct connection to the Rhine, and the North Sea Canal was dug to give the port a shorter connection to the North Sea. Both projects dramatically improved commerce with the rest of Europe and the world. In 1906, Joseph Conrad gave a brief description of Amsterdam as seen from the seaside, in The Mirror of the Sea.

20th century–present

 
Photochrom of Amsterdam's Dam Square at the beginning of the 20th century

Shortly before the First World War, the city started to expand again, and new suburbs were built. Even though the Netherlands remained neutral in this war, Amsterdam suffered a food shortage, and heating fuel became scarce. The shortages sparked riots in which several people were killed. These riots are known as the Aardappeloproer (Potato rebellion). People started looting stores and warehouses in order to get supplies, mainly food.[58]

 
The rebuilt Magere Brug, around 1938.

On 1 January 1921, after a flood in 1916, the depleted municipalities of Durgerdam, Holysloot, Zunderdorp and Schellingwoude, all lying north of Amsterdam, were, at their own request, annexed to the city.[59][60] Between the wars, the city continued to expand, most notably to the west of the Jordaan district in the Frederik Hendrikbuurt and surrounding neighbourhoods.

Nazi Germany invaded the Netherlands on 10 May 1940 and took control of the country. Some Amsterdam citizens sheltered Jews, thereby exposing themselves and their families to a high risk of being imprisoned or sent to concentration camps. More than 100,000 Dutch Jews were deported to Nazi concentration camps, of whom some 60,000 lived in Amsterdam. In response, the Dutch Communist Party organized the February strike attended by 300,000 people to protest against the raids. The most famous deportee was the young Jewish girl Anne Frank, who died in the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp.[61] At the end of the Second World War, communication with the rest of the country broke down, and food and fuel became scarce. Many citizens traveled to the countryside to forage. Dogs, cats, raw sugar beets, and tulip bulbs—cooked to a pulp—were consumed to stay alive.[62] Many trees in Amsterdam were cut down for fuel, and wood was taken from the houses, apartments and other buildings of deported Jews.

 
People celebrating the liberation of the Netherlands at the end of World War II on 8 May 1945

Many new suburbs, such as Osdorp, Slotervaart, Slotermeer and Geuzenveld, were built in the years after the Second World War.[63] These suburbs contained many public parks and wide-open spaces, and the new buildings provided improved housing conditions with larger and brighter rooms, gardens, and balconies. Because of the war and other events of the 20th century, almost the entire city centre had fallen into disrepair. As society was changing,[clarification needed] politicians and other influential figures made plans to redesign large parts of it. There was an increasing demand for office buildings, and also for new roads, as the automobile became available to most people.[64] A metro started operating in 1977 between the new suburb of Bijlmermeer in the city's Zuidoost (southeast) exclave and the centre of Amsterdam. Further plans were to build a new highway above the metro to connect Amsterdam Centraal and the city centre with other parts of the city.

The required large-scale demolitions began in Amsterdam's former Jewish neighborhood. Smaller streets, such as the Jodenbreestraat and Weesperstraat, were widened and almost all houses and buildings were demolished. At the peak of the demolition, the Nieuwmarktrellen (Nieuwmarkt Riots) broke out;[65] the rioters expressed their fury about the demolition caused by the restructuring of the city.

As a result, the demolition was stopped and the highway into the city's centre was never fully built; only the metro was completed. Only a few streets remained widened. The new city hall was built on the almost completely demolished Waterlooplein. Meanwhile, large private organizations, such as Stadsherstel Amsterdam, were founded to restore the entire city centre. Although the success of this struggle is visible today, efforts for further restoration are still ongoing.[64] The entire city centre has reattained its former splendour and, as a whole, is now a protected area. Many of its buildings have become monuments, and in July 2010 the Grachtengordel (the three concentric canals: Herengracht, Keizersgracht, and Prinsengracht) was added to the UNESCO World Heritage List.[66]

 
The 17th-century Canals of Amsterdam were listed as UNESCO World Heritage Sites in 2010,[67] contributing to Amsterdam's fame as the "Venice of the North".[68][69] Along with De Wallen, the canals are the focal-point for tourists in the city.

In the 21st century, the Amsterdam city centre has attracted large numbers of tourists: between 2012 and 2015, the annual number of visitors rose from 10 to 17 million. Real estate prices have surged, and local shops are making way for tourist-oriented ones, making the centre unaffordable for the city's inhabitants.[70] These developments have evoked comparisons with Venice, a city thought to be overwhelmed by the tourist influx.[71]

Construction of a new metro line connecting the part of the city north of the IJ to its southern part was started in 2003. The project was controversial because its cost had exceeded its budget by a factor of three by 2008,[72] because of fears of damage to buildings in the centre, and because construction had to be halted and restarted multiple times.[73] The new metro line was completed in 2018.[74]

Since 2014, renewed focus has been given to urban regeneration and renewal, especially in areas directly bordering the city centre, such as Frederik Hendrikbuurt. This urban renewal and expansion of the traditional centre of the city—with the construction on artificial islands of the new eastern IJburg neighbourhood—is part of the Structural Vision Amsterdam 2040 initiative.[75][76]

Geography

 
Satellite picture of Amsterdam and North Sea Canal
 
Topographic map of Amsterdam
 
Large-scale map of the city centre of Amsterdam, including sightseeing markers, as of April 2017.

Amsterdam is located in the Western Netherlands, in the province of North Holland, the capital of which is not Amsterdam, but rather Haarlem. The river Amstel ends in the city centre and connects to a large number of canals that eventually terminate in the IJ. Amsterdam is about 2 m (6.6 ft) below sea level.[77] The surrounding land is flat as it is formed of large polders. An artificial forest, Amsterdamse Bos, is in the southwest. Amsterdam is connected to the North Sea through the long North Sea Canal.

Amsterdam is intensely urbanised, as is the Amsterdam metropolitan area surrounding the city. Comprising 219.4 km2 (84.7 sq mi) of land, the city proper has 4,457 inhabitants per km2 and 2,275 houses per km2.[78] Parks and nature reserves make up 12% of Amsterdam's land area.[79]

Water

Amsterdam has more than 100 km (60 mi) of canals, most of which are navigable by boat. The city's three main canals are the Prinsengracht, Herengracht and Keizersgracht.

In the Middle Ages, Amsterdam was surrounded by a moat, called the Singel, which now forms the innermost ring in the city, and gives the city centre a horseshoe shape. The city is also served by a seaport. It has been compared with Venice, due to its division into about 90 islands, which are linked by more than 1,200 bridges.[80]

Climate

Amsterdam has an oceanic climate (Köppen: Cfb)[81] strongly influenced by its proximity to the North Sea to the west, with prevailing westerly winds.

Amsterdam, as well as most of the North Holland province, lies in USDA Hardiness zone 8b. Frosts mainly occur during spells of easterly or northeasterly winds from the inner European continent. Even then, because Amsterdam is surrounded on three sides by large bodies of water, as well as having a significant heat-island effect, nights rarely fall below −5 °C (23 °F), while it could easily be −12 °C (10 °F) in Hilversum, 25 km (16 mi) southeast.

Summers are moderately warm with a number of hot and humid days with occasional rain every month. The average daily high in August is 22.1 °C (72 °F), and 30 °C (86 °F) or higher is only measured on average on 2.5 days, placing Amsterdam in AHS Heat Zone 2. The record extremes range from −19.7 °C (−3.5 °F) to 36.3 °C (97.3 °F).[82][83][unreliable source?] Days with more than 1 mm (0.04 in) of precipitation are common, on average 133 days per year.

Amsterdam's average annual precipitation is 838 mm (33 in).[84] A large part of this precipitation falls as light rain or brief showers. Cloudy and damp days are common during the cooler months of October through March.

Climate data for Amsterdam Airport Schiphol
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 14.0
(57.2)
16.6
(61.9)
24.1
(75.4)
28.0
(82.4)
31.5
(88.7)
33.2
(91.8)
36.3
(97.3)
34.5
(94.1)
31.0
(87.8)
25.3
(77.5)
18.2
(64.8)
15.5
(59.9)
36.3
(97.3)
Average high °C (°F) 6.2
(43.2)
6.9
(44.4)
10.1
(50.2)
14.3
(57.7)
17.8
(64.0)
20.3
(68.5)
22.5
(72.5)
22.4
(72.3)
19.2
(66.6)
14.7
(58.5)
10.0
(50.0)
6.9
(44.4)
14.3
(57.7)
Daily mean °C (°F) 3.8
(38.8)
4.1
(39.4)
6.5
(43.7)
9.8
(49.6)
13.3
(55.9)
16.0
(60.8)
18.1
(64.6)
18.0
(64.4)
15.1
(59.2)
11.3
(52.3)
7.4
(45.3)
4.6
(40.3)
10.7
(51.2)
Average low °C (°F) 1.2
(34.2)
1.0
(33.8)
2.8
(37.0)
5.2
(41.4)
8.6
(47.5)
11.3
(52.3)
13.5
(56.3)
13.4
(56.1)
11.0
(51.8)
7.7
(45.9)
4.5
(40.1)
1.5
(34.7)
6.8
(44.3)
Record low °C (°F) −16.3
(2.7)
−19.7
(−3.5)
−16.7
(1.9)
−4.7
(23.5)
−1.1
(30.0)
2.3
(36.1)
5.0
(41.0)
5.0
(41.0)
2.0
(35.6)
−3.4
(25.9)
−8.1
(17.4)
−14.8
(5.4)
−19.7
(−3.5)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 66.5
(2.62)
54.7
(2.15)
51.8
(2.04)
39.6
(1.56)
53.9
(2.12)
64.8
(2.55)
82.3
(3.24)
98.6
(3.88)
84.4
(3.32)
86.7
(3.41)
85.3
(3.36)
81.7
(3.22)
850.3
(33.48)
Average snowfall cm (inches) 4.8
(1.9)
5.3
(2.1)
2.8
(1.1)
0.2
(0.1)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0.1
(0.0)
0.8
(0.3)
3.9
(1.5)
17.9
(7.0)
Average precipitation days (≥ 1 mm) 12.2 10.8 9.7 8.6 8.9 9.7 10.9 11.6 10.9 12.4 13.4 14.1 133.2
Average relative humidity (%) 87.3 84.9 81.0 75.6 74.5 76.3 77.2 78.3 81.8 84.9 88.4 88.5 81.6
Mean monthly sunshine hours 69.0 94.3 146.0 197.7 230.7 217.2 225.4 203.5 154.2 116.9 66.8 58.2 1,779.9
Percent possible sunshine 26.8 33.6 39.6 47.4 47.4 43.4 44.7 44.6 40.4 35.3 25.2 24.1 37.7
Average ultraviolet index 1 1 2 4 5 6 6 5 4 2 1 0 3
Source: Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute (1991–2020 normals)[85] (1971–2000 extremes)[86] and Weather Atlas (UV index)[87]

Demographics

Historical population

Estimated population, 1300–1564
YearPop.±% p.a.
13001,000—    
14004,700+1.56%
151411,000+0.75%
YearPop.±% p.a.
154613,200+0.57%
155722,200+4.84%
156430,900+4.84%
Source: Bureau Monumentenzorg en Archeologie (1300)[88]
Ramaer 1921, pp. 11–12, 181 (1400 and 1564)
Van Dillen 1929, pp. xxv–xxvi (1514, 1546 and 1557)

In 1300, Amsterdam's population was around 1,000 people.[89] While many towns in Holland experienced population decline during the 15th and 16th centuries, Amsterdam's population grew,[90] mainly due to the rise of the profitable Baltic maritime trade especially in grain after the Burgundian victory in the Dutch–Hanseatic War in 1441.[91] The population of Amsterdam was only modest compared to the towns and cities of Flanders and Brabant, which comprised the most urbanized area of the Low Countries.[92]

Historical population in 10-year intervals, 1590–present
YearPop.±%
159041,362—    
160059,551+44.0%
161082,742+38.9%
1620106,500+28.7%
1630135,439+27.2%
1640162,388+19.9%
1650176,873+8.9%
1660192,767+9.0%
1670206,188+7.0%
1680219,098+6.3%
1690224,393+2.4%
1700235,224+4.8%
1710239,149+1.7%
1720241,447+1.0%
1730239,866−0.7%
1740237,582−1.0%
1750233,952−1.5%
1760240,862+3.0%
1770239,056−0.7%
1780228,938−4.2%
1790214,473−6.3%
1800203,485−5.1%
YearPop.±%
1810201,347−1.1%
1820197,831−1.7%
1830206,383+4.3%
1840214,367+3.9%
1850223,700+4.4%
1860244,050+9.1%
1870279,221+14.4%
1880323,784+16.0%
1890417,539+29.0%
1900520,602+24.7%
1910573,983+10.3%
1920647,427+12.8%
1930757,386+17.0%
1940800,594+5.7%
1950835,834+4.4%
1960869,602+4.0%
1970831,463−4.4%
1980716,967−13.8%
1990695,221−3.0%
2000731,289+5.2%
2010767,773+5.0%
2020872,380+13.6%
Source: Nusteling 1985, p. 240 (1590–1670)
Van Leeuwen & Oeppen 1993, p. 87 (1680–1880)
Department for Research, Information and Statistics (1890–present)

This changed when, during the Dutch Revolt, many people from the Southern Netherlands fled to the North, especially after Antwerp fell to Spanish forces in 1585. Jews from Spain, Portugal and Eastern Europe similarly settled in Amsterdam, as did Germans and Scandinavians.[90] In thirty years, Amsterdam's population more than doubled between 1585 and 1610.[93] By 1600, its population was around 50,000.[89] During the 1660s, Amsterdam's population reached 200,000.[94] The city's growth levelled off and the population stabilized around 240,000 for most of the 18th century.[95]

In 1750, Amsterdam was the fourth largest city in Western Europe, behind London (676,000), Paris (560,000) and Naples (324,000).[96] This was all the more remarkable as Amsterdam was neither the capital city nor the seat of government of the Dutch Republic, which itself was a much smaller state than Great Britain, France or the Ottoman Empire. In contrast to those other metropolises, Amsterdam was also surrounded by large towns such as Leiden (about 67,000), Rotterdam (45,000), Haarlem (38,000) and Utrecht (30,000).[97]

The city's population declined in the early 19th century,[98] dipping under 200,000 in 1820.[99] By the second half of the 19th century, industrialization spurred renewed growth.[100] Amsterdam's population hit an all-time high of 872,000 in 1959,[101] before declining in the following decades due to government-sponsored suburbanisation to so-called groeikernen (growth centres) such as Purmerend and Almere.[102][103][104] Between 1970 and 1980, Amsterdam experienced its sharp population decline, peaking at a net loss of 25,000 people in 1973.[104] By 1985 the city had only 675,570 residents.[105] This was soon followed by reurbanization and gentrification,[106][104] leading to renewed population growth in the 2010s. Also in the 2010s, much of Amsterdam's population growth was due to immigration to the city.[107]

Immigration

In the 16th and 17th century, non-Dutch immigrants to Amsterdam were mostly Protestant Huguenots and Flemings, Sephardic Jews, and Westphalians. Huguenots came after the Edict of Fontainebleau in 1685, while the Flemish Protestants came during the Eighty Years' War against Catholic Spain. The Westphalians came to Amsterdam mostly for economic reasons; their influx continued through the 18th and 19th centuries.[citation needed] Before the Second World War, 10% of the city population was Jewish. Just twenty percent of them survived the Holocaust.[108]

The first mass immigration in the 20th century was by people from Indonesia, who came to Amsterdam after the independence of the Dutch East Indies in the 1940s and 1950s. In the 1960s guest workers from Turkey, Morocco, Italy, and Spain emigrated to Amsterdam. After the independence of Suriname in 1975, a large wave of Surinamese settled in Amsterdam, mostly in the Bijlmer area. Other immigrants, including refugees asylum seekers and undocumented immigrants, came from Europe, the Americas, Asia and Africa. In the 1970s and 1980s, many 'old' Amsterdammers moved to 'new' cities like Almere and Purmerend, prompted by the third Land-use planning bill of the Dutch Government. This bill promoted suburbanization and arranged for new developments in so-called "groeikernen", literally cores of growth. Young professionals and artists moved into neighborhoods De Pijp and the Jordaan abandoned by these Amsterdammers. The non-Western immigrants settled mostly in the social housing projects in Amsterdam-West and the Bijlmer. Today, people of non-Western origin make up approximately one-fifth of the population of Amsterdam, and more than 30% of the city's children.[109][110][111] Ethnic Dutch (as defined by the Dutch census) now make up a minority of the total population, although by far the largest one. Only one in three inhabitants under 15 is an autochthon, or a person who has two parents of Dutch origin.[112] Segregation along ethnic lines is clearly visible, with people of non-Western origin, considered a separate group by Statistics Netherlands, concentrating in specific neighborhoods especially in Nieuw-West, Zeeburg, Bijlmer and in certain areas of Amsterdam-Noord.[113][114]

City of Amsterdam (2020)
Foreign population by country of origin
(includes 2nd generation immigrants)[115]
Country or territory Population
Morocco 77,210
Suriname 64,218
Turkey 44,465
Indonesia 24,075
Germany 19,374
UK 15,338
Ghana 12,847
Dutch Caribbean 12,174
USA 11,582
Others 484,982

In 2000, Christians formed the largest religious group in the city (28% of the population). The next largest religion was Islam (8%), most of whose followers were Sunni.[116][117] In 2015, Christians formed the largest religious group in the city (28% of the population). The next largest religion was Islam (7.1%), most of whose followers were Sunni.[115]

Religion

Religion in Amsterdam (2015)[118]

  Non affiliated (62.2%)
  Catholic Church (13.3%)
  Islam (7.1%)
  Other Christian denominations (5.9%)
  Hinduism (1.1%)
  Buddhism (1.0%)
  Judaism (0.7%)

In 1578, the largely Catholic city of Amsterdam joined the revolt against Spanish rule,[119] late in comparison to other major northern Dutch cities.[120] Catholic priests were driven out of the city.[119] Following the Dutch takeover, all churches were converted to Protestant worship.[121] Calvinism was declared the main religion;[120] although Catholicism was not forbidden and priests allowed to serve, the Catholic hierarchy was prohibited.[dubious ] This led to the establishment of schuilkerken, covert religious buildings that were hidden in pre-existing buildings. Catholics, some Jewish and dissenting Protestants worshiped in such buildings.[122] A large influx of foreigners of many religions came to 17th-century Amsterdam, in particular Sefardic Jews from Spain and Portugal,[123][124] Huguenots from France,[125] Lutherans, Mennonites, as well as Protestants from across the Netherlands.[126] This led to the establishment of many non-Dutch-speaking churches.[citation needed] In 1603, the Jewish received permission to practice their religion in the city. In 1639, the first synagogue was consecrated.[127] The Jews came to call the town 'Jerusalem of the West'.[128]

