As a result of several conflicts in other parts of
Europe the cities in the Republic of the Seven United Netherlands opened their
gates to religious and economic refugees. This lead to a rapid growth of the
urban population in many of the important trading centres such as Middelburg,
Flushing (Vlissingen in Dutch), Harlem, Delft, Leiden, Gouda, Schiedam, Rotterdam, Amsterdam, Utrecht, Arnhem, Zwolle
and Groningen. The republic was governed by a States General wherein all mayor
cities were represented. After the fall of Antwerp in 1585 the economic centre shifted
from Brabant towards Holland. In Holland several small cities quickly grew with
immigrants from the southern Netherlands and the Rhineland.
Amsterdam became one of the most important cities in
Europe during the 17th century. This city had started as a humble fishing
settlement on the Amstel river in the 13th century. A dam was built to create a
secure harbour on the IJ around 1205. The settlement Amstelredamme only
consisted of small houses along a dyke on either side of the Amstel river; the
Ouwezijds and Nieuwezijds (old side and new side respectively). In 1306 the
settlement was granted city rights and in 1340 a palisade was erected around
the oval shaped settlement on both banks of the river. This settlement was
later expanded by digging a second (1385) and third (1420) moat around it. This
was the only way of expanding a water city. Amsterdam was after all located in
marshland.
In 1538 a city plan was drawn showing the dam in the
Amstel with the Damrak beyond the dam slues and a number of moats encircling
the settlement: Oudezijds Voorburwal, Oudezijds Achterburgwal, Nieuwezijds
Voorburgwal and Nieuwezijds Achterburgwal (named after the old and new
fortifications respectively) and the Singel (omsingelen means to wrap around or encircle). In 1518 a new outer
moat (de Nieuwe Gracht) with city wall was constructed to enclose the suburb of
Lastage east of the St. Anthony Gate. East of these city walls several islands
were created between 1591 and 93 that would develop into the Jewish quarter of
Amsterdam. It was mainly developed for housing in the 17th en 18th centuries,
before then mainly warehouses stood here within the expanded fortifications.
The iconic urban shape of the old city of Amsterdam
with its fan like structure and rings of watercourses. The semicircular
canal-belt is one of the most easily recognizable urban features. Within the
old centre we find the Old Church (O), the New Church (N), City Hall (C), the
Dam Square (D) and the Damrak (R). The main focus of the city before the canal-belt
lay east with the Lastage (L later New Market), the Synagogue (S), the Hortus
(H), Natura Artis Magistra (A), Plantage (P) and 's- Lands Zeemagazijn (Z - the
Arsenal of the Amsterdam Admiralty). The Singel (s) surrounds the old city. The
Nieuwe Gracht (ng) indicates the edge of the eastern extension. The Herengracht
(h) surrounded the first extension. The canal-belt proper consists of the
Herengracht (h), Keizersgracht (k), Prinsengracht (p) and Singelgracht (sg). Thiscontinues beyond the Amstel (a) as
Nieuwe Herengracht (nh), Nieuwe Keizersgracht (nk) and Nieuwe Prinsengracht
(np). The canal-belt starts at the Brouwersgracht (b).Beyond
the canal-belt we find the Jordaan district (J).
The expansion before 1600 was relatively small in
scale, but in 1612 a large speculative expansion (stadsuitleg) was started.
This so-called grachtengordel (literally: canal-belt) was penciled in over
existing fields and comprised of a series of interconnected waterways with
three main watercourses encircling the old city. These three broad watercourses
or grachten* were dug in straight sections between new radials fanning out from
the edges of the old city. Work started in the west at the Brouwersgracht
(Brewers Canal). The first phase consisted of the three main watercourses -the
preexisting an widened- Herengracht (named after the Heren Regeerders or
Councilors), Keizersgracht (named in honour of the Holy Roman Emperor
Maximilian of Habsburg) and Prinsengracht (named in honour of William prince of
Orange). Of these the Prinsengracht was conceived as the most prestigious with
larger plots. Between the canals mews were constructed . On these mews stable
blocks and servants housing was built at the back of the long and narrow
gardens. Beyond the canal belt less prestigious housing was planned. This area
called Jordaan follows the old polder parceling. Polder ditches were
alternately widened or filled in. The Jordaan area has a parallel structure of
strips at an angle to the canal-belt. The area first known as Het Nieuwe Werk
(the new works or new piece) once included eleven canals
In a second phase of construction after 1658 the canal-belt was extended from
the Leidsegracht to the Amstel river. The peripheral moat (Singelgracht) around
the fortifications was also extended, eventually towards the IJ at Zeeburg at
the end of the 17th century. Beyond the Amstel river the canal-belt was
continued (1662), but every watercourse had the word Nieuw (new) attached to
it. Development of this part of the canal-belt stalled in the second half of
the 18th century and the area was used as gardens, a physics garden (Hortus
Medicus), a municipal tree nursery (de Plantage) and a recreational area. In
the IJ - a large inlet of the Zuiderzee - several artificial islands were
constructed to serve as wharfs and shipyards: the eastern islands and docks
around 1657 an the western islands and docks around 1615. So with the canal-belt
the harbour also expanded outward away from the Damrak.
The four subsequent enlargements of Amsterdam -also
known as the eerste (U1), tweede (U2), derde (U3) en vierde (U4) uitleg, were
executed between 1578 and 1665. In this period the city grew from 30.000 to
160.000 inhabitants (within the walls) and became the most important trading
and industrial centre of Europe (together with Zaandam north of the IJ).In the
IJ two new harbour areas were developed on new islands in this sea inlet: the
Western Harbour (W) and Eastern Harbour (E).
* The Dutch
word "gracht" stems from graft
a form of graven and means dug out or cut through. The German equivalent is Graben. Gracht is used for
inner-city watercourses as well as moats, dry moats and embankments or quays. There
is no true equivalent in other languages. In English the word canal is mostly
used although in Dutch kanaal refers
to a shipping channel (also known as vaart,
which means as much as waterway
navigateable by boat). To complicate the matter even further in Flanders
the word gracht is used for ditches
and other drainage channels. In Bruges the word reien is used, in Ghent they use leien and in Antwerp ruien is
used instead of gracht for inner-city
watercourses.
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