The First Photographs Ever Taken of Amsterdam [600+ Images, 1859-1899] Dutch Golden Age/ Technology

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  • Опубликовано: 3 сен 2023
  • Today we will browse through over 600 of the most detailed and rarest photographs taken of Amsterdam before the year 1900. These images, many never before seen on, come from a multitude of different resources, including, but not limited to; the Amsterdam Historical Society, and The University of Amsterdam.
    The oldest photograph is this collection will date to roughly 1859, which is the earliest photograph of Amsterdam I was able to locate. This is my most in depth collection to date, and the abundance of ancient, or old world technology, visible in this city is unquestionably remarkable. Please like, share, and subscribe to my channel if you’re not already, and be sure to leave a comment down below about which images stood out to you the most.
    Again, this collection is for the Old World researcher, and the newcomer to European History, as the vast and elaborate architecture showcased through today’s collection will astound even the most seasoned of viewers. Enjoy!
    Links for further reading;
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amsterdam
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Netherl...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canals_...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dutch_G...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History...
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Комментарии • 470

  • @gorillainthemix
    @gorillainthemix 11 месяцев назад +139

    I'm Dutch, my family used to own two hotels in Amsterdam, one was built in 1666. Been doing deep research on some buildings and going through the archives of the City of Amsterdam. So far absolutely fascinating. I hope to make a video about it soon...

    • @danielletimmons3176
      @danielletimmons3176 11 месяцев назад +11

      I'd ❤ to see it!

    • @Nimrod20012
      @Nimrod20012 11 месяцев назад +12

      The buildings already stood there!

    • @moorishknight8239
      @moorishknight8239 11 месяцев назад +5

      Those buildings already stood there😂

    • @lyndonowen8525
      @lyndonowen8525 11 месяцев назад +5

      How long does it take to design and build a train......one wonders...
      Decades or months......and where did all the steel ...come from

    • @Iedereen1Ontdekking
      @Iedereen1Ontdekking 11 месяцев назад

      @@TRIBE.OF.ZEBULUN euhhh you are also describing Aussie there mate.. a totally plundered raped continent. I think Holland is glad you moved away :D

  • @climber222
    @climber222 11 месяцев назад +31

    I remember going to Amsterdam with my Dad when I was 10 and saying to him. 'Dad these are the same buildings as Sydney'
    I also remember my Dutch family being so kind and loving, I always miss them very much.

    • @lucasrem
      @lucasrem 9 месяцев назад

      Dutch people all left.
      I would prefer the US over Australia, you moved in the years after the war ?
      You owned a farm, what is your story ?
      We all left, now Europa is White villages only, rest is gone.....

  • @michelvanderschaaf6914
    @michelvanderschaaf6914 10 месяцев назад +12

    I can only cry when i see this, what did they do to my country

    • @BlondieYouTube
      @BlondieYouTube 2 месяца назад

      Two World Wars which devastated Europe and caused their Colonial Empires to collapse?
      Let's not forget the cold war which split Europe into two, and it's hastily reform into globalism after the fall of the Sovjet Union, and blamo, we're at Europe today.

    • @divinity_together
      @divinity_together 2 месяца назад

      immigration + americanisation is what ruins this country

    • @jolienewashington342
      @jolienewashington342 8 дней назад +1

      made it better, just remember, these people have diversity or pride parades. Isnt life so much better now?

  • @MrVariable
    @MrVariable 11 месяцев назад +26

    In those times, people wore their nicest clothes because they were out in public. My grandmother told me (so this is early last century) that she had two sets of clothes for my uncles & aunties, one set of nice clothes for when they travelled to a relative's place & then when they would arrive, she would get them to change into the second set regular clothes. She said people would judge parents for not providing good clothes as if to imply they were lower class & couldn't take care of their kids if the kids didn't have nice clothes.
    Seeing everyone dressed nicely the further you go back in time makes sense.

    • @donquichotte9424
      @donquichotte9424 5 месяцев назад +1

      That's correct. I remember those days very well (73 years old now and still going strong). We had sunday clothses and week clothes. The sunday clothes were for doctor visits or for when there were visitors. The minute I came home from school I had to change in the "home clothes". My grandparents had a sunday parlour eventhough they had a very tiny house. It was empty most of the year. Weird actually when you look back. In my whole life I have been in there maybe 4 times. The christmas tree was in there and I was not allowed in there. Great times; no supermarkets, sweets for 1 cent. I can go on for ever but most of all: we were free!

    • @antidoteify
      @antidoteify Месяц назад

      @@donquichotte9424 I'm not your age but I still do that, nice clothes for outside, less nice clothes for inside.

  • @philipmartin475
    @philipmartin475 11 месяцев назад +36

    Paris and London get a lot of the attention when it comes to amazing architecture, but this city is absolutely spectacular and can hold its own against any European city. Amazing photos.

    • @Man-in-the-green
      @Man-in-the-green 10 месяцев назад +2

      In Paris they know only one type of buildings namely Haussmann. Before that it more looked like Amsterdam without the canals…

    • @jsb7975
      @jsb7975 10 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@Man-in-the-greenDutch architecture was very distinguished as tippically Dutch.
      Old Paris was smaller than Amsterdam (during the 17th-18th century Amsterdam was the biggest city in Europe, even the world. You can look it up)
      Pre-Haussmann houses were all plastered white and gray, nothing like Amsterdam's architecture....

