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Negen Straatjes

Negen Straatjes

FieldValue
official_nameNegen Straatjes
settlement_typeNeighborhood of Amsterdam
image_skylineBrug 24 in de Hartenstraat over de Herengracht foto 2.jpg
image_captionHartenstraat bridge over the Herengracht
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_nameNetherlands
subdivision_type1Province
subdivision_name1North Holland
subdivision_type2COROP
subdivision_name2Amsterdam
subdivision_type3Borough
subdivision_name3Centrum
unit_prefMetric
timezoneCET
utc_offset+1
area_code1016
websitehttps://de9straatjes.nl/en/home

Negen Straatjes (; ) is a neighbourhood of Amsterdam, Netherlands located in the Grachtengordel, a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

Overview

Negen Straatjes comprises nine side streets off the Prinsengracht, Keizersgracht, Herengracht and Singel in central Amsterdam which have been promoting themselves with that name since the 1990s. Together they form a sub-neighborhood within the larger western Grachtengordel (), one with many small and diverse shops and restaurants. The construction in this area goes back to the first half of the 17th century. Negen Straatjes is bordered on the north by the Raadhuisstraat and on the south by the Leidsegracht. In between, the Prinsengracht, Keizersgracht, Herengracht and Singel are intersected by three cross streets - but each of the cross streets has different names in each of its sections between the canals.

From the Prinsengracht towards the Singel and beginning with the northernmost streets, the streets are:

  • Reestraat () – Hartenstraat () – Gasthuismolensteeg ()
  • Berenstraat () – Wolvenstraat () – Oude Spiegelstraat ()
  • Runstraat () – Huidenstraat () – Wijde Heisteeg ()

The names are reminders of many of the types of work that were carried out here in centuries past, especially the processing of skins (cow, bear, wolf and roe deer skins).

| File:Amsterdam - Runstraat 33.JPG | Runstraat and Prinsengracht, 2010 | File:Amsterdam - Keizersgracht 357.JPG | Keizersgracht and Huidenstraat, 2011 | File:Oude Spiegelstraat 12 corner with Herengracht.JPG | Herengracht and Oude Spiegelstraat, 2010 | File:Herengracht 300 corner with Wolvenstraat 1a.JPG | Herengracht and Wolvenstraat, 2011

History

Signs from each of the nine streets

Until the end of the 16th century, the city of Amsterdam encompassed the area inside the Singel and what is now Kloveniersburgwal. After the Alteration and change in management, the city expanded in four stages between 1585 and 1665. Around 1612, during the Twelve Years' Truce, the third expansion of the city began with the reclamation of the Grachtengordel (including the area now known as Negen Straatjes) and the Jordaan between Brouwersgracht en Leidsegracht. The majority of the buildings in Negen Straatjes date from the 18th century, with little remaining of the original 17th century buildings. There are more than 140 national () and municipal monuments in Negen Straatjes.

The idea to promote the Nine Little Streets as a shopping area came from a few entrepreneurs such as Djoeke Wessing. They wanted a common name for the area and give it a kind of allure as the more notable nearby neighborhood of Jordaan. This would promote cooperation and business growth, but also attract more tourists to the hitherto relatively unknown area. The "Association of the 9 Streets" was founded on November 12, 1996. Nobody thought it was a good name at the time, but the name has stuck, and the area retains the name.

Area attractions

  • Museum Het Grachtenhuis at Herengracht 386
  • Photography Museum Huis Marseille on Keizersgracht 401
  • The European Center for Art, Culture and Science in the Felix Meritis house on the Keizersgracht
  • The Dutch Institute for War Documentation (, NIOD) on the Herengracht

The yearly Prinsengrachtconcert () in August takes places at the corner of the Prinsengracht and the Reestraat at Pulitzer Amsterdam.

The "tenth" street

In recent years the Hazenstraat, a side street off the Elandsgracht in the Jordaan, close to Negen Straatjes, has called itself the Tenth Street (Dutch: Tiende Straatje).

References

References

  1. "Seventeenth-century canal ring area of Amsterdam inside the Singelgracht - UNESCO World Heritage Centre". Whc.unesco.org.
  2. Bewonersgroep Grachten 9+ Branchering 9 straatjes toen en nu 23 november 2017 http://www.grachtennegenplus.nl/Content/2027081858/gnp/Photoalbums/b99c66a2-dc4a-428a-bc0f-00abc5eef385/2017-11-24%20Branchering%20def.%20concept%20in%20PDF.pdf
  3. [http://www.de9straatjes.nl/nl/nieuws/djoeke_wessing_art_deco_en_de_vrouw_achter_de_9_straatjes/ Djoeke Wessing, art deco and: the woman behind the 9 Streets]
  4. [http://www.tussentaalenbeeld.nl/A60fa3.htm De Hazenstraat is het Tiende Straatje]
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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