As they became established in the city, other Christian denominations used converted Catholic chapels to conduct their own services. The oldest English-language church congregation in the world outside the United Kingdom is found at the Begijnhof.[citation needed][129] Regular services there are still offered in English under the auspices of the Church of Scotland.[130] Being Calvinists, the Huguenots soon integrated into the Dutch Reformed Church, though often retaining their own congregations. Some, commonly referred by the moniker 'Walloon', are recognizable today as they offer occasional services in French.[citation needed]

In the second half of the 17th century, Amsterdam experienced an influx of Ashkenazim, Jews from Central and Eastern Europe. Jews often fled the pogroms in those areas. The first Ashkenazis who arrived in Amsterdam were refugees from the Khmelnytsky Uprising occurring in Ukraine and the Thirty Years' War, which devastated much of Central Europe. They not only founded their own synagogues, but had a strong influence on the 'Amsterdam dialect' adding a large Yiddish local vocabulary.[131] Despite an absence of an official Jewish ghetto, most Jews preferred to live in the eastern part, which used to be the center of medieval Amsterdam. The main street of this Jewish neighbourhood was Jodenbreestraat. The neighbourhood comprised the Waterlooplein and the Nieuwmarkt.[131][132] Buildings in this neighbourhood fell into disrepair after the Second World War[133] a large section of the neighbourhood was demolished during the construction of the metro system. This led to riots, and as a result the original plans for large-scale reconstruction were abandoned by the government.[134][135] The neighbourhood was rebuilt with smaller-scale residence buildings on the basis of its original layout.[136]

 
The Westerkerk in the Centrum borough, one of Amsterdam's best-known churches

Catholic churches in Amsterdam have been constructed since the restoration of the episcopal hierarchy in 1853.[137] One of the principal architects behind the city's Catholic churches, Cuypers, was also responsible for the Amsterdam Centraal station and the Rijksmuseum.[138][139]

In 1924, the Catholic Church hosted the International Eucharistic Congress in Amsterdam;[140] numerous Catholic prelates visited the city, where festivities were held in churches and stadiums.[141] Catholic processions on the public streets, however, were still forbidden under law at the time.[142] Only in the 20th century was Amsterdam's relation to Catholicism normalised,[143] but despite its far larger population size, the episcopal see of the city was placed in the provincial town of Haarlem.[144]

Historically, Amsterdam has been predominantly Christian, in 1900 Christians formed the largest religious group in the city (70% of the population), Dutch Reformed Church formed 45% of the city population, while the Catholic Church formed 25% of the city population.[145] In recent times, religious demographics in Amsterdam have been changed by immigration from former colonies. Hinduism has been introduced from the Hindu diaspora from Suriname[146] and several distinct branches of Islam have been brought from various parts of the world.[147] Islam is now the largest non-Christian religion in Amsterdam.[118] The large community of Ghanaian immigrants have established African churches,[148] often in parking garages in the Bijlmer area.[149]

Diversity and immigration

Amsterdam experienced an influx of religions and cultures after the Second World War. With 180 different nationalities,[150] Amsterdam is home to one of the widest varieties of nationalities of any city in the world.[151] The proportion of the population of immigrant origin in the city proper is about 50%[152] and 88% of the population are Dutch citizens.[153]

Amsterdam has been one of the municipalities in the Netherlands which provided immigrants with extensive and free Dutch-language courses, which have benefited many immigrants.[154]

Cityscape and architecture

 
View of the city centre looking southwest from the Oosterdokskade
 
A 1538 painting by Cornelis Anthonisz showing a bird's-eye view of Amsterdam. The famous Grachtengordel had not yet been established.

Amsterdam fans out south from the Amsterdam Centraal station and Damrak, the main street off the station. The oldest area of the town is known as De Wallen (English: "The Quays"). It lies to the east of Damrak and contains the city's famous red-light district. To the south of De Wallen is the old Jewish quarter of Waterlooplein.

The medieval and colonial age canals of Amsterdam, known as grachten, embraces the heart of the city where homes have interesting gables. Beyond the Grachtengordel are the former working-class areas of Jordaan and de Pijp. The Museumplein with the city's major museums, the Vondelpark, a 19th-century park named after the Dutch writer Joost van den Vondel, as well as the Plantage neighbourhood, with the zoo, are also located outside the Grachtengordel.

Several parts of the city and the surrounding urban area are polders. This can be recognised by the suffix -meer which means lake, as in Aalsmeer, Bijlmermeer, Haarlemmermeer and Watergraafsmeer.

Canals

 
Rokin – November 1977

The Amsterdam canal system is the result of conscious city planning.[155] In the early 17th century, when immigration was at a peak, a comprehensive plan was developed that was based on four concentric half-circles of canals with their ends emerging at the IJ bay. Known as the Grachtengordel, three of the canals were mostly for residential development: the Herengracht (where "Heren" refers to Heren Regeerders van de stad Amsterdam, ruling lords of Amsterdam, whilst gracht means canal, so that the name can be roughly translated as "Canal of the Lords"), Keizersgracht (Emperor's Canal) and Prinsengracht (Prince's Canal).[156] The fourth and outermost canal is the Singelgracht, which is often not mentioned on maps because it is a collective name for all canals in the outer ring. The Singelgracht should not be confused with the oldest and innermost canal, the Singel.

 
Herengracht
 
Prinsengracht

The canals served for defense, water management and transport. The defenses took the form of a moat and earthen dikes, with gates at transit points, but otherwise no masonry superstructures.[157] The original plans have been lost, so historians, such as Ed Taverne, need to speculate on the original intentions: it is thought that the considerations of the layout were purely practical and defensive rather than ornamental.[158]

Construction started in 1613 and proceeded from west to east, across the breadth of the layout, like a gigantic windshield wiper as the historian Geert Mak calls it – and not from the centre outwards, as a popular myth has it. The canal construction in the southern sector was completed by 1656. Subsequently, the construction of residential buildings proceeded slowly. The eastern part of the concentric canal plan, covering the area between the Amstel river and the IJ bay, has never been implemented. In the following centuries, the land was used for parks, senior citizens' homes, theatres, other public facilities, and waterways without much planning.[159] Over the years, several canals have been filled in, becoming streets or squares, such as the Nieuwezijds Voorburgwal and the Spui.[160]

Expansion

 
The Egelantiersgracht lies west of the Grachtengordel, in the Jordaan neighbourhood.

After the development of Amsterdam's canals in the 17th century, the city did not grow beyond its borders for two centuries. During the 19th century, Samuel Sarphati devised a plan based on the grandeur of Paris and London at that time. The plan envisaged the construction of new houses, public buildings and streets just outside the Grachtengordel. The main aim of the plan, however, was to improve public health. Although the plan did not expand the city, it did produce some of the largest public buildings to date, like the Paleis voor Volksvlijt.[161][162][163]

Following Sarphati, civil engineers Jacobus van Niftrik and Jan Kalff designed an entire ring of 19th-century neighbourhoods surrounding the city's centre, with the city preserving the ownership of all land outside the 17th-century limit, thus firmly controlling development.[164] Most of these neighbourhoods became home to the working class.[165]

In response to overcrowding, two plans were designed at the beginning of the 20th century which were very different from anything Amsterdam had ever seen before: Plan Zuid (designed by the architect Berlage) and West. These plans involved the development of new neighbourhoods consisting of housing blocks for all social classes.[166][167]

After the Second World War, large new neighbourhoods were built in the western, southeastern, and northern parts of the city. These new neighbourhoods were built to relieve the city's shortage of living space and give people affordable houses with modern conveniences. The neighbourhoods consisted mainly of large housing blocks located among green spaces, connected to wide roads, making the neighbourhoods easily accessible by motor car. The western suburbs which were built in that period are collectively called the Westelijke Tuinsteden. The area to the southeast of the city built during the same period is known as the Bijlmer.[168][169]

Architecture

 
The Royal Palace of Amsterdam, by architects Jacob van Campen and Daniël Stalpaert is characteristic of the architecture of the Dutch Baroque architecture.

Amsterdam has a rich architectural history. The oldest building in Amsterdam is the Oude Kerk (English: Old Church), at the heart of the Wallen, consecrated in 1306.[170] The oldest wooden building is Het Houten Huys[171] at the Begijnhof. It was constructed around 1425 and is one of only two existing wooden buildings. It is also one of the few examples of Gothic architecture in Amsterdam. The oldest stone building of the Netherlands, The Moriaan is built in 's-Hertogenbosch.

In the 16th century, wooden buildings were razed and replaced with brick ones. During this period, many buildings were constructed in the architectural style of the Renaissance. Buildings of this period are very recognisable with their stepped gable façades, which is the common Dutch Renaissance style. Amsterdam quickly developed its own Renaissance architecture. These buildings were built according to the principles of the architect Hendrick de Keyser.[172] One of the most striking buildings designed by Hendrick de Keyser is the Westerkerk. In the 17th century baroque architecture became very popular, as it was elsewhere in Europe. This roughly coincided with Amsterdam's Golden Age. The leading architects of this style in Amsterdam were Jacob van Campen, Philips Vingboons and Daniel Stalpaert.[173]

 
The Begijnhof is one of the oldest hofjes in Amsterdam.
 
The Openbare Bibliotheek Amsterdam and Conservatorium van Amsterdam, two examples of 21st-century architecture in the centre of the city

Philip Vingboons designed splendid merchants' houses throughout the city. A famous building in baroque style in Amsterdam is the Royal Palace on Dam Square. Throughout the 18th century, Amsterdam was heavily influenced by French culture. This is reflected in the architecture of that period. Around 1815, architects broke with the baroque style and started building in different neo-styles.[174] Most Gothic style buildings date from that era and are therefore said to be built in a neo-gothic style. At the end of the 19th century, the Jugendstil or Art Nouveau style became popular and many new buildings were constructed in this architectural style. Since Amsterdam expanded rapidly during this period, new buildings adjacent to the city centre were also built in this style. The houses in the vicinity of the Museum Square in Amsterdam Oud-Zuid are an example of Jugendstil. The last style that was popular in Amsterdam before the modern era was Art Deco. Amsterdam had its own version of the style, which was called the Amsterdamse School. Whole districts were built this style, such as the Rivierenbuurt.[175] A notable feature of the façades of buildings designed in Amsterdamse School is that they are highly decorated and ornate, with oddly shaped windows and doors.

The old city centre is the focal point of all the architectural styles before the end of the 19th century. Jugendstil and Georgian are mostly found outside the city's centre in the neighbourhoods built in the early 20th century, although there are also some striking examples of these styles in the city centre. Most historic buildings in the city centre and nearby are houses, such as the famous merchants' houses lining the canals.

Parks and recreational areas

 

Amsterdam has many parks, open spaces, and squares throughout the city. The Vondelpark, the largest park in the city, is located in the Oud-Zuid neighbourhood and is named after the 17th-century Amsterdam author Joost van den Vondel. Yearly, the park has around 10 million visitors. In the park is an open-air theatre, a playground and several horeca facilities. In the Zuid borough, is the Beatrixpark, named after Queen Beatrix. Between Amsterdam and Amstelveen is the Amsterdamse Bos ("Amsterdam Forest"), the largest recreational area in Amsterdam. Annually, almost 4.5 million people visit the park, which has a size of 1.000 hectares and is approximately three times the size of Central Park.[176] The Amstelpark in the Zuid borough houses the Rieker windmill, which dates to 1636. Other parks include the Sarphatipark in the De Pijp neighbourhood, the Oosterpark in the Oost borough and the Westerpark in the Westerpark neighbourhood. The city has three beaches: Nemo Beach, Citybeach "Het stenen hoofd" (Silodam) and Blijburg, all located in the Centrum borough.

The city has many open squares (plein in Dutch). The namesake of the city as the site of the original dam, Dam Square, is the main city square and has the Royal Palace and National Monument. Museumplein hosts various museums, including the Rijksmuseum, Van Gogh Museum, and Stedelijk Museum. Other squares include Rembrandtplein, Muntplein, Nieuwmarkt, Leidseplein, Spui and Waterlooplein. Also, near to Amsterdam is the Nekkeveld estate conservation project.

Economy

 
The Amsterdam Stock Exchange, the oldest stock exchange in the world
 
The Zuidas, the city's main business district

Amsterdam is the financial and business capital of the Netherlands.[177] According to the 2007 European Cities Monitor (ECM) – an annual location survey of Europe's leading companies carried out by global real estate consultant Cushman & Wakefield – Amsterdam is one of the top European cities in which to locate an international business, ranking fifth in the survey.[178] with the survey determining London, Paris, Frankfurt and Barcelona as the four European cities surpassing Amsterdam in this regard.

A substantial number of large corporations and banks' headquarters are located in the Amsterdam area, including: AkzoNobel, Heineken International, ING Group, ABN AMRO, TomTom, Delta Lloyd Group, Booking.com and Philips. Although many small offices remain along the historic canals, centrally based companies have increasingly relocated outside Amsterdam's city centre. Consequently, the Zuidas (English: South Axis) has become the new financial and legal hub of Amsterdam,[179] with the country's five largest law firms and several subsidiaries of large consulting firms, such as Boston Consulting Group and Accenture, as well as the World Trade Centre (Amsterdam) located in the Zuidas district. In addition to the Zuidas, there are three smaller financial districts in Amsterdam:

The adjoining municipality of Amstelveen is the location of KPMG International's global headquarters. Other non-Dutch companies have chosen to settle in communities surrounding Amsterdam since they allow freehold property ownership, whereas Amsterdam retains ground rent.

The Amsterdam Stock Exchange (AEX), now part of Euronext, is the world's oldest stock exchange and, due to Brexit, has overtaken LSE as the largest bourse in Europe.[183] It is near Dam Square in the city centre.

Port of Amsterdam

The Port of Amsterdam is the fourth-largest port in Europe, the 38th largest port in the world and the second-largest port in the Netherlands by metric tons of cargo. In 2014, the Port of Amsterdam had a cargo throughput of 97,4 million tons of cargo, which was mostly bulk cargo. Amsterdam has the biggest cruise port in the Netherlands with more than 150 cruise ships every year. In 2019, the new lock in IJmuiden opened; since then, the port has been able to grow to 125 million tonnes in capacity.

Tourism

 
Boats give tours of the city, such as this one in front of the EYE Film Institute Netherlands.
 
Spiegelgracht

Amsterdam is one of the most popular tourist destinations in Europe, receiving more than 5.34 million international visitors annually; this is excluding the 16 million day-trippers visiting the city every year.[184] The number of visitors has been growing steadily over the past decade. This can be attributed to an increasing number of European visitors. Two-thirds of the hotels are located in the city's centre.[185] Hotels with 4 or 5 stars contribute 42% of the total beds available and 41% of the overnight stays in Amsterdam. The room occupation rate was 85% in 2017, up from 78% in 2006.[186][187] The majority of tourists (74%) originate from Europe. The largest group of non-European visitors come from the United States, accounting for 14% of the total.[187] Certain years have a theme in Amsterdam to attract extra tourists. For example, the year 2006 was designated "Rembrandt 400", to celebrate the 400th birthday of Rembrandt van Rijn. Some hotels offer special arrangements or activities during these years. The average number of guests per year staying at the four campsites around the city range from 12,000 to 65,000.[187]

De Wallen (red-light district)

 
De Wallen, Amsterdam's Red-light district, offers activities such as legal prostitution and a number of coffee shops that sell cannabis. It is one of the main tourist attractions.[188]

De Wallen, also known as Walletjes or Rosse Buurt, is a designated area for legalised prostitution and is Amsterdam's largest and best-known red-light district. This neighbourhood has become a famous attraction for tourists. It consists of a network of canals, streets, and alleys containing several hundred small, one-room apartments rented by sex workers who offer their services from behind a window or glass door, typically illuminated with red lights. In recent years, the city government has been closing and repurposing the famous red-light district windows in an effort to clean up the area and reduce the amount of party and sex tourism.

Retail

Shops in Amsterdam range from large high-end department stores such as De Bijenkorf founded in 1870 to small speciality shops. Amsterdam's high-end shops are found in the streets P.C. Hooftstraat[189] and Cornelis Schuytstraat, which are located in the vicinity of the Vondelpark. One of Amsterdam's busiest high streets is the narrow, medieval Kalverstraat in the heart of the city. Other shopping areas include the Negen Straatjes and Haarlemmerdijk and Haarlemmerstraat. Negen Straatjes are nine narrow streets within the Grachtengordel, the concentric canal system of Amsterdam. The Negen Straatjes differ from other shopping districts with the presence of a large diversity of privately owned shops. The Haarlemmerstraat and Haarlemmerdijk were voted best shopping street in the Netherlands in 2011. These streets have as the Negen Straatjes a large diversity of privately owned shops. However, as the Negen Straatjes are dominated by fashion stores, the Haarlemmerstraat and Haarlemmerdijk offer a wide variety of stores, just to name some specialities: candy and other food-related stores, lingerie, sneakers, wedding clothing, interior shops, books, Italian deli's, racing and mountain bikes, skatewear, etc.

The city also features a large number of open-air markets such as the Albert Cuyp Market, Westerstraat-markt, Ten Katemarkt, and Dappermarkt. Some of these markets are held daily, like the Albert Cuypmarkt and the Dappermarkt. Others, like the Westerstraatmarkt, are held every week.

Fashion

 
An Amsterdammer waits for a traffic light to change at the Muntplein in the heart of Amsterdam.

Several fashion brands and designers are based in Amsterdam. Fashion designers include Iris van Herpen,[190] Mart Visser, Viktor & Rolf, Marlies Dekkers and Frans Molenaar. Fashion models like Yfke Sturm, Doutzen Kroes and Kim Noorda started their careers in Amsterdam. Amsterdam has its garment centre in the World Fashion Center. Fashion photographers Inez van Lamsweerde and Vinoodh Matadin were born in Amsterdam.[191]

Culture

 
The Rijksmuseum houses Rembrandt's The Night Watch.
 
The Van Gogh Museum houses the world's largest collection of Van Gogh's paintings and letters.
 
The Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam is an international museum dedicated to modern and contemporary art and design.