    • @heuvelke1065
      @heuvelke1065 10 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@jsb7975and now it is one of the smallest cities in the world. Not even close to 1 million.

    • @jsb7975
      @jsb7975 10 месяцев назад

      @@heuvelke1065 it's over 900.000 now and around one and a half million urban.
      Metropolitan 2 and a half million.

    • @denachtconducteur7070
      @denachtconducteur7070 10 месяцев назад +1

      Been to London it's nothing special

  • @WilliamBensch
    @WilliamBensch 10 месяцев назад +4

    Born in amsterdam in the early 50s,i am subscribed .
    the center of the city like the Rembrands plein and the waterloo plein,the Amstel river were my playground,...no tv and no computers at all just a kid playing and exploring at the age of 5....

  • @jaamaan123
    @jaamaan123 11 месяцев назад +56

    Here are a few names
    6:47 Concert gebouw location - Museumplein
    7:36 Westertoren seen from Prinsengracht
    7:52 Westergasfabriek on the horizon
    8:18 Rijksmuseum ?
    9:01 Centraal Station
    9:51 Muiderpoort
    9:55 Magere brug
    10:04 Paleis voor Volksvlijt - Burned
    11:06 Munttoren seen from the river Amstel
    12:18 Rembrandtplein - Het Gouden Hoofd
    12:53 Stadhouderskade - looking east towards Rijksmuseum
    13:50 Stadsschouwburg Leidseplein
    15:18 Rijksmuseum
    17:51 Paleis voor Volksvlijt - Burned
    18:44 Basiliek van de Heilige Nicolaas
    21:08 Mozes en Aäronkerk
    22:10 Koninklijk Paleis

    • @moorishknight8239
      @moorishknight8239 11 месяцев назад +8

      Top. Bedankt 🎉

    • @artstation707
      @artstation707 11 месяцев назад +5

      Why would anyone burn Paleis voor Volksvlijt? It almost seems like it's inserted. It is hard to believe it existed.

    • @-_YouMayFind_-
      @-_YouMayFind_- 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@artstation707 That is still unknown but it might have been done on purpose but of course its not sure. Maybe someone left the candle on or something. As far as I know there was no proof of someone doing it on purpose.

    • @loladonai3744
      @loladonai3744 10 месяцев назад +2

      Dank je! Ik vroeg mij al af wat dat prachtige gebouw was. Paleis voor volksvlijt dus. Jammer dat het niet herbouwd is.

    • @gabchaim8232
      @gabchaim8232 10 месяцев назад +3

      @@loladonai3744 Politieke Verlanglijst 2023 :
      1 -- Klimaatbeleid 2 -- Bestaanszekerheid 3 -- Diversiteit 4 -- Paleis voor Volksvlijt

  • @ishko108
    @ishko108 11 месяцев назад +49

    Jarid my man, when you do it you do it. What a tremendous work you've done with this. I wonder how many people or even historians know about this kind of collection, or who even cares about it. And here you are, you brought it to the world via RUclips. Thank you for that. And thank the Dutch people who helped you do it. I cannot believe the quality of these photographs.

  • @seymourbuttz6971
    @seymourbuttz6971 11 месяцев назад +37

    What I see is a much more refined and advanced society than we have today.
    Excellent presentation and thank you.

    • @FRESHboosters
      @FRESHboosters  11 месяцев назад +1

      Glad you liked it!

    • @Dorianek8
      @Dorianek8 10 месяцев назад +2

      One 5 dollar microchip is 100 times more advanced and refined than all this shit

    • @XpRnz
      @XpRnz 10 месяцев назад +6

      @@Dorianek8 You're too focused on technology. It all depends how you view the comparison, in lots of ways their world was more careless and in harmony than the chaos of the society and ugly nature of current days concrete jungles we're experiencing today.

    • @Tsuma_Vento
      @Tsuma_Vento 10 месяцев назад +4

      In ways this is true. But at the end of the 19th century into the 20th century Amsterdam would have also been one of the dirtiest, stinking cities of Europe, with parts of the city being in quite a state of disrepair. That is until Dr. Sarphati came with his ingenious water management plan for the city, with fresh water taps and watertanks for all. The city was plagued by cholera.

    • @RickPatNB
      @RickPatNB 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@XpRnzIt's because of culture and lack of social media. Mass immigration has It's consequences. We have no common ground anymore since our morals aren't the same anymore. There's no solidarity in todays society anymore. It's everyone for themselves. This will never ever come back.

  • @kelleclark
    @kelleclark 11 месяцев назад +12

    They loved their 'vanilla skies' in Amsterdam, too :)

    • @AlxndrXX
      @AlxndrXX 11 месяцев назад +4

      Don't ask questions :) easily explainable :) all photos just did that :) that's just the way pictures came out back then :)

  • @sidneysill8495
    @sidneysill8495 11 месяцев назад +41

    The thing that always sticks out to me the very most is the slipshod signage on these astounding buildings. I feel like that is one of the major telltale signs that things are not as we are told...
    Thank you as always Jarid, you do the best work.

