Amersfoort

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Amersfoort
Location of Amersfoort
Coordinates: 52°09′N 5°23′E / 52.15, 5.38
Country Netherlands
Province Utrecht
Area (2006)
 - Total 63.78 km² (24.6 sq mi)
 - Land 62.88 km² (24.3 sq mi)
 - Water 0.90 km² (0.3 sq mi)
Population (1 January 2007)
 - Total 139,017
 - Density 2,211/km² (5,726.5/sq mi)
  Source: CBS, Statline.
Time zone CET (UTC+1)
 - Summer (DST) CEST (UTC+2)
Website: www.amersfoort.nl

Image:Ltspkr.pngAmersfoort is a municipality and the second largest city of the province of Utrecht in central Netherlands.

Contents

[edit] Population centres

The municipality of Amersfoort consists of the following cities, towns, villages and/or districts: Amersfoort, Hoogland, Hooglanderveen, Stoutenburg Noord.

[edit] The city of Amersfoort

[edit] History

Hunter gatherers set up camps in the Amersfoort region in the Mesolithic period. Archaeologists have found traces of these camps to the north of Amersfoort, such as the remains of hearths, and sometimes microlithic flint objects.

Settlements in the Amersfoort area from around 1000 BC have been found, but the name Amersfoort (named after a ford in the Amer River, now the Eem) did not appear until the 11th century. The city grew around what is now known as the central square, the "Hof", where the Bishops of Utrecht estblished a court, in order to control the "Gelderse vallei", and was granted city rights in 1259 by the bishop of Utrecht Hendrik van Vianden. A first defensive wall, made out of brick, was finished around 1300. Soon after, the need for enlargement of the city became apparent and around 1380 the construction of a new wall was begun and completed around 1450. The famous Koppelpoort, a combined land and water gate, is part of this second wall. The first wall was demolished and houses were built in its place. Today's Muurhuizen (wallhouses) Street is at the exact location of the first wall; the fronts of the houses are built on top of the first city wall’s foundations.

The famous Koppelpoort in Amersfoort, at evening
The famous Koppelpoort in Amersfoort, at evening

The Onze-Lieve-Vrouwentoren tower (The Tower of Our Lady)[1] is one of the tallest medieval church towers in the Netherlands at 98 metres (322 ft). The construction of the tower and the church was started in 1444. The church was demolished by an explosion in 1787, but the tower survived, and the layout of the church still can be discerned today through the use of different types of stone in the pavement of the open space that was created. It is now the reference point of the RD coordinate system, the coordinate grid used by the Dutch topographical service: the RD coordinates are (155.000, 463.000).

The inner city of Amersfoort has been preserved very well since the Middle Ages. Apart from the Onze-Lieve-Vrouwetoren, the Koppelpoort , and the Muurhuizen (Wall-houses), there is also the Sint-Joris church.

In the Middle Ages, Amersfoort was an important centre for the textile industry, and there were a large number of breweries. In the 18th century the city flourished because of the cultivation of tobacco.

[edit] Second World War

There was a concentration camp near the city of Amersfoort during the Second World War. The camp, officially called Polizeiliches Durchgangslager Amersfoort (Police Transit Camp Amersfoort), better known as Kamp Amersfoort, was actually located in the neighbouring municipality of Leusden. After the war the leader of the camp, Joseph Kotälla, was sentenced to death.

[edit] Keistad (Boulder-city)

Amersfoortse Kei
Amersfoortse Kei

The nickname for Amersfoort, Keistad (boulder-city), originates in the Amersfoortse Kei, a 9-tonne (19,842 lb) boulder that was dragged from the Soest moors into the city in 1661 by 400 people because of a bet between two landowners. The people got their reward when the winner bought everyone beer and pretzels. Other nearby towns then nicknamed the people of Amersfoort Keihoofd (boulder-head). This story embarrassed the inhabitants, and they buried the boulder in the city, but after it was found again in 1903 it was placed in a prominent spot as a monument.

[edit] Musea

  • The Mondriaan House: birthplace of the painter Piet Mondriaan. Exhibits a lifesize reconstruction of his workshop in Paris. Some temporary shows and work by artists inspired by the painter.
  • Flehite: historic, educational and temporary exhibitions behind a splendid facade. Closed until at least 2008 due to asbestos contamination.
  • Zonnehof: small elegant modernist building designed by Gerrit Rietveld on an eponymous square just south of the centre with temporary exhibitions of mostly contemporary art.
  • Armando Museum: Work by the painter Armando (who lived in Amersfoort as a child) in a renovated classisistic church building. Mostly temporary exhib. (Most of the church and the art on exhibition was destoyed in a fire on October 22, 2007.)[2]
  • Culinary Museum

[edit] Transport

There are bus services in Amersfoort offered by three firms: Connexxion, BBA and the Stadsvervoer Nederland. Connexxion provides services in town and to some destinations further afield like Utrecht, while BBA and Stadsvervoer Nederland offer connections to regional destinations.

Amersfoort has three railway stations:

  • Amersfoort, the main intercity station, which has trains to Enschede, Rotterdam, Den Haag, Amsterdam and Leeuwarden/Groningen
  • Amersfoort Schothorst, the second station in the north of Amersfoort and has on workdays six trains an hour in the direction of the main station Amersfoort and two trains an hour toZwolle.
  • Amersfoort Vathorst, at the north of Amersfoort Schothorst and has on workdays four train to Amersfoort and two to Zwolle.

[edit] Notable people born in Amersfoort

See also People from Amersfoort

[edit] Miscellaneous

[edit] Local government

'Koppelpoort' Amersfoort
'Koppelpoort' Amersfoort

The municipal council of Amersfoort consists of 39 seats, which are divided as follows:[4]

  • VVD - 6 seats
  • PvdA - 10 seats
  • CDA - 5 seats
  • GroenLinks - 4 seats
  • Jouw Amersfoort - 3 seats
  • ChristenUnie - 3 seats
  • SP - 3 seats
  • Burger Partij Amersfoort - 5 seats
  • PAPA (Politieke Actiepartij Amersfoort - not represented)
  • NCPN (Nieuwe Communistische Partij Nederland - not represented)

[edit] Sister cities

[edit] References

  1. ^ Onze Lieve Vrouwentoren. SkyscraperCity. Retrieved on 2008-03-26.
  2. ^ "Armando Museum fire", Armandomuseum.nl, 2007-10-22. Retrieved on 2007-11-04. 
  3. ^ Reference at Wikipedia in German
  4. ^ Zetelverdeling en stemaantallen (Dutch). Gemeente Amersfoort. Retrieved on 2008-03-26.

[edit] External links