During the later part of the 16th century, Amsterdam's Rederijkerskamer (Chamber of rhetoric) organised contests between different Chambers in the reading of poetry and drama.[192][193] In 1637, Schouwburg, the first theatre in Amsterdam was built, opening on 3 January 1638.[194] The first ballet performances in the Netherlands were given in Schouwburg in 1642 with the Ballet of the Five Senses.[195][196] In the 18th century, French theatre became popular. While Amsterdam was under the influence of German music in the 19th century there were few national opera productions; the Hollandse Opera of Amsterdam was built in 1888 for the specific purpose of promoting Dutch opera.[197] In the 19th century, popular culture was centred on the Nes area in Amsterdam (mainly vaudeville and music-hall).[citation needed] An improved metronome was invented in 1812 by Dietrich Nikolaus Winkel.[198] The Rijksmuseum (1885) and Stedelijk Museum (1895) were built and opened.[199][200] In 1888, the Concertgebouworkest orchestra was established.[201] With the 20th century came cinema, radio and television.[citation needed] Though most studios are located in Hilversum and Aalsmeer, Amsterdam's influence on programming is very strong. Many people who work in the television industry live in Amsterdam. Also, the headquarters of the Dutch SBS Broadcasting Group is located in Amsterdam.[202]

Museums

The most important museums of Amsterdam are located on the Museumplein (Museum Square), located at the southwestern side of the Rijksmuseum. It was created in the last quarter of the 19th century on the grounds of the former World's fair. The northeastern part of the square is bordered by the large Rijksmuseum. In front of the Rijksmuseum on the square itself is a long, rectangular pond. This is transformed into an ice rink in winter.[203] The northwestern part of the square is bordered by the Van Gogh Museum, House of Bols Cocktail & Genever Experience and Coster Diamonds. The southwestern border of the Museum Square is the Van Baerlestraat, which is a major thoroughfare in this part of Amsterdam. The Concertgebouw is located across this street from the square. To the southeast of the square are several large houses, one of which contains the American consulate. A parking garage can be found underneath the square, as well as a supermarket. The Museumplein is covered almost entirely with a lawn, except for the northeastern part of the square which is covered with gravel. The current appearance of the square was realised in 1999, when the square was remodelled. The square itself is the most prominent site in Amsterdam for festivals and outdoor concerts, especially in the summer. Plans were made in 2008 to remodel the square again because many inhabitants of Amsterdam are not happy with its current appearance.[204]

 

The Rijksmuseum possesses the largest and most important collection of classical Dutch art.[205] It opened in 1885. Its collection consists of nearly one million objects.[206] The artist most associated with Amsterdam is Rembrandt, whose work, and the work of his pupils, is displayed in the Rijksmuseum. Rembrandt's masterpiece The Night Watch is one of the top pieces of art of the museum. It also houses paintings from artists like Bartholomeus van der Helst, Johannes Vermeer, Frans Hals, Ferdinand Bol, Albert Cuyp, Jacob van Ruisdael and Paulus Potter. Aside from paintings, the collection consists of a large variety of decorative art. This ranges from Delftware to giant doll-houses from the 17th century. The architect of the gothic revival building was P.J.H. Cuypers. The museum underwent a 10-year, 375 million euro renovation starting in 2003. The full collection was reopened to the public on 13 April 2013 and the Rijksmuseum has remained the most visited museum in Amsterdam with 2.2 million visitors in 2016 and 2.16 million in 2017.[207]

Van Gogh lived in Amsterdam for a short while and there is a museum dedicated to his work. The museum is housed in one of the few modern buildings in this area of Amsterdam. The building was designed by Gerrit Rietveld. This building is where the permanent collection is displayed. A new building was added to the museum in 1999. This building, known as the performance wing, was designed by Japanese architect Kisho Kurokawa. Its purpose is to house temporary exhibitions of the museum.[208][209] Some of Van Gogh's most famous paintings, like The Potato Eaters and Sunflowers, are in the collection.[210] The Van Gogh museum is the second most visited museum in Amsterdam, not far behind the Rijksmuseum in terms of the number of visits, being approximately 2.1 million in 2016,[211] for example.

Next to the Van Gogh museum stands the Stedelijk Museum. This is Amsterdam's most important museum of modern art. The museum is as old as the square it borders and was opened in 1895. The permanent collection consists of works of art from artists like Piet Mondrian, Karel Appel, and Kazimir Malevich. After renovations lasting several years, the museum opened in September 2012 with a new composite extension that has been called 'The Bathtub' due to its resemblance to one.

Amsterdam contains many other museums throughout the city. They range from small museums such as the Verzetsmuseum (Resistance Museum), the Anne Frank House, and the Rembrandt House Museum, to the very large, like the Tropenmuseum (Museum of the Tropics), Amsterdam Museum (formerly known as Amsterdam Historical Museum), Hermitage Amsterdam (a dependency of the Hermitage Museum in Saint Petersburg) and the Joods Historisch Museum (Jewish Historical Museum). The modern-styled Nemo is dedicated to child-friendly science exhibitions.

Music

 
Coldplay performing at the Amsterdam Arena, 2016

Amsterdam's musical culture includes a large collection of songs that treat the city nostalgically and lovingly. The 1949 song "Aan de Amsterdamse grachten" ("On the canals of Amsterdam") was performed and recorded by many artists, including John Kraaijkamp Sr.; the best-known version is probably that by Wim Sonneveld (1962). In the 1950s Johnny Jordaan rose to fame with "Geef mij maar Amsterdam" ("I prefer Amsterdam"), which praises the city above all others (explicitly Paris); Jordaan sang especially about his own neighbourhood, the Jordaan ("Bij ons in de Jordaan"). Colleagues and contemporaries of Johnny include Tante Leen and Manke Nelis. Another notable Amsterdam song is "Amsterdam" by Jacques Brel (1964).[212] A 2011 poll by Amsterdam newspaper Het Parool that Trio Bier's "Oude Wolf" was voted "Amsterdams lijflied".[213] Notable Amsterdam bands from the modern era include the Osdorp Posse and The Ex.

AFAS Live (formerly known as the Heineken Music Hall) is a concert hall located near the Johan Cruyff Arena (known as the Amsterdam Arena until 2018). Its main purpose is to serve as a podium for pop concerts for big audiences. Many famous international artists have performed there. Two other notable venues, Paradiso and the Melkweg are located near the Leidseplein. Both focus on broad programming, ranging from indie rock to hip hop, R&B, and other popular genres. Other more subcultural music venues are OCCII, OT301, De Nieuwe Anita, Winston Kingdom, and Zaal 100. Jazz has a strong following in Amsterdam, with the Bimhuis being the premier venue. In 2012, Ziggo Dome was opened, also near Amsterdam Arena, a state-of-the-art indoor music arena.

AFAS Live is also host to many electronic dance music festivals, alongside many other venues. Armin van Buuren and Tiesto, some of the worlds leading Trance DJ's hail from the Netherlands and frequently perform in Amsterdam. Each year in October, the city hosts the Amsterdam Dance Event (ADE) which is one of the leading electronic music conferences and one of the biggest club festivals for electronic music in the world, attracting over 350,000 visitors each year.[214] Another popular dance festival is 5daysoff, which takes place in the venues Paradiso and Melkweg. In the summertime, there are several big outdoor dance parties in or nearby Amsterdam, such as Awakenings, Dance Valley, Mystery Land, Loveland, A Day at the Park, Welcome to the Future, and Valtifest.

 
The Concertgebouw or Royal Concert Hall houses performances of the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra and other musical events.

Amsterdam has a world-class symphony orchestra, the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra. Their home is the Concertgebouw, which is across the Van Baerlestraat from the Museum Square. It is considered by critics to be a concert hall with some of the best acoustics in the world. The building contains three halls, Grote Zaal, Kleine Zaal, and Spiegelzaal. Some nine hundred concerts and other events per year take place in the Concertgebouw, for a public of over 700,000, making it one of the most-visited concert halls in the world.[215] The opera house of Amsterdam is located adjacent to the city hall. Therefore, the two buildings combined are often called the Stopera, (a word originally coined by protesters against it very construction: Stop the Opera[-house]). This huge modern complex, opened in 1986, lies in the former Jewish neighbourhood at Waterlooplein next to the river Amstel. The Stopera is the home base of Dutch National Opera, Dutch National Ballet and the Holland Symfonia. Muziekgebouw aan 't IJ is a concert hall, which is located in the IJ near the central station. Its concerts perform mostly modern classical music. Located adjacent to it, is the Bimhuis, a concert hall for improvised and Jazz music.

Performing arts

Amsterdam has three main theatre buildings.

 
Stadsschouwburg, Amsterdam's best-known theatre
 
Royal Theater Carré, It was originally meant as a permanent circus building.

The Stadsschouwburg at the Leidseplein is the home base of Toneelgroep Amsterdam. The current building dates from 1894. Most plays are performed in the Grote Zaal (Great Hall). The normal program of events encompasses all sorts of theatrical forms. In 2009, the new hall of the Stadsschouwburg Amsterdam, Toneelgroep Amsterdam and Melkweg opened, and the renovation of the front end of the theatre was ready.

The Dutch National Opera and Ballet (formerly known as Het Muziektheater), dating from 1986, is the principal opera house and home to Dutch National Opera and Dutch National Ballet. Royal Theatre Carré was built as a permanent circus theatre in 1887 and is currently mainly used for musicals, cabaret performances, and pop concerts.

The recently re-opened DeLaMar Theater houses more commercial plays and musicals. A new theatre has also moved into the Amsterdam scene in 2014, joining other established venues: Theater Amsterdam is located in the west part of Amsterdam, on the Danzigerkade. It is housed in a modern building with a panoramic view over the harbour. The theatre is the first-ever purpose-built venue to showcase a single play entitled ANNE, the play based on Anne Frank's life.

On the east side of town, there is a small theatre in a converted bathhouse, the Badhuistheater. The theatre often has English programming.

The Netherlands has a tradition of cabaret or kleinkunst, which combines music, storytelling, commentary, theatre and comedy. Cabaret dates back to the 1930s and artists like Wim Kan, Wim Sonneveld and Toon Hermans were pioneers of this form of art in the Netherlands. In Amsterdam is the Kleinkunstacademie (English: Cabaret Academy) and Nederlied Kleinkunstkoor (English: Cabaret Choir). Contemporary popular artists are Youp van 't Hek, Freek de Jonge, Herman Finkers, Hans Teeuwen, Theo Maassen, Herman van Veen, Najib Amhali, Raoul Heertje, Jörgen Raymann, Brigitte Kaandorp and Comedytrain. The English spoken comedy scene was established with the founding of Boom Chicago in 1993. They have their own theatre at Leidseplein.

Nightlife

 
DeWolff performing at Paradiso
 
The Magere Brug or "Skinny Bridge" over the Amstel at night

Amsterdam is famous for its vibrant and diverse nightlife. Amsterdam has many cafés (bars). They range from large and modern to small and cosy. The typical Bruine Kroeg (brown café) breathe a more old fashioned atmosphere with dimmed lights, candles, and somewhat older clientele. These brown cafés mostly offer a wide range of local and international artisanal beers. Most cafés have terraces in summertime. A common sight on the Leidseplein during summer is a square full of terraces packed with people drinking beer or wine. Many restaurants can be found in Amsterdam as well. Since Amsterdam is a multicultural city, a lot of different ethnic restaurants can be found. Restaurants range from being rather luxurious and expensive to being ordinary and affordable. Amsterdam also possesses many discothèques. The two main nightlife areas for tourists are the Leidseplein and the Rembrandtplein. The Paradiso, Melkweg and Sugar Factory are cultural centres, which turn into discothèques on some nights. Examples of discothèques near the Rembrandtplein are the Escape, Air, John Doe and Club Abe. Also noteworthy are Panama, Hotel Arena (East), TrouwAmsterdam and Studio 80. In recent years '24-hour' clubs opened their doors, most notably Radion De School, Shelter and Marktkantine. Bimhuis located near the Central Station, with its rich programming hosting the best in the field is considered one of the best jazz clubs in the world. The Reguliersdwarsstraat is the main street for the LGBT community and nightlife.

Festivals

 
Queen's Day in Amsterdam on 2013
 
People dressed in orange on the canals of Amsterdam in 2010 during Koningsdag or King's Day

In 2008, there were 140 festivals and events in Amsterdam.[216] During the same year, Amsterdam was designated as the World Book Capital for one year by UNESCO.[217]

Famous festivals and events in Amsterdam include: Koningsdag (which was named Koninginnedag until the crowning of King Willem-Alexander in 2013) (King's Day – Queen's Day); the Holland Festival for the performing arts; the yearly Prinsengrachtconcert (classical concerto on the Prinsen canal) in August; the 'Stille Omgang' (a silent Roman Catholic evening procession held every March); Amsterdam Gay Pride; The Cannabis Cup; and the Uitmarkt. On Koningsdag—that is held each year on 27 April—hundreds of thousands of people travel to Amsterdam to celebrate with the city's residents. The entire city becomes overcrowded with people buying products from the freemarket, or visiting one of the many music concerts.

 
One of the decorated boats participating in the 2013 Canal Parade of the Amsterdam Gay Pride

The yearly Holland Festival attracts international artists and visitors from all over Europe. Amsterdam Gay Pride is a yearly local LGBT parade of boats in Amsterdam's canals, held on the first Saturday in August.[218] The annual Uitmarkt is a three-day cultural event at the start of the cultural season in late August. It offers previews of many different artists, such as musicians and poets, who perform on podia.[219]

Sports

Amsterdam is home of the Eredivisie football club AFC Ajax. The stadium Johan Cruyff Arena is the home of Ajax. It is located in the south-east of the city next to the new Amsterdam Bijlmer ArenA railway station. Before moving to their current location in 1996, Ajax played their regular matches in the now demolished De Meer Stadion in the eastern part of the city[220] or in the Olympic Stadium. In 1928, Amsterdam hosted the Summer Olympics. The Olympic Stadium built for the occasion has been completely restored and is now used for cultural and sporting events, such as the Amsterdam Marathon.[221] In 1920, Amsterdam assisted in hosting some of the sailing events for the Summer Olympics held in neighbouring Antwerp, Belgium by hosting events at Buiten IJ.

 
AFC Ajax player Johan Cruyff, 1967

The city holds the Dam to Dam Run, a 16 km (10 mi) race from Amsterdam to Zaandam, as well as the Amsterdam Marathon. The ice hockey team Amstel Tijgers play in the Jaap Eden ice rink. The team competes in the Dutch ice hockey premier league. Speed skating championships have been held on the 400-meter lane of this ice rink.

Amsterdam holds two American football franchises: the Amsterdam Crusaders and the Amsterdam Panthers. The Amsterdam Pirates baseball team competes in the Dutch Major League. There are three field hockey teams: Amsterdam, Pinoké and Hurley, who play their matches around the Wagener Stadium in the nearby city of Amstelveen. The basketball team MyGuide Amsterdam competes in the Dutch premier division and play their games in the Sporthallen Zuid.[222]

There is one rugby club in Amsterdam, which also hosts sports training classes such as RTC (Rugby Talenten Centrum or Rugby Talent Centre) and the National Rugby stadium.

Since 1999, the city of Amsterdam honours the best sportsmen and women at the Amsterdam Sports Awards. Boxer Raymond Joval and field hockey midfielder Carole Thate were the first to receive the awards, in 1999.

Amsterdam hosted the World Gymnaestrada in 1991 and will do so again in 2023.[223]

Politics

 
Femke Halsema has been the Mayor of Amsterdam since 2018.

The city of Amsterdam is a municipality under the Dutch Municipalities Act. It is governed by a directly elected municipal council, a municipal executive board and a mayor. Since 1981, the municipality of Amsterdam has gradually been divided into semi-autonomous boroughs, called stadsdelen or 'districts'. Over time, a total of 15 boroughs were created. In May 2010, under a major reform, the number of Amsterdam boroughs was reduced to eight: Amsterdam-Centrum covering the city centre including the canal belt, Amsterdam-Noord consisting of the neighbourhoods north of the IJ lake, Amsterdam-Oost in the east, Amsterdam-Zuid in the south, Amsterdam-West in the west, Amsterdam Nieuw-West in the far west, Amsterdam Zuidoost in the southeast, and Westpoort covering the Port of Amsterdam area.[224]

City government

As with all Dutch municipalities, Amsterdam is governed by a directly elected municipal council, a municipal executive board and a government appointed[225] mayor (burgemeester). The mayor is a member of the municipal executive board, but also has individual responsibilities in maintaining public order. On 27 June 2018, Femke Halsema (former member of House of Representatives for GroenLinks from 1998 to 2011) was appointed as the first woman to be Mayor of Amsterdam by the King's Commissioner of North Holland for a six-year term after being nominated by the Amsterdam municipal council and began serving a six-year term on 12 July 2018. She replaces Eberhard van der Laan (Labour Party) who was the Mayor of Amsterdam from 2010 until his death in October 2017. After the 2014 municipal council elections, a governing majority of D66, VVD and SP was formed – the first coalition without the Labour Party since World War II.[226] Next to the Mayor, the municipal executive board consists of eight wethouders ('alderpersons') appointed by the municipal council: four D66 alderpersons, two VVD alderpersons and two SP alderpersons.[227]

On 18 September 2017, it was announced by Eberhard van der Laan in an open letter to Amsterdam citizens that Kajsa Ollongren would take up his office as acting Mayor of Amsterdam with immediate effect due to ill health.[228] Ollongren was succeeded as acting Mayor by Eric van der Burg on 26 October 2017 and by Jozias van Aartsen on 4 December 2017.

 
Boroughs of Amsterdam until 24 March 2022

Unlike most other Dutch municipalities, Amsterdam is subdivided into eight boroughs, called stadsdelen or 'districts', and the urban area of Weesp, a system that was implemented gradually in the 1980s to improve local governance. The boroughs are responsible for many activities that had previously been run by the central city. In 2010, the number of Amsterdam boroughs reached fifteen. Fourteen of those had their own district council (deelraad), elected by a popular vote. The fifteenth, Westpoort, covers the harbour of Amsterdam and had very few residents. Therefore, it was governed by the central municipal council.

Under the borough system, municipal decisions are made at borough level, except for those affairs pertaining to the whole city such as major infrastructure projects, which are the jurisdiction of the central municipal authorities. In 2010, the borough system was restructured, in which many smaller boroughs merged into larger boroughs. In 2014, under a reform of the Dutch Municipalities Act, the Amsterdam boroughs lost much of their autonomous status, as their district councils were abolished.