    • @ZooScott
      @ZooScott 11 месяцев назад +12

      Hidden ARCHITECHNOLOGY 🪃💥👀🌊⚖️💯%…….

    • @sierrashere6957
      @sierrashere6957 11 месяцев назад +8

      That's what sticks out to me too

    • @FRESHboosters
      @FRESHboosters  11 месяцев назад +5

      I totally agree!

    • @boepiesnoep7867
      @boepiesnoep7867 10 месяцев назад +2

      I have no idea what "slipshod signage" means. Can anyone explain?

    • @sidneysill8495
      @sidneysill8495 10 месяцев назад

      Slipshod - careless, untidy or slovenly.
      Signage - signs as a collective.
      Hope that clears things up
      @@boepiesnoep7867

  • @yamilandres
    @yamilandres Месяц назад

    I live in Amsterdam now for 22 years, and it still happens to me that, while walking by the street, I have to stop, watch, and say "Gee! What an absolutely beautiful city this is!"
    And this collection video catches it very well. It is very touching to see pics of old Amsterdam, and very charming to notice how the city - despite evolving - has maintained its depth of essence and character throughout the centuries.
    Jarid & co, I cannot thank you enough for taking the time and effort to put this together, all the pics, the music (couldn't be better!)... man, what a huge task!
    Thank you, brother!
    Blessings 🙌

  • @dantevortex
    @dantevortex 10 месяцев назад +8

    I live in Amsterdam, for many decades now.
    A lot of the buildings in these photos are still there, all these locations can still be visited the same way as they were in the photos.
    Amsterdam was mostly spared in the first and second world war. So most architecture is still there today.

    • @lucasrem
      @lucasrem 9 месяцев назад

      dantevortex
      You are very lucky ! Where are you, Red Light is still here, and the palaces of the leaders....Rest is gone, sorry
      Here is all gone, the railway to Germany was the first, now everything is gone.
      Blooker, the Wind Mill, on the High Way now, was Oeterwalde, a small creek.
      Many many many Doner Kebab now, everything that was is gone, all mega Hotels, one day trippers, not the backpackers that interact, ticket agent people....
      It's all gone, only the Red Light district is still here !
      YOU NEED TO FIGHT OR IT'S ALL GONE NOW !

  • @ancientartrevived
    @ancientartrevived 10 месяцев назад +14

    Rotterdam was ‘completely destroyed’ and was in the past, huge, iirc. Would be great to see what it was like before the destruction
    And thanks for these productions Jared!

    • @eszteca-music
      @eszteca-music 10 месяцев назад +3

      Rotterdam was quite dirty as the living standards where lower, there are enough photos online that you can find from the same era but it was nowehere compared to the sophistication of Amsterdam "One of Worlds Biggest Business and Trade Cities"

    • @Man-in-the-green
      @Man-in-the-green 10 месяцев назад +1

      Well, Amsterdam alway’s was richer so much nicer.

    • @ACR_BOX
      @ACR_BOX 10 месяцев назад +1

      The video game Battlefield (V) rebuild a part of old Rotterdam Pre WW2, same style and feel as Amsterdam.
      Here some footage ruclips.net/video/H6KRSnMJDdg/видео.html

    • @maximhollandnederlandthene7640
      @maximhollandnederlandthene7640 6 месяцев назад +1

      Exactly,
      A special about what Rotterdam looked like that periode would be desireable 🤗

    • @maximhollandnederlandthene7640
      @maximhollandnederlandthene7640 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@eszteca-music
      Amsterdam also had Its upper and low parts that time. 😅🤗
      Slumbs were in all big cities, worldwide and still are. 😅

  • @miggyfixx6418
    @miggyfixx6418 11 месяцев назад +21

    Awesome collection dude! The Netherlands also has a massive inventory of original star forts...

    • @jonaswhale6451
      @jonaswhale6451 10 месяцев назад

      Nederland van bovena bekeken lijkt een starfort met allemaal steunpunten ( kleinere Sterfortjes ) . waanzinnig eigenlijk om te bedeknen dat dit wereldwijd geexploiteerd is . wat vernuft .

    • @ImperialGit
      @ImperialGit 4 месяца назад

      Yeah, the Netherlands were already one the most heaviliy fortified regions in Europe at the outbreak of the Eighty Years' War (1560's).

  • @XpRnz
    @XpRnz 10 месяцев назад +7

    Been living in Amsterdam for 13 years and still love it so much, it's still majestic though modern times obviously had it's way with it.. Would sell my soul to be able to walk around and experience it in those days!

  • @katherinebangle540
    @katherinebangle540 11 месяцев назад +20

    Your research and photographs are ALWAYS mind-blowing and appreciated! Thank you, love your work ❤ !

    • @ZooScott
      @ZooScott 11 месяцев назад +1

      Is Hugh Everette in photos .

