Amsterdam
AMSTERDAM is a beguiling capital, a compact mix of the
provincial and the cosmopolitan. It has a welcoming attitude
towards visitors and a uniquely youthful orientation. For many,
however, its world-class museums and galleries - notably the
Rijksmuseum, with its collection of seventeenth-century Dutch
paintings, and the Van Gogh Museum - are reason enough to
visit.
Amsterdam was founded on a dam on the river Amstel in the
thirteenth century. During the Reformation it rose in stature,
taking trade away from Antwerp and becoming a haven for its
religious refugees. Having shaken off the yoke of the Spanish, the
city went from strength to strength in the seventeenth century,
becoming the centre of a vast trading empire with colonies in
Southeast Asia. Amsterdam accommodated its expansion with the
cobweb of canals that gives the city its distinctive and elegant
shape today. Come the eighteenth century, Amsterdam went into
gentle decline, re-emerging as a fashionable focus for the
alternative movements of the 1960s. Despite a backlash in the
1980s, the city still takes a uniquely progressive approach to
social issues and culture, with a buzz of open-air summer events,
intimate clubs and bars, and relaxed attitude to soft drugs
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