The municipal council of Amsterdam voted to maintain the borough system by replacing the district councils with smaller, but still directly elected district committees (bestuurscommissies). Under a municipal ordinance, the new district committees were granted responsibilities through delegation of regulatory and executive powers by the central municipal council.

 
View of the Stopera (left), behind the Blauwbrug (blue bridge), where the Amsterdam city hall and opera house are located, and the Hermitage Museum (right) on the Amstel

Metropolitan area

 
Police headquarters of Amsterdam

"Amsterdam" is usually understood to refer to the municipality of Amsterdam. Colloquially, some areas within the municipality, such as the town of Durgerdam, may not be considered part of Amsterdam.

Statistics Netherlands uses three other definitions of Amsterdam: metropolitan agglomeration Amsterdam (Grootstedelijke Agglomeratie Amsterdam, not to be confused with Grootstedelijk Gebied Amsterdam, a synonym of Groot Amsterdam), Greater Amsterdam (Groot Amsterdam, a COROP region) and the urban region Amsterdam (Stadsgewest Amsterdam).[115] The Amsterdam Department for Research and Statistics uses a fourth conurbation, namely the Stadsregio Amsterdam ('City Region of Amsterdam'). The city region is similar to Greater Amsterdam but includes the municipalities of Zaanstad and Wormerland. It excludes Graft-De Rijp.

The smallest of these areas is the municipality of Amsterdam with a population of 802,938 in 2013.[229] The conurbation had a population of 1,096,042 in 2013.[229] It includes the municipalities of Zaanstad, Wormerland, Oostzaan, Diemen and Amstelveen only, as well as the municipality of Amsterdam.[229] Greater Amsterdam includes 15 municipalities,[229] and had a population of 1,293,208 in 2013.[229] Though much larger in area, the population of this area is only slightly larger, because the definition excludes the relatively populous municipality of Zaanstad. The largest area by population, the Amsterdam Metropolitan Area (Dutch: Metropoolregio Amsterdam), has a population of 2,33 million.[230] It includes for instance Zaanstad, Wormerland, Muiden, Abcoude, Haarlem, Almere and Lelystad but excludes Graft-De Rijp. Amsterdam is part of the conglomerate metropolitan area Randstad, with a total population of 6,659,300 inhabitants.[231]

Of these various metropolitan area configurations, only the Stadsregio Amsterdam (City Region of Amsterdam) has a formal governmental status. Its responsibilities include regional spatial planning and the metropolitan public transport concessions.[232]

National capital

 
King Willem-Alexander, Princess Beatrix, and Queen Máxima greeting Amsterdammers from the Royal Palace of Amsterdam during Willem-Alexanders inauguration in 2013

Under the Dutch Constitution, Amsterdam is the capital of the Netherlands. Since the 1983 constitutional revision, the constitution mentions "Amsterdam" and "capital" in chapter 2, article 32: The king's confirmation by oath and his coronation take place in "the capital Amsterdam" ("de hoofdstad Amsterdam").[233] Previous versions of the constitution only mentioned "the city of Amsterdam" ("de stad Amsterdam").[234] For a royal investiture, therefore, the States General of the Netherlands (the Dutch Parliament) meets for a ceremonial joint session in Amsterdam. The ceremony traditionally takes place at the Nieuwe Kerk on Dam Square, immediately after the former monarch has signed the act of abdication at the nearby Royal Palace of Amsterdam. Normally, however, the Parliament sits in The Hague, the city which has historically been the seat of the Dutch government, the Dutch monarchy, and the Dutch supreme court. Foreign embassies are also located in The Hague.

Symbols

The coat of arms of Amsterdam is composed of several historical elements. First and centre are three St Andrew's crosses, aligned in a vertical band on the city's shield (although Amsterdam's patron saint was Saint Nicholas). These St Andrew's crosses can also be found on the city shields of neighbours Amstelveen and Ouder-Amstel. This part of the coat of arms is the basis of the flag of Amsterdam, flown by the city government, but also as civil ensign for ships registered in Amsterdam. Second is the Imperial Crown of Austria. In 1489, out of gratitude for services and loans, Maximilian I awarded Amsterdam the right to adorn its coat of arms with the king's crown. Then, in 1508, this was replaced with Maximilian's imperial crown when he was crowned Holy Roman Emperor. In the early years of the 17th century, Maximilian's crown in Amsterdam's coat of arms was again replaced, this time with the crown of Emperor Rudolph II, a crown that became the Imperial Crown of Austria. The lions date from the late 16th century, when city and province became part of the Republic of the Seven United Netherlands. Last came the city's official motto: Heldhaftig, Vastberaden, Barmhartig ("Heroic, Determined, Merciful"), bestowed on the city in 1947 by Queen Wilhelmina, in recognition of the city's bravery during the Second World War.

Transport

Metro, tram and bus

 
A tram crossing the Keizersgracht
 
The Amsterdam Metro is a mixed subway and above ground rapid transit system consisting of five lines.

Currently, there are sixteen tram routes and five metro routes. All are operated by municipal public transport operator Gemeentelijk Vervoerbedrijf (GVB), which also runs the city bus network.

Four fare-free GVB ferries carry pedestrians and cyclists across the IJ lake to the borough of Amsterdam-Noord, and two fare-charging ferries run east and west along the harbour. There are also privately operated water taxis, a water bus, a boat sharing operation, electric rental boats and canal cruises, that transport people along Amsterdam's waterways.

Regional buses, and some suburban buses, are operated by Connexxion and EBS. International coach services are provided by Eurolines from Amsterdam Amstel railway station, IDBUS from Amsterdam Sloterdijk railway station, and Megabus from the Zuiderzeeweg in the east of the city.

In order to facilitate easier transport to the centre of Amsterdam, the city has various P+R Locations where people can park their car at an affordable price and transfer to one of the numerous public transport lines.[235]

Car

Amsterdam was intended in 1932 to be the hub, a kind of Kilometre Zero, of the highway system of the Netherlands,[236] with freeways numbered One to Eight planned to originate from the city.[236] The outbreak of the Second World War and shifting priorities led to the current situation, where only roads A1, A2, and A4 originate from Amsterdam according to the original plan. The A3 to Rotterdam was cancelled in 1970 in order to conserve the Groene Hart. Road A8, leading north to Zaandam and the A10 Ringroad were opened between 1968 and 1974.[237] Besides the A1, A2, A4 and A8, several freeways, such as the A7 and A6, carry traffic mainly bound for Amsterdam.

The A10 ringroad surrounding the city connects Amsterdam with the Dutch national network of freeways. Interchanges on the A10 allow cars to enter the city by transferring to one of the 18 city roads, numbered S101 through to S118. These city roads are regional roads without grade separation, and sometimes without a central reservation. Most are accessible by cyclists. The S100 Centrumring is a smaller ringroad circumnavigating the city's centre.

In the city centre, driving a car is discouraged. Parking fees are expensive, and many streets are closed to cars or are one-way.[238] The local government sponsors carsharing and carpooling initiatives such as Autodelen and Meerijden.nu.[239] The local government has also started removing parking spaces in the city, with the goal of removing 10,000 spaces (roughly 1,500 per year) by 2025.[240]

National rail

 
Amsterdam Centraal station, the city's main train station

Amsterdam is served by ten stations of the Nederlandse Spoorwegen (Dutch Railways).[241] Five are intercity stops: Sloterdijk, Zuid, Amstel, Bijlmer ArenA and Amsterdam Centraal. The stations for local services are: Lelylaan, RAI, Holendrecht, Muiderpoort and Science Park. Amsterdam Centraal is also an international railway station. From the station there are regular services to destinations such as Austria, Belarus, Belgium, Czech Republic, Denmark, France, Germany, Hungary, Poland, Russia, Switzerland and the United Kingdom. Among these trains are international trains of the Nederlandse Spoorwegen (Amsterdam-Berlin), the Eurostar (Amsterdam-Brussels-London), Thalys (Amsterdam-Brussels-Paris/Lille), and Intercity-Express (Amsterdam–Cologne–Frankfurt).[242][243][244]

Airport

 
Amsterdam Airport Schiphol ranks as Europe's third-busiest airport for passenger traffic.

Amsterdam Airport Schiphol is less than 20 minutes by train from Amsterdam Centraal station and is served by domestic and international intercity trains, such as Thalys, Eurostar and Intercity Brussel. Schiphol is the largest airport in the Netherlands, the third-largest in Europe, and the 14th-largest in the world in terms of passengers. It handles over 68 million passengers per year and is the home base of four airlines, KLM, Transavia, Martinair and Arkefly.[245] As of 2014, Schiphol was the fifth busiest airport in the world measured by international passenger numbers.[246] This airport is 4 meters below sea level.[247] Although Schiphol is internationally known as Amsterdam Schiphol Airport it actually lies in the neighbouring municipality of Haarlemmermeer, southwest of the city.

Cycling

 
Police bicyclist crossing a bridge over the Prinsengracht
 
Bicyclist at Amsterdam

Amsterdam is one of the most bicycle-friendly large cities in the world and is a centre of bicycle culture with good facilities for cyclists such as bike paths and bike racks, and several guarded bike storage garages (fietsenstalling) which can be used.

According to the most recent figures published by Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS), in 2015 the 442.693 households (850.000 residents) in Amsterdam together owned 847.000 bicycles – 1.91 bicycle per household.[248] Theft is widespread—in 2011, about 83,000 bicycles were stolen in Amsterdam.[249] Bicycles are used by all socio-economic groups because of their convenience, Amsterdam's small size, the 400 km (249 mi) of bike paths,[250] the flat terrain, and the inconvenience of driving an automobile.[251]

Education

 
The Agnietenkapel Gate at the University of Amsterdam, founded in 1632 as the Athenaeum Illustre

Amsterdam has two universities: the University of Amsterdam (Universiteit van Amsterdam, UvA), and the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam (VU). Other institutions for higher education include an art school – Gerrit Rietveld Academie, a university of applied sciences – the Hogeschool van Amsterdam, and the Amsterdamse Hogeschool voor de Kunsten. Amsterdam's International Institute of Social History is one of the world's largest documentary and research institutions concerning social history, and especially the history of the labour movement. Amsterdam's Hortus Botanicus, founded in the early 17th century, is one of the oldest botanical gardens in the world,[252] with many old and rare specimens, among them the coffee plant that served as the parent for the entire coffee culture in Central and South America.[253]

There are over 200 primary schools in Amsterdam.[254] Some of these primary schools base their teachings on particular pedagogic theories like the various Montessori schools. The biggest Montessori high school in Amsterdam is the Montessori Lyceum Amsterdam. Many schools, however, are based on religion. This used to be primarily Roman Catholicism and various Protestant denominations, but with the influx of Muslim immigrants, there has been a rise in the number of Islamic schools. Jewish schools can be found in the southern suburbs of Amsterdam.

Amsterdam is noted for having five independent grammar schools (Dutch: gymnasia), the Vossius Gymnasium, Barlaeus Gymnasium, St. Ignatius Gymnasium, Het 4e Gymnasium and the Cygnus Gymnasium where a classical curriculum including Latin and classical Greek is taught. Though believed until recently by many to be an anachronistic and elitist concept that would soon die out, the gymnasia have recently experienced a revival, leading to the formation of a fourth and fifth grammar school in which the three aforementioned schools participate. Most secondary schools in Amsterdam offer a variety of different levels of education in the same school. The city also has various colleges ranging from art and design to politics and economics which are mostly also available for students coming from other countries.

Schools for foreign nationals in Amsterdam include the Amsterdam International Community School, British School of Amsterdam, Albert Einstein International School Amsterdam, Lycée Vincent van Gogh La Haye-Amsterdam primary campus (French school), International School of Amsterdam, and the Japanese School of Amsterdam.

Notable people

Media

Amsterdam is a prominent centre for national and international media. Some locally based newspapers include Het Parool, a national daily paper; De Telegraaf, the largest Dutch daily newspaper; the daily newspapers Trouw, de Volkskrant and NRC; De Groene Amsterdammer, a weekly newspaper; the free newspapers Metro and The Holland Times (printed in English).

Amsterdam is home to the second-largest Dutch commercial TV group SBS Broadcasting Group, consisting of TV-stations SBS 6, Net 5 and Veronica. However, Amsterdam is not considered 'the media city of the Netherlands'. The town of Hilversum, 30 km (19 mi) south-east of Amsterdam, has been crowned with this unofficial title. Hilversum is the principal centre for radio and television broadcasting in the Netherlands. Radio Netherlands, heard worldwide via shortwave radio since the 1920s, is also based there. Hilversum is home to an extensive complex of audio and television studios belonging to the national broadcast production company NOS, as well as to the studios and offices of all the Dutch public broadcasting organisations and many commercial TV production companies.

In 2012, the music video of Far East Movement, 'Live My Life', was filmed in various parts of Amsterdam.

Also, several movies were filmed in Amsterdam, such as James Bond's Diamonds Are Forever, Ocean's Twelve, Girl with a Pearl Earring and The Hitman's Bodyguard. Amsterdam is also featured in John Green's book The Fault in Our Stars, which has been made into a film as well that partly takes place in Amsterdam.

Housing

From the late 1960s onwards many buildings in Amsterdam have been squatted both for housing and for using as social centres.[255] A number of these squats have legalised and become well known, such as OCCII, OT301, Paradiso and Vrankrijk.

Sister cities

  Manchester, Greater Manchester, United Kingdom, 2007
  Zapopan, Jalisco, Mexico, 2011[256]