  • @madhurig9999
    @madhurig9999 6 месяцев назад +1

    I am Dutch too, and grew up in the old inner city of The Hague, living in a building from the 16th century. The architecture is much like Amsterdam, people still live in these buildings. Many canals have been drained and paved over to make way for traffic by cars and trucks instead of by boat. But many are still there too. For most Americans/Canadians these city-scapes are astounding. Not so for the people that live there. .. Indeed we had high ceilings and high windows, in the living quarters for healthy air circulation and light, but less high in the upper stories where the servants originally used to live. Our front door was old, enormous and very heavy, yet still swung open with ease. These larger homes were merchants houses, the high and wide front doors were used for easy access of goods, the bottom floor used to be a warehouse, large rooms with very high ceilings for storage of the merchandise. The canals used to further transport of the goods from the seaports.

  • @kaptainkrampus2856
    @kaptainkrampus2856 11 месяцев назад +6

    Eerie, intriguing, breathtaking ... and I just love your soundtrack. Especially that second track! 💯❤

  • @elouise.
    @elouise. 11 месяцев назад +3

    Fantastic😀Thank you so much! I was born in Amsterdam, and to see all this old glory touches me very much🙏❤

  • @donneal1780
    @donneal1780 11 месяцев назад +3

    I'm going to watch this at least a few times. Thank you Jared.

  • @miapdx503
    @miapdx503 11 месяцев назад +21

    I'm so grateful for these photos. The old world was so lovely...I truly feel like I belong there. And I really believe in reincarnation. I'm sure that I was there...I can feel it. Thank you for finding and sharing these photos. 🌹
    Quick question, did Amsterdam have a catastrophic fire? 🤔 and I like your choice of music. 🎵🎶🥰

    • @Allium_369
      @Allium_369 11 месяцев назад

      Go watch the channel the why files. They have a great video on the soul catcher machines the aliens use to recycle us on earth. Our negative energy is a drug for the aliens that put us here on earth. It’s very interesting.

    • @FRESHboosters
      @FRESHboosters  11 месяцев назад +2

      You are so welcome

    • @koninginvictoria
      @koninginvictoria 11 месяцев назад +4

      Yes in the 1400's when the houses were made of wood. They switched to brick after that. Two wooden houses from the 1400's are still standing. People are still living in houses from the 1600's. Many buildings in the city center have been preserved. Everything was made to be beautiful back then. Come visit! It feels like going back in time.

  • @koninginvictoria
    @koninginvictoria 11 месяцев назад +3

    Fascinating to see all these pics together. Thanks! This is my home. Such a beautiful city still today.

  • @gerry7767
    @gerry7767 11 месяцев назад +7

    Like always such a good video Jarid ! But please make a other video of belgium please theres sooo much old buildings and old tech here.. I love your channel soooo much !! Keep up the good work you doing and much love !❤

  • @LatentLexicon
    @LatentLexicon 11 месяцев назад +7

    Excellent set of photographs and presentation - Appreciate the work that you do!

  • @RegnaSaturna
    @RegnaSaturna 11 месяцев назад +7

    Only an underdevelopped people that can not appreciate beauty destroys such architecture. So we were certainly not capable of constructing it. Impressive one Jarid.

    • @dudegrant6198
      @dudegrant6198 11 дней назад

      Practically all of this architecture survives until today! Thankfully

  • @sbcap3809
    @sbcap3809 11 месяцев назад +9

    Well, this is great. Love the photos. Like in other places, just two buildings would have sufficed for the number of people in the streets, but, when in a area where it appears lived in, you’ll notice the curtains from different floors reflect different attitudes of how the light or shade is desired. Only those photos show a sense of individual presence, but the high windows, and doorways, I just cannot get over a feeling that they are way too large for the folks in the picture. Kind of like a toddler by the living room window or doorway. Anyway, thanks, you all can figure out what you think, and good job by our host, in letting music play and allowing you to make your own determination. Well done!

  • @virginiamann9641
    @virginiamann9641 11 месяцев назад +2

    Absolutely wonderful, pics. Many, many, of these I've never seen.
    And that's saying something.
    You have a great channel. I appreciate all the work and content you bring forward.

  • @angelcoyote9802
    @angelcoyote9802 11 месяцев назад +7

    Wow. Amsterdam was SO much more spectacular then than when I visited there in 2000. Thank you for this video.

    • @Man-in-the-green
      @Man-in-the-green 10 месяцев назад +5

      You look nicer on the photo’s as well.

    • @jsb7975
      @jsb7975 10 месяцев назад

      True, in the socialist decade of the seventies they tored many beautiful 19th-century buildings down (were concidered to be neo- and not historical)

    • @jewhunterbiden
      @jewhunterbiden 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@Man-in-the-green lmao

  • @dunsk1987
    @dunsk1987 11 месяцев назад +2

    Wow! These photos are absolutely outstanding! Thank you for doing this! I really hope Jon levi finds this video or someone brings it to his attention.

  • @plungy
    @plungy 10 месяцев назад +1

    So many photo's of the neighborhood where I live, so humbling to see how many people lived in these houses before my time. Makes you wonder how far we live back in time right now for all the generations to come.

  • @SXMSXMSXM
    @SXMSXMSXM 11 месяцев назад +10

    Jarid, I am a fan of your channel. Much appriciation. I find it hypnotizing and annoying that the photographs move. Would you try a video where you share the whole still photographs? So we can see the whole picture. May be more people feel like this? Especially this one on Amsterdam for me from Holland.

  • @7BlackShadow
    @7BlackShadow 11 месяцев назад +3

    I really need to make a donation to you and your dedication for this passion.
    From all the other nonsense here on youtube, this truly has great character. Great stuff like always

  • @FrankHandana
    @FrankHandana 10 месяцев назад

    Thank you so much. I really love these old photos and the perspective it gives on life in this time of age

  • @studioduco4968
    @studioduco4968 11 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you so much for this one Jarid! Amsterdam is still a beautiful place, there is still a lot standing but also a lot destroyed. This is stunning. When I see this, I get the feeling that I was born a century too late. I'll share this on Li.

  • @nicom.peeters1576
    @nicom.peeters1576 10 месяцев назад +1

    Many thanks, Jarid, for sharing this splendid document. I lived near Amsterdam in my youth, fifties and sixties, which I visited regularly. So I recognize many in this video like the steamvessel of KNSM and other ships, steam locomotives and harbour scenes, St. Nicholas Church, Central Station, etc. It stirs in me melancholy, not the least because of what we have lost. People back then seemed to have built with passion, so beautifully balanced architecture and city infrastructure and so on with 'primitive' means compared to modern technology.

  • @andreamarshal3805
    @andreamarshal3805 11 месяцев назад

    I loved listening to the beautiful music while glancing at the magical, mysterious past with the incredible buildings.
    I sometimes break out with tears, at times my emotions are triggered watching your vids..
    Thanks for your vids & effort you put into them..

  • @natasjadirken5633
    @natasjadirken5633 10 месяцев назад +15

    Wow! My compliments for this! My birthtown ❤
    Ever since I was little , say 7 or 8 years old, and we would go for a stroll on sunday I would look in awe to all the old houses. I turned out be a history geek and I still look in awe when I'm home.
    Amsterdam had 225.000 residents in 1850 and in 50 years time it doubled to 522.000 in 1900. Living was hell in Amsterdam in those days. The houses were made of wood, mice and fungi everywhere, sicknesses as tuberculose, cholera and tyfus were common.
    Why? Because there were no sewers in those days yet! Everything got in the canals and that's why there were so much diseases.
    In 1871 so called vacuum carriages were going through the streets to pick up feces that people collected in buckets, the feces were made into fertilizer.
    Unemployed people were picked to start sweeping the streets and the first waterpipes underground were built so people could buy a bucket of clean water for 1 cent.
    Streets were so narrowly built that the sunshine couldn't even touch the ground. There is an old Amsterdam expression: "you can stick it where the sun doesn't shine" It originates out of these small streets.
    Nowadays there are 3 houses known older than what you see in these pictures : the wooden house in the Begijnhof from around 1528, Int Aepjen aan de Zeedijk 1 from around 1548, but the oldest is the house at Warmoesstraat 90 was built in 1485!

    • @martinuso7446
      @martinuso7446 10 месяцев назад +1

      Krij nau de kolere, wis ik niet. (cholera-kolere)

    • @lucasrem
      @lucasrem 9 месяцев назад

      natasjadirken5633
      How to get it back, now outsiders take over our City, it's not the Free West anymore.
      We as locals that did stay for ages, lost their rights ? Why give it away ?
      Why the evil leaders, we have to change it how it was, the west is good ! preserve it
      The West is Good, Clean the evil that took it over !

    • @leculduchien1386
      @leculduchien1386 18 дней назад

      Pretty sure that expression has nothing to de with narrow streets.

    • @natasjadirken5633
      @natasjadirken5633 18 дней назад

      @@martinuso7446 🤣🤣

  • @wilvanveen3290
    @wilvanveen3290 10 месяцев назад +1

    Wow. This is really great. I live in Amsterdam for 45 years and though much changed, there is so much that is still there. Wonderful to see. Thanks for this!

    • @FRESHboosters
      @FRESHboosters  10 месяцев назад +3

      Glad you enjoyed it, my friend, thank you for watching. I dream of one day visiting and seeing the remaining masterpieces in person.

  • @koubenakombi3066
    @koubenakombi3066 11 месяцев назад +3

    Awesome! Thank you!

  • @thijsmallekote1977
    @thijsmallekote1977 8 месяцев назад

    Glad to see some old world leftovers from that time. Have not yet watched the whole but Im already thankfull

  • @margaretgregory5677
    @margaretgregory5677 11 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you so much for all your hard work.

  • @christopherleva6232
    @christopherleva6232 11 месяцев назад +5

    thanks so much for sharing your amazing work. the fade outs of some of the pics at their apex is sometimes frustrating. Still much appreciated.