See also

References

Citations

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amsterdam, other, uses, disambiguation, stər, also, stər, dutch, ˌɑmstərˈdɑm, listen, river, amstel, capital, most, populous, city, netherlands, with, hague, being, seat, government, population, within, city, proper, urban, area, metropolitan, area, located, d. For other uses see Amsterdam disambiguation Amsterdam ˈ ae m s t er d ae m AM ster dam UK also ˌ ae m s t er ˈ d ae m AM ster DAM 9 10 Dutch ˌɑmsterˈdɑm listen lit The Dam on the River Amstel is the capital and most populous city of the Netherlands with The Hague being the seat of government It has a population of 919 845 11 within the city proper 1 457 018 in the urban area 6 and 2 480 394 in the metropolitan area 12 Located in the Dutch province of North Holland 13 14 Amsterdam is colloquially referred to as the Venice of the North for its large number of canals now designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site 15 AmsterdamCapital city and municipalityFrom top down left to right Keizersgracht canal in the Centrum borough the Royal Concertgebouw and Rijksmuseum code nld promoted to code nlFlagCoat of armsNicknames Mokum the Venice of the NorthMotto s Heldhaftig Vastberaden Barmhartig Valiant Steadfast Compassionate Location of Amsterdam municipalityAmsterdamLocation within the NetherlandsShow map of NetherlandsAmsterdamLocation within EuropeShow map of EuropeCoordinates 52 22 22 N 04 53 37 E 52 37278 N 4 89361 E 52 37278 4 89361 Coordinates 52 22 22 N 04 53 37 E 52 37278 N 4 89361 E 52 37278 4 89361CountryNetherlandsProvinceNorth HollandRegionAmsterdam metropolitan areaCity HallStoperaBoroughsEight districts CentrumNoordWestNieuw WestZuidOostZuidoostWestpoortGovernment 1 BodyMunicipal council MayorFemke Halsema GL Area 2 3 Municipality219 32 km2 84 68 sq mi Land165 76 km2 64 00 sq mi Water53 56 km2 20 68 sq mi Randstad3 043 km2 1 175 sq mi Elevation 4 2 m 7 ft Population October 2022 5 Municipality919 845 Density5 277 km2 13 670 sq mi Urban1 457 018 Metro region2 480 394 Randstad8 116 000DemonymAmsterdammerTime zoneUTC 1 CET Summer DST UTC 2 CEST Postcode1000 1183Area code020GeoTLD amsterdamWebsitewww wbr amsterdam wbr nlClick on the map for a fullscreen viewAmsterdam was founded at the mouth of the Amstel River that was dammed to control flooding the city s name derives from the Amstel dam 16 Originally a small fishing village in the late 12th century Amsterdam became a major world port during the Dutch Golden Age of the 17th century when the Netherlands was an economic powerhouse Amsterdam is the leading center for finance and trade as well as a hub of production of secular art 17 In the 19th and 20th centuries the city expanded and many new neighborhoods and suburbs were planned and built The canals of Amsterdam and the 19 20th century Defence Line of Amsterdam are both on the UNESCO World Heritage List Sloten annexed in 1921 by the municipality of Amsterdam is the oldest part of the city dating to the 9th century The city has a long tradition of openness liberalism and tolerance 18 Cycling is key to the city s modern character and there are numerous biking paths and lanes spread throughout the entire city 19 20 Amsterdam s main attractions include its historic canals the Rijksmuseum code nld promoted to code nl the state museum with a vast collection of Dutch Golden Age art the Van Gogh Museum the Dam Square where the Royal Palace of Amsterdam and former city hall stadhuis code nld promoted to code nl are located the Amsterdam Museum Stedelijk Museum with modern art Hermitage Amsterdam the Concertgebouw code nld promoted to code nl concert hall the Anne Frank House the Het Scheepvaartmuseum code nld promoted to code nl the Heineken Experience the Natura Artis Magistra code lat promoted to code la Hortus Botanicus NEMO the red light district and many cannabis coffee shops The city is also well known for its nightlife and festival activity with several of its nightclubs Melkweg code nld promoted to code nl Paradiso among the world s most famous Primarily known for its artistic heritage elaborate canal system and narrow canal houses with gabled facades well preserved legacies of the city s 17th century Golden Age and the establishment of the Van Gogh Museum displaying the work of the famous Dutch modern artist have attracted millions of visitors to Amsterdam annually The Amsterdam Stock Exchange is considered the oldest modern securities market stock exchange in the world As the commercial capital of the Netherlands and one of the top financial centres in Europe Amsterdam is considered an alpha world city by the Globalization and World Cities Research Network The city is also the cultural capital of the Netherlands 21 Many large Dutch institutions have their headquarters in the city including the Philips conglomerate AkzoNobel Booking com TomTom and ING 22 Many of the world s largest companies are based in Amsterdam or have established their European headquarters in the city such as leading technology companies Uber Netflix and Tesla 23 In 2022 Amsterdam was ranked the ninth best city in the world to live in by the Economist Intelligence Unit 24 and 12th globally on quality of living for environment and infrastructure by Mercer 25 The city was ranked 4th place globally as top tech hub in the Savills Tech Cities 2019 report 2nd in Europe 26 and 3rd in innovation by Australian innovation agency 2thinknow in their Innovation Cities Index 2009 27 The Port of Amsterdam is the fifth largest in Europe 28 The KLM hub and Amsterdam s main airport Schiphol is the busiest airport in the Netherlands the third busiest in Europe and the 11th busiest airport in the world 29 The Dutch capital is considered one of the most multicultural cities in the world with at least 177 nationalities represented 30 Immigration and ethnic segregation in Amsterdam is a current issue 31 A few of Amsterdam s notable residents throughout its history include painters Rembrandt and Vincent van Gogh seventeenth century philosopher Baruch Spinoza and the Holocaust victim and diarist Anne Frank Contents 1 History 1 1 Prehistory 1 2 Founding 1 3 Middle Ages 1 4 Conflict with Spain 1 5 Center of the Dutch Golden Age 1 6 Decline and modernization 1 7 20th century present 2 Geography 2 1 Water 2 2 Climate 3 Demographics 3 1 Historical population 3 2 Immigration 3 3 Religion 3 4 Diversity and immigration 4 Cityscape and architecture 4 1 Canals 4 2 Expansion 4 3 Architecture 4 4 Parks and recreational areas 5 Economy 5 1 Port of Amsterdam 5 2 Tourism 5 2 1 De Wallen red light district 5 3 Retail 5 4 Fashion 6 Culture 6 1 Museums 6 2 Music 6 3 Performing arts 6 4 Nightlife 6 5 Festivals 7 Sports 8 Politics 8 1 City government 8 2 Metropolitan area 8 3 National capital 8 4 Symbols 9 Transport 9 1 Metro tram and bus 9 2 Car 9 3 National rail 9 4 Airport 9 5 Cycling 10 Education 11 Notable people 12 Media 13 Housing 14 Sister cities 15 See also 16 References 16 1 Citations 16 2 Literature 17 Further reading 18 External linksHistory EditMain article History of Amsterdam For a chronological guide see Timeline of Amsterdam Prehistory Edit Due to its geographical location in what used to be wet peatland the founding of Amsterdam is later than other urban centers in the Low Countries However around the area of what later became Amsterdam farmers settled as early as three millennia ago They lived along the prehistoric IJ river and upstream of its tributary Amstel The prehistoric IJ was a shallow and quiet stream in peatland behind beach ridges This secluded area was able to grow into an important local settlement center especially in the late Bronze Age the Iron Age and the Roman Age Neolithic and Roman artefacts have also been found in the prehistoric Amstel bedding under Amsterdam s Damrak and Rokin such as shards of Bell Beaker culture pottery 2200 2000 BC and a granite grinding stone 2700 2750 BC 32 33 but the location of these artefacts around the river banks of the Amstel probably point to a presence of a modest semi permanent or seasonal settlement Until water issues were controlled a permanent settlement would not have been possible since the river mouth and the banks of the Amstel in this period in time were too wet for permanent habitation 34 35 Founding Edit See also Other names of Amsterdam The origins of Amsterdam is linked to the development of the peatland called Amestelle meaning watery area from Aa m river stelle site at a shoreline river bank 36 In this area land reclamation started as early as the late 10th century 37 Amestelle was located along a side arm of the IJ This side arm took the name from the eponymous land Amstel Amestelle was inhabited by farmers who lived more inland and more upstream where the land was not as wet as at the banks of the downstream river mouth These farmers were starting the reclamation around upstream Ouderkerk aan de Amstel and later at the other side of the river at Amstelveen The Van Amstel family known in documents by this name since 1019 36 held the stewardship in this northwestern nook of the ecclesiastical district of the bishop of Utrecht The family later served also under the count of Holland A major turning point in the development of the Amstel river mouth was the All Saint s Flood of 1170 In an extremely short period of time the shallow river IJ turned into a wide estuary which from then on offered the Amstel an open connection to the Zuiderzee IJssel and waterways further afield This made the water flow of the Amstel more active so excess water could be drained better With drier banks the downstream Amstel mouth became attractive for permanent habitation Moreover the river had grown from an insignificant peat stream into a junction of international waterways 38 A settlement was built here immediately after the landscape change of 1170 Right from the start of its foundation it focused on traffic production and trade not on farming as opposed to how communities had lived further upstream for the past 200 years and northward for thousands of years 39 The construction of a dam at the mouth of the Amstel eponymously named Dam is historically estimated to have occurred between 1264 and 1275 The settlement first appeared in a document from 1275 concerning a road toll granted by the count of Holland Floris V to the residents apud Amestelledamme at the dam in the Amstel or at the dam of Amstelland 40 This allowed the inhabitants of the village to travel freely through the County of Holland paying no tolls at bridges locks and dams 41 This was a move in a years long struggle for power in the area between the count of Holland and the Amstel family who governed the area on behalf of the bishop of Utrecht 42 By 1327 the name had developed into Aemsterdam 43 44 Middle Ages Edit The Oude Kerk was consecrated in 1306 AD The bishop of Utrecht granted Amsterdam city rights in either 1300 or 1306 45 In 1345 what is known as Eucharistic miracle in Kalverstraat rendered the city an important place of pilgrimage until the Protestant Reformation 46 During the heydays of the Stille Omgang which the expression of the pilgrimage 47 up to 90 000 pilgrims came to Amsterdam In the 21st century this has reduced to about 1 000 48 From the 14th century on Amsterdam flourished largely from trade with the Hanseatic League From the 15th century on the city established an independent trade route with the Baltic Sea in grain and timber cutting out the Hanseatic League as middlemen which drastically reduced costs and laid the foundation for Amsterdam as the staple market of Europe Conflict with Spain Edit Amsterdam citizens celebrating the Peace of Munster 30 January 1648 Painting by Bartholomeus van der Helst The Low Countries were part of the Hapsburg inheritance and came under the Spanish monarchy in the early sixteenth century The Dutch rebelled against Philip II of Spain who led a defense of Catholicism during the Protestant Reformation The main reasons for the uprising were the imposition of new taxes the tenth penny and the religious persecution of Protestants by the newly introduced Inquisition The revolt escalated into the Eighty Years War which ultimately led to Dutch independence 49 Strongly pushed by Dutch Revolt leader William the Silent the Dutch Republic became known for its relative religious tolerance Jews from the Iberian Peninsula Protestant Huguenots from France prosperous merchants and printers from Flanders and economic and religious refugees from the Spanish controlled parts of the Low Countries found safety in Amsterdam The influx of Flemish printers and the city s intellectual tolerance made Amsterdam a center for the European free press 50 Center of the Dutch Golden Age Edit Courtyard of the Amsterdam Stock Exchange by Emanuel de Witte 1653 The Amsterdam Stock Exchange was the first stock exchange to introduce continuous trade in the early 17th century 51 During the 17th century Amsterdam experienced what is considered its Golden Age during which it became the wealthiest city in the Western world 52 Ships sailed from Amsterdam to the Baltic Sea the Caribbean North America and Africa as well as present day Indonesia India Sri Lanka and Brazil forming the basis of a worldwide trading network Amsterdam s merchants had the largest share in both the Dutch East India Company VOC and the Dutch West India Company These companies acquired overseas possessions that later became Dutch colonies Amsterdam was Europe s most important hub for the shipment of goods and was the leading financial center of the western world 53 In 1602 the Amsterdam office of the Dutch East India Company became the world s first stock exchange by trading in its own shares 54 The Bank of Amsterdam started operations in 1609 acting as a full service bank for Dutch merchant bankers and as a reserve bank Beginning during this period Amsterdam also became involved in the trade in African slaves The city was a major destination port for Dutch slave ships beginning in the 17th century which lasted until the United Netherlands abolished the Dutch involvement in the trade in 1814 under pressure by the British government Amsterdam was also a member of the Society of Suriname an organization founded to oversee the management of Surinam a Dutch slave colony On 1 July 2021 the mayor of Amsterdam Femke Halsema apologized for the city s involvement in the African slave trade which had contributed to the city s wealth 55 56 Decline and modernization Edit Amsterdam s prosperity declined during the 18th and early 19th centuries The wars of the Dutch Republic with England latterly Great Britain and France took their toll on the city During the Napoleonic Wars Amsterdam s significance reached its lowest point with Holland being absorbed into the French Empire However the later establishment of the United Kingdom of the Netherlands in 1815 marked a turning point View of Vijzelstraat looking towards the Muntplein 1891 The end of the 19th century is sometimes called Amsterdam s second Golden Age 57 New museums a railway station and the Concertgebouw code nld promoted to code nl were built in this same time the Industrial Revolution reached the city The Amsterdam Rhine Canal was dug to give Amsterdam a direct connection to the Rhine and the North Sea Canal was dug to give the port a shorter connection to the North Sea Both projects dramatically improved commerce with the rest of Europe and the world In 1906 Joseph Conrad gave a brief description of Amsterdam as seen from the seaside in The Mirror of the Sea 20th century present Edit Photochrom of Amsterdam s Dam Square at the beginning of the 20th century Shortly before the First World War the city started to expand again and new suburbs were built Even though the Netherlands remained neutral in this war Amsterdam suffered a food shortage and heating fuel became scarce The shortages sparked riots in which several people were killed These riots are known as the Aardappeloproer Potato rebellion People started looting stores and warehouses in order to get supplies mainly food 58 The rebuilt Magere Brug around 1938 On 1 January 1921 after a flood in 1916 the depleted municipalities of Durgerdam Holysloot Zunderdorp and Schellingwoude all lying north of Amsterdam were at their own request annexed to the city 59 60 Between the wars the city continued to expand most notably to the west of the Jordaan district in the Frederik Hendrikbuurt and surrounding neighbourhoods Nazi Germany invaded the Netherlands on 10 May 1940 and took control of the country Some Amsterdam citizens sheltered Jews thereby exposing themselves and their families to a high risk of being imprisoned or sent to concentration camps More than 100 000 Dutch Jews were deported to Nazi concentration camps of whom some 60 000 lived in Amsterdam In response the Dutch Communist Party organized the February strike attended by 300 000 people to protest against the raids The most famous deportee was the young Jewish girl Anne Frank who died in the Bergen Belsen concentration camp 61 At the end of the Second World War communication with the rest of the country broke down and food and fuel became scarce Many citizens traveled to the countryside to forage Dogs cats raw sugar beets and tulip bulbs cooked to a pulp were consumed to stay alive 62 Many trees in Amsterdam were cut down for fuel and wood was taken from the houses apartments and other buildings of deported Jews People celebrating the liberation of the Netherlands at the end of World War II on 8 May 1945 Many new suburbs such as Osdorp Slotervaart Slotermeer and Geuzenveld were built in the years after the Second World War 63 These suburbs contained many public parks and wide open spaces and the new buildings provided improved housing conditions with larger and brighter rooms gardens and balconies Because of the war and other events of the 20th century almost the entire city centre had fallen into disrepair As society was changing clarification needed politicians and other influential figures made plans to redesign large parts of it There was an increasing demand for office buildings and also for new roads as the automobile became available to most people 64 A metro started operating in 1977 between the new suburb of Bijlmermeer in the city s Zuidoost southeast exclave and the centre of Amsterdam Further plans were to build a new highway above the metro to connect Amsterdam Centraal and the city centre with other parts of the city The required large scale demolitions began in Amsterdam s former Jewish neighborhood Smaller streets such as the Jodenbreestraat and Weesperstraat were widened and almost all houses and buildings were demolished At the peak of the demolition the Nieuwmarktrellen Nieuwmarkt Riots broke out 65 the rioters expressed their fury about the demolition caused by the restructuring of the city As a result the demolition was stopped and the highway into the city s centre was never fully built only the metro was completed Only a few streets remained widened The new city hall was built on the almost completely demolished Waterlooplein Meanwhile large private organizations such as Stadsherstel Amsterdam were founded to restore the entire city centre Although the success of this struggle is visible today efforts for further restoration are still ongoing 64 The entire city centre has reattained its former splendour and as a whole is now a protected area Many of its buildings have become monuments and in July 2010 the Grachtengordel the three concentric canals Herengracht Keizersgracht and Prinsengracht was added to the UNESCO World Heritage List 66 The 17th century Canals of Amsterdam were listed as UNESCO World Heritage Sites in 2010 67 contributing to Amsterdam s fame as the Venice of the North 68 69 Along with De Wallen the canals are the focal point for tourists in the city In the 21st century the Amsterdam city centre has attracted large numbers of tourists between 2012 and 2015 the annual number of visitors rose from 10 to 17 million Real estate prices have surged and local shops are making way for tourist oriented ones making the centre unaffordable for the city s inhabitants 70 These developments have evoked comparisons with Venice a city thought to be overwhelmed by the tourist influx 71 Construction of a new metro line connecting the part of the city north of the IJ to its southern part was started in 2003 The project was controversial because its cost had exceeded its budget by a factor of three by 2008 72 because of fears of damage to buildings in the centre and because construction had to be halted and restarted multiple times 73 The new metro line was completed in 2018 74 Since 2014 renewed focus has been given to urban regeneration and renewal especially in areas directly bordering the city centre such as Frederik Hendrikbuurt This urban renewal and expansion of the traditional centre of the city with the construction on artificial islands of the new eastern IJburg neighbourhood is part of the Structural Vision Amsterdam 2040 initiative 75 76 Geography Edit Satellite picture of Amsterdam and North Sea Canal Topographic map of Amsterdam Large scale map of the city centre of Amsterdam including sightseeing markers as of April 2017 update Amsterdam is located in the Western Netherlands in the province of North Holland the capital of which is not Amsterdam but rather Haarlem The river Amstel ends in the city centre and connects to a large number of canals that eventually terminate in the IJ Amsterdam is about 2 m 6 6 ft below sea level 77 The surrounding land is flat as it is formed of large polders An artificial forest Amsterdamse Bos is in the southwest Amsterdam is connected to the North Sea through the long North Sea Canal Amsterdam is intensely urbanised as is the Amsterdam metropolitan area surrounding the city Comprising 219 4 km2 84 7 sq mi of land the city proper has 4 457 inhabitants per km2 and 2 275 houses per km2 78 Parks and nature reserves make up 12 of Amsterdam s land area 79 Water Edit Amsterdam has more than 100 km 60 mi of canals most of which are navigable by boat The city s three main canals are the Prinsengracht Herengracht and Keizersgracht In the Middle Ages Amsterdam was surrounded by a moat called the Singel which now forms the innermost ring in the city and gives the city centre a horseshoe shape The city is also served by a seaport It has been compared with Venice due to its division into about 90 islands which are linked by more than 1 200 bridges 80 Climate Edit Nieuwendammerdijk en Buiksloterdijk Amsterdam Noord winter 2010 Amsterdam has an oceanic climate Koppen Cfb 81 strongly influenced by its proximity to the North Sea to the west