  • @alfredvonk7686
    @alfredvonk7686 10 месяцев назад +1

    A True treasure you made, thanks you for putting effort into this. Raised and lived in Amsterdam i recognitie so many buildings. What elegant beauty!
    Strange to imagion that at the time of taking those pictures, these buildings were almost brandnew 😊
    Best regards from the Netherlands

  • @deanekendall545
    @deanekendall545 11 месяцев назад

    Thanks Jarid, im your 888th like, which i find intrigueing. I appreciate your work Jared and have been following you for several years now. Charles Was, is another of my go to for information. BIG UPS JARED

  • @ACR_BOX
    @ACR_BOX 10 месяцев назад +4

    6:16 theater ??
    6:47 Concert gebouw location - Museumplein
    7:36 Westertoren seen from Prinsengracht
    7:52 Westergasfabriek on the horizon
    7:59 entree Vondelpark 23:51
    8:18 ?? Oude stadhuis? Of RijksMuseum?
    9:03 Central station Northwest view
    32:47 Central station southwest view
    9:51 Muiderpoort
    9:55 Magere brug
    10:04 Paleis voor Volksvlijt - Burned
    11:06 Munttoren seen from the river Amstel
    12:18 Rembrandtplein - Het Gouden Hoofd
    12:53 Stadhouderskade - looking east towards Rijksmuseum
    13:50 Stadsschouwburg Leidseplein
    15:18 Rijksmuseum
    17:51 Paleis voor Volksvlijt - Burned
    18:44 Basiliek van de Heilige Nicolaas
    21:08 Mozes en Aäronkerk
    22:09 Damrak View to the The Palais - Koninklijk Paleis
    25:17 Kerkstraat 258
    28:52 Concert Gebouw
    30:03 Magere Brug?
    31:13 Central station Front view (South to North)
    31:31 Someone remember the name? Building is demolished long ago if i remember right (Old expose center?)
    32:24 De Gooyer: stellingmolen, Amsterdamse Funenkade (bij de Zeeburgerstraat / hoek Sarphatistraat)
    33:16 Basilica of Saint Nicholas Prins Hendrikkade 73, 1012 AD Amsterdam
    33:33 Rijksmuseum Ruysdaelkade/Stadhouderskade
    I forgot so many (street/building) names..
    As a young kid I lived in the Kerkstraat/churchstreet 359 in the early 80's
    TIP: Best steak (Tournedos/file minion) in town @ Castell, Lijnbaansgracht 254, 252, 1017 RK Amsterdam
    If there is interest in more i will continue it next time.
    Thanks for sharing👍✌

  • @ansfriedzwaagstra6934
    @ansfriedzwaagstra6934 11 месяцев назад

    ... and your voice is a delight to listen to. Thank you.

  • @derekgantt6282
    @derekgantt6282 10 месяцев назад

    It is friday..this is another enlightenment..love as I ponder over all these extraordinary photos...this is really a historical search light...just navigate..such a part of my creative research...journey on ...peace and work ..labor...landscapes of future glory...my friend.

  • @lef4161
    @lef4161 11 месяцев назад +7

    Thank you,amazing research! I've seen buildings and architecture like this all around Europe,even in the smallest of places. The people look placed in there,not homogenous somehow.

  • @scottsmith6643
    @scottsmith6643 11 месяцев назад +4

    You do good research, Dude!

  • @timsrednavnaj
    @timsrednavnaj 3 месяца назад +1

    Great collection!

  • @paulberendsen8152
    @paulberendsen8152 10 месяцев назад +2

    Wow .... Thank you, Jarid Boosters, for this. Amsterdam is the city i was born in and where i live now. I am interested in history and photography, so i have seen many photos of the old Amsterdam, from before i was born. But you really add something ... I do see very recognizable buildings and street-views. I do see "recognizable" views of torn-down buildings and dried up canals. About former buildings: I teamed up with people wanting to restore the "Paleis van Volksvlijt", the then people's culture centre. I see so many things ... i am happy that most people in this city donot wear black c;othes. So much to say, however i can't add at this moment.
    So, thank you, Jarid ! I will try to look at your other contributions here when i find the time.

  • @tpgul8848
    @tpgul8848 11 месяцев назад +4

    Love to see these pics i know most places you show

  • @damjanerjavec8867
    @damjanerjavec8867 11 месяцев назад +6

    When cabbage came, tulips are never far away

  • @timothymartin664
    @timothymartin664 7 месяцев назад

    i absolutely love your work all of it

  • @evelynkorjack2126
    @evelynkorjack2126 11 месяцев назад +8

    for some reason i am able to see the stereoscopics in 3d when i slow it down and do the "magic eye" gaze. anyone else?

  • @PP-xd9rv
    @PP-xd9rv 11 месяцев назад +2

    This is nothing short of brilliant; all credit to Jarid. Wow!

  • @Amberseven
    @Amberseven Месяц назад +1

    Just incredible. Wow👍❤️

  • @WickedMuis
    @WickedMuis 10 месяцев назад +2

    Fascinating stuff! Always fun to see historical photos, seeing how people lived at that time and compare it to what it has become now. Some of the stuff I could recognise (or not, as I think there are photos from Rotterdam in there as that city looked a lot like Amsterdam) and cared to mention and some stuff that looked familiar, but could not quite place it and had to do some 'detective work':
    0:30 Rijksmuseum at the back, looking from the bridge towards the Spiegelgracht
    0:57 Says at the bottom of the card: Prins Hendrikkade (near central station), St. Nicolaaskerk
    1:04 "Het Koninklijk Paleis" (The Royal Palace, on the Dam square), former town hall, dubbed palace since Louis Bonapart (Napoleon's brother) was put there to govern the country. The statue in front was a national monument dedicated to the march of king William I against the Belgian uprising in 1831 and was called "Eendracht" (Unity), which soon became nicknamed "Naatje op de Dam" or "Naatje". Built in 1855-56 and removed in 1914 when the square was restructured/tram tracks were moved.
    1:15 Ringvaart is a canal southeast of Amsterdam
    1:46 Military building says "Marine" (navy). It's now a museum of maritime history (Scheepvaartmuseum).
    1:59 Reguliersgracht nr 136, corner with Lijnbaansgracht. The factory chimney in the background, I believe is of the bread factory at the Vijzelgracht, which has been demolished long time ago.
    2:00 Former headquarters of the postoffice at Nieuwezijds Voorburgwal. It's a largely vacant (a few shops) shopping mall called Magna Plaza, but a monument.
    2:16 this doesn't look like Amsterdam??
    2:27 Nieuwe Kerk (New Church) at Dam square. In the background is the tower of the Palace.
    2:36 Westerkerk (Western Church)
    2:53 Dam square
    3:21 Drawing of the Raadhuisstraat
    3:39 Could be Weesperstraat, which was demolished in its entirity after WW2, a shopping street similar to Utrechtsestraat and Leidsestraat
    3:49 View on the Munttoren at Muntplein, just not quite sure from what angle, but think Reguliersbreestraat.
    4:09 Rijksmuseum viewd from the Paulus Potterstraat. They added more to the "Druckeruitbouw / Druckervleugel" (Drucker wing) in 1906 to house an art collection which now blocks the view on the Rijksmuseum.
    4:38 Construction of the postoffice HQ from 2:00
    6:45 Concertgebouw at Museumplein. Looks like a firefighter demonstration being held there.
    7:35 Westerkerk seen from Prinsengracht, south of the Rozengracht bridge, taken from the Reestraat bridge
    7:53 Watergraafsmeer (seen on the building) is an area then southeast of Amsterdam, now part of Amsterdam. The boys are posing on the Ringdijk, at the Ringvaart, and the road crossing in the background is now a bridge between Middenweg and Linnaeusstraat. Building on the right is Ringdijk 1A and still standing.
    8:00 Entrance of Vondelpark at Stadhouderskade.
    8:17 Rijksmuseum in the back, view on Museumplein. The road leading from the camera is Paulus Potterstraat, and the building on the right is the Stedelijkmuseum, art museum, now for modern art, opened in 1895. Here clearly the area is not yet fully finished.
    9:03 East side of the central station.
    9:34 Doesn't look like Amsterdam...
    9:52 Don't think this is Amsterdam either..?
    9:56 Magere Brug (Meager Bridge) over the river Amstel was named like that because an costly bridge was postponed and later a cheaper one was built. That's actually a photo by Jacob Olie in 1894.
    10:09 Paleis voor Volksvlijt (Palace of Popular Diligence) viewed from next to Sarphatistraat and its bridge over the river Amstel. Destroyed. Area is now a quare with Dutch Bank built in the facinity.
    10:38 Damrak, a lot of these buildings are no longer standing. Viewed from what's now Beursplein. But the building with the man on a ladder, suspended out of the window, is still there; nr 83.
    11:04 View on Muntplein and the Munttoren from Amstel river
    11:34 Don't think this is Amsterdam..?
    12:15 Buildings at what's now called Rembrandtplein. Building with Het Gouden Hoofd (The Golden Head) still exists to this day. Rembrandtplein 27. Rest on the photo is all gone. Viewed from Utrechtsestraat
    12:34 Tower of Zuiderkerk on the right
    12:52 View towards west on Rijksmuseum (towering building in the back in the middle) from Stadhouderskade
    13:47 Stadsschouwburg at Leidseplein
    14:07 + 14:13 Tram depot for horse trams at Konninginneweg 29. Anno 1893. Been a police station for a while. Now it's used commercially. Remarkable to see how little urban development there still is at the time of the photo.
    15:14 Rijksmuseum
    16:12 Paleis voor Volksvlijt viewed from Weteringschans. Buildings on the left still exist. The one on the corner is nr 255-257. Top ornaments got damaged, I guess and not rebuilt.
    16:26 Looks like Vondelpark
    16:41 View over 't IJ, harbour and open water north of central station (on the left).
    17:51 Paleis voor Volksvlijt
    18:04 Munttoren, viewed from Reguliersbreestraat
    18:20 Paleis voor Volksvlijt
    18:38 Schreierstoren (Cryers' Tower; named because family said goodbye to the sailors going for the East-Indies there). Church in the background is St. Nicolaaskerk.
    19:08 West side of the Rijksmuseum. The gate saying "OVER AMSTEL" has been removed. But the door saying "Bibliotheek" (Library) is still there, and the Rijksmuseum Research Library is still housed behind it.
    19:38 Bergpoort (mountain gate) was a gate in the defenses of the Bergkerk in Deventer. When it was found obstructing 'modern' traffic it was moved to the garden of the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam in 1885, merged together with a defense gate Herepoort (Lord's Gate) from Groningen. You see the Deventer side on this photo.
    21:04 Mozes en Aäronkerk - Moses and Aaron Church (officially Church of St. Anthony of Padua). From that photo only the church still exists.
    22:12 Dam square
    22:52 View through the Reguliersbreestraat to the Munttoren from Rembrandtplein.
    22:59 Paleis voor Volksvlijt
    23:21 Rozengracht, already filled-in and no longer functioning as a canal, looking towards the Westerkerk
    23:39 Munttoren viewed from the Amstel
    23:49 Vondelpark entrance at Stadhouderskade
    24:24 Don't think this is Amsterdam..
    24:57 Royal Palace with Nieuwe Kerk in the background
    25:10 Don't think this is Amsterdam..?
    25:52 Montelbaanstoren
    27:44 The gate in the garden of the Rijksmuseum, Herepoort from Groningen side.
    27:52 Same gate, Deventer side
    28:02 Schreierstoren on the right
    28:47 Concertgebouw at Museumplein, newly built
    30:14 Haarlemmerpoort; old city gate towards Haarlem
    30:40 View over Amstel river, the sluices towards the Magere Brug, with the towers of Zuiderkerk and Oude Kerk in the background
    30:46 Montelbaanstoren at the Oudeschans
    31:08 Central station
    31:21 View on the Mozes en Aäronkerk over what's now called Waterlooplein. Buildings on the left side are gone to make way for an opera and town hall (Stadhuis) building, nicknamed "Stopera"
    31:30 Paleis van Volksvlijt
    32:54 Central station
    33:13 St. Nicolaaskerk
    33:32 Rijksmuseum
    22:41 Montelbaanstoren
    35:27 Haarlemmerpoort
    36:00 De Waag at Nieuwmarkt; First city gate, after city expansion a building for trade at the square that developed there. Now a restaurant.
    36:38 Looks like the sawmill De Otter, ath the Gillis van Ledenberchstraat 78.
    36:51 Munttoren on the left
    37:29 Magere Brug over the Amstel river
    37:32 Don't think this is Amsterdam..?
    37:48 View on Zuiderkerktoren from the Amstel looking into Groenburgwal. The little wooden bridge is the Staalmeestersbrug
    38:04 Carré theatre viewed from the Achtergracht
    38:13 Leidseplein with on the left the old neoclassical Stadsschouwburg. Viewing into the Leidsestraat
    38:34 Damrak, with int he distance the central station
    40:00 Don't think this is Amsterdam..?
    40:10 Magere Brug with decorations
    40:57 Since it has the Rijksmuseum in the background, these buildings have been demolished. Think this is viewed from the north at the Weteringschans
    41:15 Don't think this is Amsterdam..?