with prevailing westerly winds Amsterdam as well as most of the North Holland province lies in USDA Hardiness zone 8b Frosts mainly occur during spells of easterly or northeasterly winds from the inner European continent Even then because Amsterdam is surrounded on three sides by large bodies of water as well as having a significant heat island effect nights rarely fall below 5 C 23 F while it could easily be 12 C 10 F in Hilversum 25 km 16 mi southeast Summers are moderately warm with a number of hot and humid days with occasional rain every month The average daily high in August is 22 1 C 72 F and 30 C 86 F or higher is only measured on average on 2 5 days placing Amsterdam in AHS Heat Zone 2 The record extremes range from 19 7 C 3 5 F to 36 3 C 97 3 F 82 83 unreliable source Days with more than 1 mm 0 04 in of precipitation are common on average 133 days per year Amsterdam s average annual precipitation is 838 mm 33 in 84 A large part of this precipitation falls as light rain or brief showers Cloudy and damp days are common during the cooler months of October through March Climate data for Amsterdam Airport SchipholMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 14 0 57 2 16 6 61 9 24 1 75 4 28 0 82 4 31 5 88 7 33 2 91 8 36 3 97 3 34 5 94 1 31 0 87 8 25 3 77 5 18 2 64 8 15 5 59 9 36 3 97 3 Average high C F 6 2 43 2 6 9 44 4 10 1 50 2 14 3 57 7 17 8 64 0 20 3 68 5 22 5 72 5 22 4 72 3 19 2 66 6 14 7 58 5 10 0 50 0 6 9 44 4 14 3 57 7 Daily mean C F 3 8 38 8 4 1 39 4 6 5 43 7 9 8 49 6 13 3 55 9 16 0 60 8 18 1 64 6 18 0 64 4 15 1 59 2 11 3 52 3 7 4 45 3 4 6 40 3 10 7 51 2 Average low C F 1 2 34 2 1 0 33 8 2 8 37 0 5 2 41 4 8 6 47 5 11 3 52 3 13 5 56 3 13 4 56 1 11 0 51 8 7 7 45 9 4 5 40 1 1 5 34 7 6 8 44 3 Record low C F 16 3 2 7 19 7 3 5 16 7 1 9 4 7 23 5 1 1 30 0 2 3 36 1 5 0 41 0 5 0 41 0 2 0 35 6 3 4 25 9 8 1 17 4 14 8 5 4 19 7 3 5 Average precipitation mm inches 66 5 2 62 54 7 2 15 51 8 2 04 39 6 1 56 53 9 2 12 64 8 2 55 82 3 3 24 98 6 3 88 84 4 3 32 86 7 3 41 85 3 3 36 81 7 3 22 850 3 33 48 Average snowfall cm inches 4 8 1 9 5 3 2 1 2 8 1 1 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 8 0 3 3 9 1 5 17 9 7 0 Average precipitation days 1 mm 12 2 10 8 9 7 8 6 8 9 9 7 10 9 11 6 10 9 12 4 13 4 14 1 133 2Average relative humidity 87 3 84 9 81 0 75 6 74 5 76 3 77 2 78 3 81 8 84 9 88 4 88 5 81 6Mean monthly sunshine hours 69 0 94 3 146 0 197 7 230 7 217 2 225 4 203 5 154 2 116 9 66 8 58 2 1 779 9Percent possible sunshine 26 8 33 6 39 6 47 4 47 4 43 4 44 7 44 6 40 4 35 3 25 2 24 1 37 7Average ultraviolet index 1 1 2 4 5 6 6 5 4 2 1 0 3Source Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute 1991 2020 normals 85 1971 2000 extremes 86 and Weather Atlas UV index 87 Demographics EditHistorical population Edit Estimated population 1300 1564YearPop p a 13001 000 14004 700 1 56 151411 000 0 75 YearPop p a 154613 200 0 57 155722 200 4 84 156430 900 4 84 Source Bureau Monumentenzorg en Archeologie 1300 88 Ramaer 1921 pp 11 12 181 1400 and 1564 Van Dillen 1929 pp xxv xxvi 1514 1546 and 1557 In 1300 Amsterdam s population was around 1 000 people 89 While many towns in Holland experienced population decline during the 15th and 16th centuries Amsterdam s population grew 90 mainly due to the rise of the profitable Baltic maritime trade especially in grain after the Burgundian victory in the Dutch Hanseatic War in 1441 91 The population of Amsterdam was only modest compared to the towns and cities of Flanders and Brabant which comprised the most urbanized area of the Low Countries 92 Historical population in 10 year intervals 1590 presentYearPop 159041 362 160059 551 44 0 161082 742 38 9 1620106 500 28 7 1630135 439 27 2 1640162 388 19 9 1650176 873 8 9 1660192 767 9 0 1670206 188 7 0 1680219 098 6 3 1690224 393 2 4 1700235 224 4 8 1710239 149 1 7 1720241 447 1 0 1730239 866 0 7 1740237 582 1 0 1750233 952 1 5 1760240 862 3 0 1770239 056 0 7 1780228 938 4 2 1790214 473 6 3 1800203 485 5 1 YearPop 1810201 347 1 1 1820197 831 1 7 1830206 383 4 3 1840214 367 3 9 1850223 700 4 4 1860244 050 9 1 1870279 221 14 4 1880323 784 16 0 1890417 539 29 0 1900520 602 24 7 1910573 983 10 3 1920647 427 12 8 1930757 386 17 0 1940800 594 5 7 1950835 834 4 4 1960869 602 4 0 1970831 463 4 4 1980716 967 13 8 1990695 221 3 0 2000731 289 5 2 2010767 773 5 0 2020872 380 13 6 Source Nusteling 1985 p 240 1590 1670 Van Leeuwen amp Oeppen 1993 p 87 1680 1880 Department for Research Information and Statistics 1890 present This changed when during the Dutch Revolt many people from the Southern Netherlands fled to the North especially after Antwerp fell to Spanish forces in 1585 Jews from Spain Portugal and Eastern Europe similarly settled in Amsterdam as did Germans and Scandinavians 90 In thirty years Amsterdam s population more than doubled between 1585 and 1610 93 By 1600 its population was around 50 000 89 During the 1660s Amsterdam s population reached 200 000 94 The city s growth levelled off and the population stabilized around 240 000 for most of the 18th century 95 In 1750 Amsterdam was the fourth largest city in Western Europe behind London 676 000 Paris 560 000 and Naples 324 000 96 This was all the more remarkable as Amsterdam was neither the capital city nor the seat of government of the Dutch Republic which itself was a much smaller state than Great Britain France or the Ottoman Empire In contrast to those other metropolises Amsterdam was also surrounded by large towns such as Leiden about 67 000 Rotterdam 45 000 Haarlem 38 000 and Utrecht 30 000 97 The city s population declined in the early 19th century 98 dipping under 200 000 in 1820 99 By the second half of the 19th century industrialization spurred renewed growth 100 Amsterdam s population hit an all time high of 872 000 in 1959 101 before declining in the following decades due to government sponsored suburbanisation to so called groeikernen growth centres such as Purmerend and Almere 102 103 104 Between 1970 and 1980 Amsterdam experienced its sharp population decline peaking at a net loss of 25 000 people in 1973 104 By 1985 the city had only 675 570 residents 105 This was soon followed by reurbanization and gentrification 106 104 leading to renewed population growth in the 2010s Also in the 2010s much of Amsterdam s population growth was due to immigration to the city 107 Immigration Edit In the 16th and 17th century non Dutch immigrants to Amsterdam were mostly Protestant Huguenots and Flemings Sephardic Jews and Westphalians Huguenots came after the Edict of Fontainebleau in 1685 while the Flemish Protestants came during the Eighty Years War against Catholic Spain The Westphalians came to Amsterdam mostly for economic reasons their influx continued through the 18th and 19th centuries citation needed Before the Second World War 10 of the city population was Jewish Just twenty percent of them survived the Holocaust 108 The first mass immigration in the 20th century was by people from Indonesia who came to Amsterdam after the independence of the Dutch East Indies in the 1940s and 1950s In the 1960s guest workers from Turkey Morocco Italy and Spain emigrated to Amsterdam After the independence of Suriname in 1975 a large wave of Surinamese settled in Amsterdam mostly in the Bijlmer area Other immigrants including refugees asylum seekers and undocumented immigrants came from Europe the Americas Asia and Africa In the 1970s and 1980s many old Amsterdammers moved to new cities like Almere and Purmerend prompted by the third Land use planning bill of the Dutch Government This bill promoted suburbanization and arranged for new developments in so called groeikernen literally cores of growth Young professionals and artists moved into neighborhoods De Pijp and the Jordaan abandoned by these Amsterdammers The non Western immigrants settled mostly in the social housing projects in Amsterdam West and the Bijlmer Today people of non Western origin make up approximately one fifth of the population of Amsterdam and more than 30 of the city s children 109 110 111 Ethnic Dutch as defined by the Dutch census now make up a minority of the total population although by far the largest one Only one in three inhabitants under 15 is an autochthon or a person who has two parents of Dutch origin 112 Segregation along ethnic lines is clearly visible with people of non Western origin considered a separate group by Statistics Netherlands concentrating in specific neighborhoods especially in Nieuw West Zeeburg Bijlmer and in certain areas of Amsterdam Noord 113 114 City of Amsterdam 2020 Foreign population by country of origin includes 2nd generation immigrants 115 Country or territory PopulationMorocco 77 210Suriname 64 218Turkey 44 465Indonesia 24 075Germany 19 374UK 15 338Ghana 12 847Dutch Caribbean 12 174USA 11 582Others 484 982In 2000 Christians formed the largest religious group in the city 28 of the population The next largest religion was Islam 8 most of whose followers were Sunni 116 117 In 2015 Christians formed the largest religious group in the city 28 of the population The next largest religion was Islam 7 1 most of whose followers were Sunni 115 Religion Edit Religion in Amsterdam 2015 118 Non affiliated 62 2 Catholic Church 13 3 Protestant Church 9 8 Islam 7 1 Other Christian denominations 5 9 Hinduism 1 1 Buddhism 1 0 Judaism 0 7 In 1578 the largely Catholic city of Amsterdam joined the revolt against Spanish rule 119 late in comparison to other major northern Dutch cities 120 Catholic priests were driven out of the city 119 Following the Dutch takeover all churches were converted to Protestant worship 121 Calvinism was declared the main religion 120 although Catholicism was not forbidden and priests allowed to serve the Catholic hierarchy was prohibited dubious discuss This led to the establishment of schuilkerken covert religious buildings that were hidden in pre existing buildings Catholics some Jewish and dissenting Protestants worshiped in such buildings 122 A large influx of foreigners of many religions came to 17th century Amsterdam in particular Sefardic Jews from Spain and Portugal 123 124 Huguenots from France 125 Lutherans Mennonites as well as Protestants from across the Netherlands 126 This led to the establishment of many non Dutch speaking churches citation needed In 1603 the Jewish received permission to practice their religion in the city In 1639 the first synagogue was consecrated 127 The Jews came to call the town Jerusalem of the West 128 As they became established in the city other Christian denominations used converted Catholic chapels to conduct their own services The oldest English language church congregation in the world outside the United Kingdom is found at the Begijnhof citation needed 129 Regular services there are still offered in English under the auspices of the Church of Scotland 130 Being Calvinists the Huguenots soon integrated into the Dutch Reformed Church though often retaining their own congregations Some commonly referred by the moniker Walloon are recognizable today as they offer occasional services in French citation needed In the second half of the 17th century Amsterdam experienced an influx of Ashkenazim Jews from Central and Eastern Europe Jews often fled the pogroms in those areas The first Ashkenazis who arrived in Amsterdam were refugees from the Khmelnytsky Uprising occurring in Ukraine and the Thirty Years War which devastated much of Central Europe They not only founded their own synagogues but had a strong influence on the Amsterdam dialect adding a large Yiddish local vocabulary 131 Despite an absence of an official Jewish ghetto most Jews preferred to live in the eastern part which used to be the center of medieval Amsterdam The main street of this Jewish neighbourhood was Jodenbreestraat The neighbourhood comprised the Waterlooplein and the Nieuwmarkt 131 132 Buildings in this neighbourhood fell into disrepair after the Second World War 133 a large section of the neighbourhood was demolished during the construction of the metro system This led to riots and as a result the original plans for large scale reconstruction were abandoned by the government 134 135 The neighbourhood was rebuilt with smaller scale residence buildings on the basis of its original layout 136 The Westerkerk in the Centrum borough one of Amsterdam s best known churches Catholic churches in Amsterdam have been constructed since the restoration of the episcopal hierarchy in 1853 137 One of the principal architects behind the city s Catholic churches Cuypers was also responsible for the Amsterdam Centraal station and the Rijksmuseum code nld promoted to code nl 138 139 In 1924 the Catholic Church hosted the International Eucharistic Congress in Amsterdam 140 numerous Catholic prelates visited the city where festivities were held in churches and stadiums 141 Catholic processions on the public streets however were still forbidden under law at the time 142 Only in the 20th century was Amsterdam s relation to Catholicism normalised 143 but despite its far larger population size the episcopal see of the city was placed in the provincial town of Haarlem 144 Historically Amsterdam has been predominantly Christian in 1900 Christians formed the largest religious group in the city 70 of the population Dutch Reformed Church formed 45 of the city population while the Catholic Church formed 25 of the city population 145 In recent times religious demographics in Amsterdam have been changed by immigration from former colonies Hinduism has been introduced from the Hindu diaspora from Suriname 146 and several distinct branches of Islam have been brought from various parts of the world 147 Islam is now the largest non Christian religion in Amsterdam 118 The large community of Ghanaian immigrants have established African churches 148 often in parking garages in the Bijlmer area 149 Diversity and immigration Edit Amsterdam experienced an influx of religions and cultures after the Second World War With 180 different nationalities 150 Amsterdam is home to one of the widest varieties of nationalities of any city in the world 151 The proportion of the population of immigrant origin in the city proper is about 50 152 and 88 of the population are Dutch citizens 153 Amsterdam has been one of the municipalities in the Netherlands which provided immigrants with extensive and free Dutch language courses which have benefited many immigrants 154 Cityscape and architecture EditSee also List of tallest buildings in Amsterdam View of the city centre looking southwest from the Oosterdokskade A 1538 painting by Cornelis Anthonisz showing a bird s eye view of Amsterdam The famous Grachtengordel had not yet been established Amsterdam fans out south from the Amsterdam Centraal station and Damrak the main street off the station The oldest area of the town is known as De Wallen English The Quays It lies to the east of Damrak and contains the city s famous red light district To the south of De Wallen is the old Jewish quarter of Waterlooplein The medieval and colonial age canals of Amsterdam known as grachten embraces the heart of the city where homes have interesting gables Beyond the Grachtengordel are the former working class areas of Jordaan and de Pijp The Museumplein with the city s major museums the Vondelpark a 19th century park named after the Dutch writer Joost van den Vondel as well as the Plantage neighbourhood with the zoo are also located outside the Grachtengordel Several parts of the city and the surrounding urban area are polders This can be recognised by the suffix meer which means lake as in Aalsmeer Bijlmermeer Haarlemmermeer and Watergraafsmeer Canals Edit Main article Canals of Amsterdam Rokin November 1977 The Amsterdam canal system is the result of conscious city planning 155 In the early 17th century when immigration was at a peak a comprehensive plan was developed that was based on four concentric half circles of canals with their ends emerging at the IJ bay Known as the Grachtengordel three of the canals were mostly for residential development the Herengracht where Heren refers to Heren Regeerders van de stad Amsterdam ruling lords of Amsterdam whilst gracht means canal so that the name can be roughly translated as Canal of the Lords Keizersgracht Emperor s Canal and Prinsengracht Prince s Canal 156 The fourth and outermost canal is the Singelgracht which is often not mentioned on maps because it is a collective name for all canals in the outer ring The Singelgracht should not be confused with the oldest and innermost canal the Singel Herengracht Prinsengracht The canals served for defense water management and transport The defenses took the form of a moat and earthen dikes with gates at transit points but otherwise no masonry superstructures 157 The original plans have been lost so historians such as Ed Taverne need to speculate on the original intentions it is thought that the considerations of the layout were purely practical and defensive rather than ornamental 158 Construction started in 1613 and proceeded from west to east across the breadth of the layout like a gigantic windshield wiper as the historian Geert Mak calls it and not from the centre outwards as a popular myth has it The canal construction in the southern sector was completed by 1656 Subsequently the construction of residential buildings proceeded slowly The eastern part of the concentric canal plan covering the area between the Amstel river and the IJ bay has never been implemented In the following centuries the land was used for parks senior citizens homes theatres other public facilities and waterways without much planning 159 Over the years several canals have been filled in becoming streets or squares such as the Nieuwezijds Voorburgwal and the Spui 160 Expansion Edit Main article Expansion of Amsterdam since the 19th century The Egelantiersgracht lies west of the Grachtengordel in the Jordaan neighbourhood After the development of Amsterdam s canals in the 17th century the city did not grow beyond its borders for two centuries During the 19th century Samuel Sarphati devised a plan based on the grandeur of Paris and London at that time The plan envisaged the construction of new houses public buildings and streets just outside the Grachtengordel The main aim of the plan however was to improve public health Although the plan did not expand the city it did produce some of the largest public buildings to date like the Paleis voor Volksvlijt 161 162 163 Following Sarphati civil engineers Jacobus van Niftrik and Jan Kalff designed an entire ring of 19th century neighbourhoods surrounding the city s centre with the city preserving the ownership of all land outside the 17th century limit thus firmly controlling development 164 Most of these neighbourhoods became home to the working class 165 In response to overcrowding two plans were designed at the beginning of the 20th century which were very different from anything Amsterdam had ever seen before Plan Zuid designed by the architect Berlage and West These plans involved the development of new neighbourhoods consisting of housing blocks for all social classes 166 167 After the Second World War large new neighbourhoods were built in the western southeastern and northern parts of the city These new neighbourhoods were built to relieve the city s shortage of living space and give people affordable houses with modern conveniences The neighbourhoods consisted mainly of large housing blocks located among green spaces connected to wide roads making the neighbourhoods easily accessible by motor car The western suburbs which were built in that period are collectively called the Westelijke Tuinsteden The area to the southeast of the city built during the same period is known as the Bijlmer 168 169 Architecture Edit The Royal Palace of Amsterdam by architects Jacob van Campen and Daniel Stalpaert is characteristic of the architecture of the Dutch Baroque architecture Amsterdam has a rich architectural history The oldest building in Amsterdam is the Oude Kerk English Old Church at the heart of the Wallen consecrated in 1306 170 The oldest wooden building is Het Houten Huys 171 at the Begijnhof It was constructed around 1425 and is one of only two existing wooden buildings It is also one of the few examples of Gothic architecture in Amsterdam The oldest stone building of the Netherlands The Moriaan is built in s Hertogenbosch In the 16th century wooden buildings were razed and replaced with brick ones During this period many buildings were constructed in the architectural style of the Renaissance Buildings of this period are very recognisable with their stepped gable facades which is the common Dutch Renaissance style Amsterdam quickly developed its own Renaissance architecture These buildings were built according to the principles of the architect Hendrick de Keyser 172 One of the most striking buildings designed by Hendrick de Keyser is the Westerkerk In the 17th century baroque architecture became very popular as it was elsewhere in Europe This roughly coincided with Amsterdam s Golden Age The leading architects of this style in Amsterdam were Jacob van Campen Philips Vingboons and Daniel Stalpaert 173 The Begijnhof is one of the oldest hofjes in Amsterdam The Openbare Bibliotheek Amsterdam and Conservatorium van Amsterdam two examples of 21st century architecture in the centre of the city Philip Vingboons designed splendid merchants houses throughout the city A famous building in baroque style in Amsterdam is the Royal Palace on Dam Square Throughout the 18th century Amsterdam was heavily influenced by French culture This is reflected in the architecture of that period Around 1815 architects broke with the baroque style and started building in different neo styles 174 Most Gothic style buildings date from that era and are therefore said to be built in a neo gothic style At the end of the 19th century the Jugendstil or Art Nouveau style became popular and many new buildings were constructed in this architectural style Since Amsterdam expanded rapidly during this period new buildings adjacent to the city centre were also built in this style The houses in the vicinity of the Museum Square in Amsterdam Oud Zuid are an example of Jugendstil The last style that was popular in Amsterdam before the modern era was Art Deco Amsterdam had its own version of the style which was called the Amsterdamse School Whole districts were built this style such as the Rivierenbuurt 175 A notable feature of the facades of buildings designed in Amsterdamse School is that they are highly decorated and ornate with oddly shaped windows and doors The old city centre is the focal point of all the architectural styles before the end of the 19th century Jugendstil and Georgian are mostly found outside the city s centre in the neighbourhoods built in the early 20th century although there are also some striking examples of these styles in the city centre Most historic buildings in the city centre and nearby are houses such as the famous merchants houses lining the canals Parks and recreational areas Edit Main articles List of parks in Amsterdam and List of squares in Amsterdam A VondelparkB BeatrixparkC SarphatiparkD OosterparkE Park FrankendaelF RembrandtparkG WesterparkH FlevoparkI Amsterdamse BosJ AmstelparkK Hortus BotanicusL WertheimerparkM Martin Luther KingparkN Sloterpark Amsterdam has many parks open spaces and squares throughout the city The Vondelpark the largest park in the city is located in the Oud Zuid neighbourhood and is named after the 17th century Amsterdam author Joost van den Vondel Yearly the park has around 10 million visitors In the park is an open air theatre a playground and several horeca facilities In the Zuid borough is the Beatrixpark named after Queen Beatrix Between Amsterdam and Amstelveen is the Amsterdamse Bos Amsterdam Forest the largest recreational area in Amsterdam Annually almost 4 5 million people visit the park which has a size of 1 000 hectares and is approximately three times the size of Central Park 176 The Amstelpark in the Zuid borough houses the Rieker windmill which dates to 1636 Other parks include the Sarphatipark in the De Pijp neighbourhood the Oosterpark in the Oost borough and the Westerpark in the Westerpark neighbourhood The city has three beaches Nemo Beach Citybeach Het stenen hoofd Silodam and Blijburg all located in the Centrum borough The city has many open squares plein in Dutch The namesake of the city as the site of the original dam Dam Square is the main city square and has the Royal Palace and National Monument Museumplein hosts various museums including the Rijksmuseum code nld promoted to code nl Van Gogh Museum and Stedelijk Museum Other squares include Rembrandtplein Muntplein Nieuwmarkt Leidseplein Spui and Waterlooplein Also near to Amsterdam is the Nekkeveld estate conservation project Economy Edit The Amsterdam Stock Exchange the oldest stock exchange in the world The Zuidas the city s main business district Amsterdam is the financial and business capital of the Netherlands 177 According to the 2007 European Cities Monitor ECM an annual location survey of Europe s leading companies carried out by global real estate consultant Cushman amp Wakefield Amsterdam is one of the top European cities in which to locate an international business ranking fifth in the survey 178 with the survey determining London Paris Frankfurt and Barcelona as the four European cities surpassing Amsterdam in this regard A substantial number of large corporations and banks headquarters are located in the Amsterdam area including AkzoNobel Heineken International ING Group ABN AMRO TomTom Delta Lloyd Group Booking com and Philips Although many small offices remain along the historic canals centrally based companies have increasingly relocated outside Amsterdam s city centre Consequently the Zuidas English South Axis has become the new financial and legal hub of Amsterdam 179 with the country s five largest law firms and several subsidiaries of large consulting firms such as Boston Consulting Group and Accenture as well as the World Trade Centre Amsterdam located in the Zuidas district In addition to the Zuidas there are three smaller financial districts in Amsterdam around Amsterdam Sloterdijk railway station Where one can find the offices of several newspapers such as De Telegraaf as well as those of Deloitte the Gemeentelijk Vervoerbedrijf municipal public transport company and the Dutch tax offices Belastingdienst around the Johan Cruyff Arena in Amsterdam Zuidoost with the headquarters of ING Group around the Amstel railway station in the Amsterdam Oost district to the east of the historical city Amsterdam s tallest building the Rembrandt Tower is located here 180 As are the headquarters of Philips the Dutch multinational conglomerate 181 Amsterdam has been a leading city to reduce the use of raw materials and has created a plan to become a circular city by 2050 182 The adjoining municipality of Amstelveen is the location of KPMG International s global headquarters Other non Dutch companies have chosen to settle in communities surrounding Amsterdam since they allow freehold property ownership whereas Amsterdam retains ground rent The Amsterdam Stock Exchange AEX now part of Euronext is the world s oldest stock exchange and due to Brexit has overtaken LSE as the largest bourse in Europe 183 It is near Dam Square in the city centre Port of Amsterdam Edit The Port of Amsterdam is the fourth largest port in Europe the 38th largest port in the world and the second largest port in the Netherlands by metric tons of cargo In 2014 the Port of Amsterdam had a cargo throughput of 97 4 million tons of cargo which was mostly bulk cargo Amsterdam has the biggest cruise port in the Netherlands with more than 150 cruise ships every year In 2019 the new lock in IJmuiden opened since then the port has been able to grow to 125 million tonnes in capacity Tourism Edit Main article List of tourist attractions in Amsterdam Boats give tours of the city such as this one in front of the EYE Film Institute Netherlands Spiegelgracht Amsterdam is one of the most popular tourist destinations in Europe receiving more than 5 34 million international visitors annually this is excluding the 16 million day trippers visiting the city every year 184 The number of visitors has been growing steadily over the past decade This can be attributed to an increasing number of European visitors Two thirds of the hotels are located in the city s centre 185 Hotels with 4 or 5 stars contribute 42 of the total beds available and 41 of the overnight stays in Amsterdam The room occupation rate was 85 in 2017 up from 78 in 2006 186 187 The majority of tourists 74 originate from Europe The largest group of non European visitors come from the United States accounting for 14 of the total 187 Certain years have a theme in Amsterdam to attract extra tourists For example the year 2006 was designated Rembrandt 400 to celebrate the 400th birthday of Rembrandt van Rijn Some hotels offer special arrangements or activities during these years The average number of guests per year staying at the four campsites around the city range from 12 000 to 65 000 187 De Wallen red light district Edit Main article De Wallen De Wallen Amsterdam s Red light district offers activities such as legal prostitution and a number of coffee shops that sell cannabis It is one of the main tourist attractions 188 De Wallen also known as Walletjes or Rosse Buurt is a designated area for legalised prostitution and is Amsterdam s largest and best known red light district This neighbourhood has become a famous attraction for tourists It consists of a network of canals streets and alleys containing several hundred small one room apartments rented by sex workers who offer their services from behind a window or glass door typically illuminated with red lights In recent years the city government has been closing and repurposing the famous red light district windows in an effort to clean up the area and reduce the amount of party and sex tourism Retail Edit Shops in Amsterdam range from large high end department stores such as De Bijenkorf founded in 1870 to small speciality shops Amsterdam s high end shops are found in the streets P C Hooftstraat 189 and Cornelis Schuytstraat which are located in the vicinity of the Vondelpark One of Amsterdam s busiest high streets is the narrow medieval Kalverstraat in the heart of the city Other shopping areas include the Negen Straatjes and Haarlemmerdijk and Haarlemmerstraat Negen Straatjes are nine narrow streets within the Grachtengordel the concentric canal system of Amsterdam The Negen Straatjes differ from other shopping districts with the presence of a large diversity of privately owned shops The Haarlemmerstraat and Haarlemmerdijk were voted best shopping street in the Netherlands in 2011 These streets have as the Negen Straatjes a large diversity of privately owned shops However as the Negen Straatjes are dominated by fashion stores the Haarlemmerstraat and Haarlemmerdijk offer a wide variety of stores just to name some specialities candy and other food related stores lingerie sneakers wedding clothing interior shops books Italian deli s racing and mountain bikes skatewear etc The city also features a large number of open air markets such as the Albert Cuyp Market Westerstraat markt Ten Katemarkt and Dappermarkt Some of these markets are held daily like the Albert Cuypmarkt and the Dappermarkt Others like the Westerstraatmarkt are held every week Fashion Edit An Amsterdammer waits for a traffic light to change at the Muntplein in the heart of Amsterdam Several fashion brands and designers are based in Amsterdam Fashion designers include Iris van Herpen 190 Mart Visser Viktor amp Rolf Marlies Dekkers and Frans Molenaar Fashion models like Yfke Sturm Doutzen Kroes and Kim Noorda started their careers in Amsterdam Amsterdam has its garment centre in the World Fashion Center Fashion photographers Inez van Lamsweerde and Vinoodh Matadin were born in Amsterdam 191 Culture EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Amsterdam news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Rijksmuseum code nld promoted to code nl houses Rembrandt s The Night Watch The Van Gogh Museum houses the world s largest collection of Van Gogh s paintings and letters The Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam is an international museum dedicated to modern and contemporary art and design During the later part of the 16th century Amsterdam s Rederijkerskamer Chamber of rhetoric organised contests between different Chambers in the reading of poetry and drama 192 193 In 1637 Schouwburg the first theatre in Amsterdam was built opening on 3 January 1638 194 The first ballet performances in the Netherlands were given in Schouwburg in 1642 with the Ballet of the Five Senses 195 196 In the 18th century French theatre became popular While Amsterdam was under the influence of German music in the 19th century there were few national opera productions the Hollandse Opera of Amsterdam was built in 1888 for the specific purpose of promoting Dutch opera 197 In the 19th century popular culture was centred on the Nes area in Amsterdam mainly vaudeville and music hall citation needed An improved metronome was invented in 1812 by Dietrich Nikolaus Winkel 198 The Rijksmuseum code nld promoted to code nl 1885 and Stedelijk Museum 1895 were built and opened 199 200 In 1888 the Concertgebouworkest orchestra was established 201 With the 20th century came cinema radio and television citation needed Though most studios are located in Hilversum and Aalsmeer Amsterdam s influence on programming is very strong Many people who work in the television industry live in Amsterdam Also the headquarters of the Dutch SBS Broadcasting Group is located in Amsterdam 202 Museums Edit The most important museums of Amsterdam are located on the Museumplein Museum Square located at the southwestern side of the Rijksmuseum It was created in the last quarter of the 19th century on the grounds of the former World s fair The northeastern part of the square is bordered by the large Rijksmuseum In front of the Rijksmuseum on the square itself is a long rectangular pond This is transformed into an ice rink in winter 203 The northwestern part of the square is bordered by the Van Gogh Museum House of Bols Cocktail amp Genever Experience and Coster Diamonds The southwestern border of the Museum Square is the Van Baerlestraat which is a major thoroughfare in this part of Amsterdam The Concertgebouw is located across this street from the square To the southeast of the square are several large houses one of which contains the American consulate A parking garage can be found underneath the square as well as a supermarket The Museumplein is covered almost entirely with a lawn except for the northeastern part of the square which is covered with gravel The current appearance of the square was realised in 1999 when the square was remodelled The square itself is the most prominent site in Amsterdam for festivals and outdoor concerts especially in the summer Plans were made in 2008 to remodel the square again because many inhabitants of Amsterdam are not happy with its current appearance 204 Rembrandt monument on Rembrandtplein The Rijksmuseum code nld promoted to code nl possesses the largest and most important collection of classical Dutch art 205 It opened in 1885 Its collection consists of nearly one million objects 206 The artist most associated with Amsterdam is Rembrandt whose work and the work of his pupils is displayed in the Rijksmuseum Rembrandt s masterpiece The Night Watch is one of the top pieces of art of the museum It also houses paintings from artists like Bartholomeus van der Helst Johannes Vermeer Frans Hals Ferdinand Bol Albert Cuyp Jacob van Ruisdael and Paulus Potter Aside from paintings the collection consists of a large variety of decorative art This ranges from Delftware to giant doll houses from the 17th century The architect of the gothic revival building was P J H Cuypers The museum underwent a 10 year 375 million euro renovation starting in 2003 The full collection was reopened to the public on 13 April 2013 and the Rijksmuseum has remained the most visited museum in Amsterdam with 2 2 million visitors in 2016 and 2 16 million in 2017 207 Van Gogh lived in Amsterdam for a short while and there is a museum dedicated to his work The museum is housed in one of the few modern buildings in this area of Amsterdam The building was designed by Gerrit Rietveld This building is where the permanent collection is displayed A new building was added to the museum in 1999 This building known as the performance wing was designed by Japanese architect Kisho Kurokawa Its purpose is to house temporary exhibitions of the museum 208 209 Some of Van Gogh s most famous paintings like The Potato Eaters and Sunflowers are in the collection 210 The Van Gogh museum is the second most visited museum in Amsterdam not far behind the Rijksmuseum in terms of the number of visits being approximately 2 1 million in 2016 211 for example Next to the Van Gogh museum stands the Stedelijk Museum This is Amsterdam s most important museum of modern art The museum is as old as the square it borders and was opened in 1895 The permanent collection consists of works of art from artists like Piet Mondrian Karel Appel and Kazimir Malevich After renovations lasting several years the museum opened in September 2012 with a new composite extension that has been called The Bathtub due to its resemblance to one Amsterdam contains many other museums throughout the city They range from small museums such as the Verzetsmuseum Resistance Museum the Anne Frank House and the Rembrandt House Museum to the very large like the Tropenmuseum Museum of the Tropics Amsterdam Museum formerly known as Amsterdam Historical Museum Hermitage Amsterdam a dependency of the Hermitage Museum in Saint Petersburg and the Joods Historisch Museum Jewish Historical Museum The modern styled Nemo is dedicated to child friendly science exhibitions Music Edit Further information List of songs about Amsterdam Coldplay performing at the Amsterdam Arena 2016 Amsterdam s musical culture includes a large collection of songs that treat the city nostalgically and lovingly The 1949 song Aan de Amsterdamse grachten On the canals of Amsterdam was performed and recorded by many artists including John Kraaijkamp Sr the best known version is probably that by Wim Sonneveld 1962 In the 1950s Johnny Jordaan rose to fame with Geef mij maar Amsterdam I prefer Amsterdam which praises the city above all others explicitly Paris Jordaan sang especially about his own neighbourhood the Jordaan Bij ons in de Jordaan Colleagues and contemporaries of Johnny include Tante Leen and Manke Nelis Another notable Amsterdam song is Amsterdam by Jacques Brel 1964 212 A 2011 poll by Amsterdam newspaper Het Parool that Trio Bier s Oude Wolf was voted Amsterdams lijflied 213 Notable Amsterdam bands from the modern era include the Osdorp Posse and The Ex AFAS Live formerly known as the Heineken Music Hall is a concert hall located near the Johan Cruyff Arena known as the Amsterdam Arena until 2018 Its main purpose is to serve as a podium for pop concerts for big audiences Many famous international artists have performed there Two other notable venues Paradiso and the Melkweg code nld promoted to code nl are located near the Leidseplein Both focus on broad programming ranging from indie rock to hip hop R amp B and other popular genres Other more subcultural music venues are OCCII OT301 De Nieuwe Anita Winston Kingdom and Zaal 100 Jazz has a strong following in Amsterdam with the Bimhuis being the premier venue In 2012 Ziggo Dome was opened also near Amsterdam Arena a state of the art indoor music arena AFAS Live is also host to many electronic dance music festivals alongside many other venues Armin van Buuren and Tiesto some of the worlds leading Trance DJ s hail from the Netherlands and frequently perform in Amsterdam Each year in October the city hosts the Amsterdam Dance Event ADE which is one of the leading electronic music conferences and one of the biggest club festivals for electronic music in the world attracting over 350 000 visitors each year 214 Another popular dance festival is 5daysoff which takes place in the venues Paradiso and Melkweg code nld promoted to code nl In the summertime there are several big outdoor dance parties in or nearby Amsterdam such as Awakenings Dance Valley Mystery Land Loveland A Day at the Park Welcome to the Future and Valtifest The Concertgebouw code nld promoted to code nl or Royal Concert Hall houses performances of the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra and other musical events Amsterdam has a world class symphony orchestra the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra Their home is the Concertgebouw code nld promoted to code nl which is across the Van Baerlestraat from the Museum Square It is considered by critics to be a concert hall with some of the best acoustics in the world The building contains three halls Grote Zaal Kleine Zaal and Spiegelzaal Some nine hundred concerts and other events per year take place in the Concertgebouw for a public of over 700 000 making it one of the most visited concert halls in the world 215 The opera house of Amsterdam is located adjacent to the city hall Therefore the two buildings combined are often called the Stopera a word originally coined by protesters against it very construction Stop the Opera house This huge modern complex opened in 1986 lies in the former Jewish neighbourhood at Waterlooplein next to the river Amstel The Stopera is the home base of Dutch National Opera Dutch National Ballet and the Holland Symfonia Muziekgebouw aan t IJ is a concert hall which is located in the IJ near the central station Its concerts perform mostly modern classical music Located adjacent to it is the Bimhuis a concert hall for improvised and Jazz music Performing arts Edit Amsterdam has three main theatre buildings Stadsschouwburg Amsterdam s best known theatre Royal Theater Carre It was originally meant as a permanent circus building The Stadsschouwburg at the Leidseplein is the home base of Toneelgroep Amsterdam The current building dates from 1894 Most plays are performed in the Grote Zaal Great Hall The normal program of events encompasses all sorts of theatrical forms In 2009 the new hall of the Stadsschouwburg Amsterdam Toneelgroep Amsterdam and Melkweg opened and the renovation of the front end of the theatre was ready The Dutch National Opera and Ballet formerly known as Het Muziektheater dating from 1986 is the principal opera house and home to Dutch National Opera and Dutch National Ballet Royal Theatre Carre was built as a permanent circus theatre in 1887 and is currently mainly used for musicals cabaret performances and pop concerts The recently re opened DeLaMar Theater houses more commercial plays and musicals A new theatre has also moved into the Amsterdam scene in 2014 joining other established venues Theater Amsterdam is located in the west part of Amsterdam on the Danzigerkade It is housed in a modern building with a panoramic view over the harbour The theatre is the first ever purpose built venue to showcase a single play entitled ANNE the play based on Anne Frank s life On the east side of town there is a small theatre in a converted bathhouse the Badhuistheater The theatre often has English programming The Netherlands has a tradition of cabaret or kleinkunst which combines music storytelling commentary theatre and comedy Cabaret dates back to the 1930s and artists like Wim Kan Wim Sonneveld and Toon Hermans were pioneers of this form of art in the Netherlands In Amsterdam is the Kleinkunstacademie English Cabaret Academy and Nederlied Kleinkunstkoor English Cabaret Choir Contemporary popular artists are Youp van t Hek Freek de Jonge Herman Finkers Hans Teeuwen Theo Maassen Herman van Veen Najib Amhali Raoul Heertje Jorgen Raymann Brigitte Kaandorp and Comedytrain The English spoken comedy scene was established with the founding of Boom Chicago in 1993 They have their own theatre at Leidseplein Nightlife Edit DeWolff performing at Paradiso The Magere Brug or Skinny Bridge over the Amstel at night Amsterdam is famous for its vibrant and diverse nightlife Amsterdam has many cafes bars They range from large and modern to small and cosy The typical Bruine Kroeg brown cafe breathe a more old fashioned atmosphere with dimmed lights candles and somewhat older clientele These brown cafes mostly offer a wide range of local and international artisanal beers Most cafes have terraces in summertime A common sight on the Leidseplein during summer is a square full of terraces packed with people drinking beer or wine Many restaurants can be found in Amsterdam as well Since Amsterdam is a multicultural city a lot of different ethnic restaurants can be found Restaurants range from being rather luxurious and expensive to being ordinary and affordable Amsterdam also possesses many discotheques The two main nightlife areas for tourists are the Leidseplein and the Rembrandtplein The Paradiso Melkweg code nld promoted to code nl and Sugar Factory are cultural centres which turn into discotheques on some nights Examples of discotheques near the Rembrandtplein are the Escape Air John Doe and Club Abe Also noteworthy are Panama Hotel Arena East TrouwAmsterdam and Studio 80 In recent years 24 hour clubs opened their doors most notably Radion De School Shelter and Marktkantine Bimhuis located near the Central Station with its rich programming hosting the best in the field is considered one of the best jazz clubs in the world The Reguliersdwarsstraat is the main street for the LGBT community and nightlife Festivals Edit Queen s Day in Amsterdam on 2013 People dressed in orange on the canals of Amsterdam in 2010 during Koningsdag or King s Day In 2008 there were 140 festivals and events in Amsterdam 216 During the same year Amsterdam was designated as the World Book Capital for one year by UNESCO 217 Famous festivals and events in Amsterdam include Koningsdag which was named Koninginnedag until the crowning of King Willem Alexander in 2013 King s Day Queen s Day the Holland Festival for the performing arts the yearly Prinsengrachtconcert classical concerto on the Prinsen canal in August the Stille Omgang a silent Roman Catholic evening procession held every March Amsterdam Gay Pride The Cannabis Cup and the Uitmarkt On Koningsdag that is held each year on 27 April hundreds of thousands of people travel to Amsterdam to celebrate with the city s residents The entire city becomes overcrowded with people buying products from the freemarket or visiting one of the many music concerts One of the decorated boats participating in the 2013 Canal Parade of the Amsterdam Gay Pride The yearly Holland Festival attracts international artists and visitors from all over Europe Amsterdam Gay Pride is a yearly local LGBT parade of boats in Amsterdam s canals held on the first Saturday in August 218 The annual Uitmarkt is a three day cultural event at the start of the cultural season in late August It offers previews of many different artists such as musicians and poets who perform on podia 219 Sports EditAmsterdam is home of the Eredivisie football club AFC Ajax The stadium Johan Cruyff Arena is the home of Ajax It is located in the south east of the city next to the new Amsterdam Bijlmer ArenA railway station Before moving to their current location in 1996 Ajax played their regular matches in the now demolished De Meer Stadion in the eastern part of the city 220 or in the Olympic Stadium In 1928 Amsterdam hosted the Summer Olympics The Olympic Stadium built for the occasion has been completely restored and is now used for cultural and sporting events such as the Amsterdam Marathon 221 In 1920 Amsterdam assisted in hosting some of the sailing events for the Summer Olympics held in neighbouring Antwerp Belgium by hosting events at Buiten IJ AFC Ajax player Johan Cruyff 1967 The city holds the Dam to Dam Run a 16 km 10 mi race from Amsterdam to Zaandam as well as the Amsterdam Marathon The ice hockey team Amstel Tijgers play in the Jaap Eden ice rink The team competes in the Dutch ice hockey premier league Speed skating championships have been held on the 400 meter lane of this ice rink Amsterdam holds two American football franchises the Amsterdam Crusaders and the Amsterdam Panthers The Amsterdam Pirates baseball team competes in the Dutch Major League There are three field hockey teams Amsterdam Pinoke and Hurley who play their matches around the Wagener Stadium in the nearby city of Amstelveen The basketball team MyGuide Amsterdam competes in the Dutch premier division and play their games in the Sporthallen Zuid 222 There is one rugby club in Amsterdam which also hosts sports training classes such as RTC Rugby Talenten Centrum or Rugby Talent Centre and the National Rugby stadium Since 1999 the city of Amsterdam honours the best sportsmen and women at the Amsterdam Sports Awards Boxer Raymond Joval and field hockey midfielder Carole Thate were the first to receive the awards in 1999 Amsterdam hosted the World Gymnaestrada in 1991 and will do so again in 2023 223 Politics EditMain article Government of Amsterdam Femke Halsema has been the Mayor of Amsterdam since 2018 The city of Amsterdam is a municipality under the Dutch Municipalities Act It is governed by a directly elected municipal council a municipal executive board and a mayor Since 1981 the municipality of Amsterdam has gradually been divided into semi autonomous boroughs called stadsdelen or districts Over time a total of 15 boroughs were created In May 2010 under a major reform the number of Amsterdam boroughs was reduced to eight Amsterdam Centrum covering the city centre including the canal belt Amsterdam Noord consisting of the neighbourhoods north of the IJ lake Amsterdam Oost in the east Amsterdam Zuid in the south Amsterdam West in the west Amsterdam Nieuw West in the far west Amsterdam Zuidoost in the southeast and Westpoort covering the Port of Amsterdam area 224 City government Edit Main articles Boroughs of Amsterdam and Municipal council Netherlands As with all Dutch municipalities Amsterdam is governed by a directly elected municipal council a municipal executive board and a government appointed 225 mayor burgemeester The mayor is a member of the municipal executive board but also has individual responsibilities in maintaining public order On 27 June 2018 Femke Halsema former member of House of Representatives for GroenLinks from 1998 to 2011 was appointed as the first woman to be Mayor of Amsterdam by the King s Commissioner of North Holland for a six year term after being nominated by the Amsterdam municipal council and began serving a six year term on 12 July 2018 She replaces Eberhard van der Laan Labour Party who was the Mayor of Amsterdam from 2010 until his death in October 2017 After the 2014 municipal council elections a governing majority of D66 VVD and SP was formed the first coalition without the Labour Party since World War II 226 Next to the Mayor the municipal executive board consists of eight wethouders alderpersons appointed by the municipal council four D66 alderpersons two VVD alderpersons and two SP alderpersons 227 On 18 September 2017 it was announced by Eberhard van der Laan in an open letter to Amsterdam citizens that Kajsa Ollongren would take up his office as acting Mayor of Amsterdam with immediate effect due to ill health 228 Ollongren was succeeded as acting Mayor by Eric van der Burg on 26 October 2017 and by Jozias van Aartsen on 4 December 2017 Boroughs of Amsterdam until 24 March 2022 Unlike most other Dutch municipalities Amsterdam is subdivided into eight boroughs called stadsdelen or districts and the urban area of Weesp a system that was implemented gradually in the 1980s to improve local governance The boroughs are responsible for many activities that had previously been run by the central city In 2010 the number of Amsterdam boroughs reached fifteen Fourteen of those had their own district council deelraad elected by a popular vote The fifteenth Westpoort covers the harbour of Amsterdam and had very few residents Therefore it was governed by the central municipal council Under the borough system municipal decisions are made at borough level except for those affairs pertaining to the whole city such as major infrastructure projects which are the jurisdiction of the central municipal authorities In 2010 the borough system was restructured in which many smaller boroughs merged into larger boroughs In 2014 under a reform of the Dutch Municipalities Act the Amsterdam boroughs lost much of their autonomous status as their district councils were abolished The municipal council of Amsterdam voted to maintain the borough system by replacing the district councils with smaller but still directly elected district committees bestuurscommissies Under a municipal ordinance the new district committees were granted responsibilities through delegation of regulatory and executive powers by the central municipal council View of the Stopera left behind the Blauwbrug blue bridge where the Amsterdam city hall and opera house are located and the Hermitage Museum right on the Amstel Metropolitan area Edit Police headquarters of Amsterdam Amsterdam is usually understood to refer to the municipality of Amsterdam Colloquially some areas within the municipality such as the town of Durgerdam may not be considered part of Amsterdam Statistics Netherlands uses three other definitions of Amsterdam metropolitan agglomeration Amsterdam Grootstedelijke Agglomeratie Amsterdam not to be confused with Grootstedelijk Gebied Amsterdam a synonym of Groot Amsterdam Greater Amsterdam Groot Amsterdam a COROP region and the urban region Amsterdam Stadsgewest Amsterdam 115 The Amsterdam Department for Research and Statistics uses a fourth conurbation namely the Stadsregio Amsterdam City Region of Amsterdam The city region is similar to Greater Amsterdam but includes the municipalities of Zaanstad and Wormerland It excludes Graft De Rijp The smallest of these areas is the municipality of Amsterdam with a population of 802 938 in 2013 229 The conurbation had a population of 1 096 042 in 2013 229 It includes the municipalities of Zaanstad Wormerland Oostzaan Diemen and Amstelveen only as well as the municipality of Amsterdam 229 Greater Amsterdam includes 15 municipalities 229 and had a population of 1 293 208 in 2013 229 Though much larger in area the population of this area is only slightly larger because the definition excludes the relatively populous municipality of Zaanstad The largest area by population the Amsterdam Metropolitan Area Dutch Metropoolregio Amsterdam has a population of 2 33 million 230 It includes for instance Zaanstad Wormerland Muiden Abcoude Haarlem Almere and Lelystad but excludes Graft De Rijp Amsterdam is part of the conglomerate metropolitan area Randstad with a total population of 6 659 300 inhabitants 231 Of these various metropolitan area configurations only the Stadsregio Amsterdam City Region of Amsterdam has a formal governmental status Its responsibilities include regional spatial planning and the metropolitan public transport concessions 232 National capital Edit Main article Capital of the Netherlands King Willem Alexander Princess Beatrix and Queen Maxima greeting Amsterdammers from the Royal Palace of Amsterdam during Willem Alexanders inauguration in 2013 Under the Dutch Constitution Amsterdam is the capital of the Netherlands Since the 1983 constitutional revision the constitution mentions Amsterdam and capital in chapter 2 article 32 The king s confirmation by oath and his coronation take place in the capital Amsterdam de hoofdstad Amsterdam 233 Previous versions of the constitution only mentioned the city of Amsterdam de stad Amsterdam 234 For a royal investiture therefore the States General of the Netherlands the Dutch Parliament meets for a ceremonial joint session in Amsterdam The ceremony traditionally takes place at the Nieuwe Kerk on Dam Square immediately after the former monarch has signed the act of abdication at the nearby Royal Palace of Amsterdam Normally however the Parliament sits in The Hague the city which has historically been the seat of the Dutch government the Dutch monarchy and the Dutch supreme court Foreign embassies are also located in The Hague Symbols Edit Main articles Coat of arms of Amsterdam and Flag of Amsterdam The coat of arms of Amsterdam is composed of several historical elements First and centre are three St Andrew s crosses aligned in a vertical band on the city s shield although Amsterdam s patron saint was Saint Nicholas These St Andrew s crosses can also be found on the city shields of neighbours Amstelveen and Ouder Amstel This part of the coat of arms is the basis of the flag of Amsterdam flown by the city government but also as civil ensign for ships registered in Amsterdam Second is the Imperial Crown of Austria In 1489 out of gratitude for services and loans Maximilian I awarded Amsterdam the right to adorn its coat of arms with the king s crown Then in 1508 this was replaced with Maximilian s imperial crown when he was crowned Holy Roman Emperor In the early years of the 17th century Maximilian s crown in Amsterdam s coat of arms was again replaced this time with the crown of Emperor Rudolph II a crown that became the Imperial Crown of Austria The lions date from the late 16th century when city and province became part of the Republic of the Seven United Netherlands Last came the city s official motto Heldhaftig Vastberaden Barmhartig Heroic Determined Merciful bestowed on the city in 1947 by Queen Wilhelmina in recognition of the city s bravery during the Second World War Transport EditMain article Transport in Amsterdam Metro tram and bus Edit Main articles Amsterdam Metro and Trams in Amsterdam A tram crossing the Keizersgracht The Amsterdam Metro is a mixed subway and above ground rapid transit system consisting of five lines Currently there are sixteen tram routes and five metro routes All are operated by municipal public transport operator Gemeentelijk Vervoerbedrijf GVB which also runs the city bus network Four fare free GVB ferries carry pedestrians and cyclists across the IJ lake to the borough of Amsterdam Noord and two fare charging ferries run east and west along the harbour There are also privately operated water taxis a water bus a boat sharing operation electric rental boats and canal cruises that transport people along Amsterdam s waterways Regional buses and some suburban buses are operated by Connexxion and EBS International coach services are provided by Eurolines from Amsterdam Amstel railway station IDBUS from Amsterdam Sloterdijk railway station and Megabus from the Zuiderzeeweg in the east of the city In order to facilitate easier transport to the centre of Amsterdam the city has various P R Locations where people can park their car at an affordable price and transfer to one of the numerous public transport lines 235 Car Edit Amsterdam was intended in 1932 to be the hub a kind of Kilometre Zero of the highway system of the Netherlands 236 with freeways numbered One to Eight planned to originate from the city 236 The outbreak of the Second World War and shifting priorities led to the current situation where only roads A1 A2 and A4 originate from Amsterdam according to the original plan The A3 to Rotterdam was cancelled in 1970 in order to conserve the Groene Hart Road A8 leading north to Zaandam and the A10 Ringroad were opened between 1968 and 1974 237 Besides the A1 A2 A4 and A8 several freeways such as the A7 and A6 carry traffic mainly bound for Amsterdam The A10 ringroad surrounding the city connects Amsterdam with the Dutch national network of freeways Interchanges on the A10 allow cars to enter the city by transferring to one of the 18 city roads numbered S101 through to S118 These city roads are regional roads without grade separation and sometimes without a central reservation Most are accessible by cyclists The S100 Centrumring is a smaller ringroad circumnavigating the city s centre In the city centre driving a car is discouraged Parking fees are expensive and many streets are closed to cars or are one way 238 The local government sponsors carsharing and carpooling initiatives such as Autodelen and Meerijden nu 239 The local government has also started removing parking spaces in the city with the goal of removing 10 000 spaces roughly 1 500 per year by 2025 240 National rail Edit Amsterdam Centraal station the city s main train station Amsterdam is served by ten stations of the Nederlandse Spoorwegen Dutch Railways 241 Five are intercity stops Sloterdijk Zuid Amstel Bijlmer ArenA and Amsterdam Centraal The stations for local services are Lelylaan RAI Holendrecht Muiderpoort and Science Park Amsterdam Centraal is also an international railway station From the station there are regular services to destinations such as Austria Belarus Belgium Czech Republic Denmark France Germany Hungary Poland Russia Switzerland and the United Kingdom Among these trains are international trains of the Nederlandse Spoorwegen Amsterdam Berlin the Eurostar Amsterdam Brussels London Thalys Amsterdam Brussels Paris Lille and Intercity Express Amsterdam Cologne Frankfurt 242 243 244 Airport Edit Amsterdam Airport Schiphol ranks as Europe s third busiest airport for passenger traffic Amsterdam Airport Schiphol is less than 20 minutes by train from Amsterdam Centraal station and is served by domestic and international intercity trains such as Thalys Eurostar and Intercity Brussel Schiphol is the largest airport in the Netherlands the third largest in Europe and the 14th largest in the world in terms of passengers It handles over 68 million passengers per year and is the home base of four airlines KLM Transavia Martinair and Arkefly 245 As of 2014 update Schiphol was the fifth busiest airport in the world measured by international passenger numbers 246 This airport is 4 meters below sea level 247 Although Schiphol is internationally known as Amsterdam Schiphol Airport it actually lies in the neighbouring municipality of Haarlemmermeer southwest of the city Cycling Edit Main article Cycling in Amsterdam Police bicyclist crossing a bridge over the Prinsengracht Bicyclist at Amsterdam Amsterdam is one of the most bicycle friendly large cities in the world and is a centre of bicycle culture with good facilities for cyclists such as bike paths and bike racks and several guarded bike storage garages fietsenstalling which can be used According to the most recent figures published by Central Bureau of Statistics CBS in 2015 the 442 693 households 850 000 residents in Amsterdam together owned 847 000 bicycles 1 91 bicycle per household 248 Theft is widespread in 2011 about 83 000 bicycles were stolen in Amsterdam 249 Bicycles are used by all socio economic groups because of their convenience Amsterdam s small size the 400 km 249 mi of bike paths 250 the flat terrain and the inconvenience of driving an automobile 251 Education Edit The Agnietenkapel Gate at the University of Amsterdam founded in 1632 as the Athenaeum Illustre Amsterdam has two universities the University of Amsterdam Universiteit van Amsterdam UvA and the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam VU Other institutions for higher education include an art school Gerrit Rietveld Academie a university of applied sciences the Hogeschool van Amsterdam and the Amsterdamse Hogeschool voor de Kunsten Amsterdam s International Institute of Social History is one of the world s largest documentary and research institutions concerning social history and especially the history of the labour movement Amsterdam s Hortus Botanicus founded in the early 17th century is one of the oldest botanical gardens in the world 252 with many old and rare specimens among them the coffee plant that served as the parent for the entire coffee culture in Central and South America 253 There are over 200 primary schools in Amsterdam 254 Some of these primary schools base their teachings on particular pedagogic theories like the various Montessori schools The biggest Montessori high school in Amsterdam is the Montessori Lyceum Amsterdam Many schools however are based on religion This used to be primarily Roman Catholicism and various Protestant denominations but with the influx of Muslim immigrants there has been a rise in the number of Islamic schools Jewish schools can be found in the southern suburbs of Amsterdam Amsterdam is noted for having five independent grammar schools Dutch gymnasia the Vossius Gymnasium Barlaeus Gymnasium St Ignatius Gymnasium Het 4e Gymnasium and the Cygnus Gymnasium where a classical curriculum including Latin and classical Greek is taught Though believed until recently by many to be an anachronistic and elitist concept that would soon die out the gymnasia have recently experienced a revival leading to the formation of a fourth and fifth grammar school in which the three aforementioned schools participate Most secondary schools in Amsterdam offer a variety of different levels of education in the same school The city also has various colleges ranging from art and design to politics and economics which are mostly also available for students coming from other countries Schools for foreign nationals in Amsterdam include the Amsterdam International Community School British School of Amsterdam Albert Einstein International School Amsterdam Lycee Vincent van Gogh La Haye Amsterdam primary campus French school International School of Amsterdam and the Japanese School of Amsterdam Notable people EditMain article List of people from AmsterdamMedia EditAmsterdam is a prominent centre for national and international media Some locally based newspapers include Het Parool a national daily paper De Telegraaf the largest Dutch daily newspaper the daily newspapers Trouw de Volkskrant and NRC De Groene Amsterdammer a weekly newspaper the free newspapers Metro and The Holland Times printed in English Amsterdam is home to the second largest Dutch commercial TV group SBS Broadcasting Group consisting of TV stations SBS 6 Net 5 and Veronica However Amsterdam is not considered the media city of the Netherlands The town of Hilversum 30 km 19 mi south east of Amsterdam has been crowned with this unofficial title Hilversum is the principal centre for radio and television broadcasting in the Netherlands Radio Netherlands heard worldwide via shortwave radio since the 1920s is also based there Hilversum is home to an extensive complex of audio and television studios belonging to the national broadcast production company NOS as well as to the studios and offices of all the Dutch public broadcasting organisations and many commercial TV production companies In 2012 the music video of Far East Movement Live My Life was filmed in various parts of Amsterdam Also several movies were filmed in Amsterdam such as James Bond s Diamonds Are Forever Ocean s Twelve Girl with a Pearl Earring and The Hitman s Bodyguard Amsterdam is also featured in John Green s book The Fault in Our Stars which has been made into a film as well that partly takes place in Amsterdam Housing EditFrom the late 1960s onwards many buildings in Amsterdam have been squatted both for housing and for using as social centres 255 A number of these squats have legalised and become well known such as OCCII OT301 Paradiso and Vrankrijk Sister cities Edit Manchester Greater Manchester United Kingdom 2007 Zapopan Jalisco Mexico 2011 256 See also Edit Netherlands portal Cities portal Europe portalList of populated places in the Netherlands List of cities towns and villages in North Holland List of cities in the Netherlands by province List of national capitals List of national capitals by latitude List of 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