    • @WickedMuis
      @WickedMuis 10 месяцев назад +1

      41:45 Since it has the Rijksmuseum in the background as well, these buildings all have been demolished. The one up front looks like a trade building, seen in other Dutch cities.
      42:25 Dam square with central station in the far background
      42:32 Jonas Daniel Meierplein with Mozes en Aäronkerk in the background on the right
      43:15 "Vreest God eert den Koning" - 'Fear God honour the King'; "Hulde aan den Koning" 'Praise the King' 1817 - 1887; These and many of the other photos with decorations and people gathered around with the "W" on the decorations are to celebrate the country has been an official kingdom since 1817. In 1887 it was king William III who was king of the Netherlands.
      43:21 "Heil den 70" - "Jarigen Oranjevorst", "Hail the 70" - "Birthday celebrating Orange sovereign"; "Leve de Koningin" - "Princes Wilhelmina", "(Long) Live the Queen" - "Princess Wilhelmina"; Wilhelmina was the oldest daughter of three and so to become the successor of king William III, great grandmother of the current king.
      43:50 Dam square
      44:00 drawings of decorations for the celebration of king William III. It was celebrated nationwide so some of these decorations are in other cities as well.
      44:23 Decorations mentions Amstelveld, Prinsengracht
      44:40 Damrak with Central station in the background
      45:00 Memorial on the Dam square. Royal Palace in the background
      46:30 "TER EERE VAN ONZEN KONING" - 'In honour of our king'
      50:00 Don't think this is Amsterdam..?
      50:46 Old neoclassical theatre Stadsschouwburg after the renovation of 1874 of the original built in 1774. When a fire destroyed the majority of its contents on the inside in 1890, a new one was built in 1894.
      51:30 Rijksmuseum seen from Stadhouderskade with almost no urban development behind it yet, just pastures.
      51:57 Munttoren, I think seen from Rokin/Doelensluis
      52:34 De Waag, Nieuwmarkt
      52:50 Barleus Gymnasium at the Wteringschans, built in 1885
      52:57 De Waag, Nieuwmarkt
      53:03 Looks like they are digging out the canal (still a bridge visible in the background) and its walls next to the Royal Palace and Nieuwe Kerk (on the right) to fill it up and turn it into a road
      53:16 Looks like a view through the Jodenbreestraat before it was completely demolished after WW2. Tower of the Zuiderkerk in the background
      53:25 Blauwbrug (Blue bridge) with the Mozes en Aäronkerk in the background
      53:34 Newly built Central station. The facilities for the trams and busses up front are still need to be built, as well as the roof over the tracks still needs to be constructed
      55:12 Entrance Vondelpark Stadhouderskade
      55:52 Garden at the Rijksmuseum
      56:50 Left side the former headquarters of the Dutch Bank (De Nederlandse Bank) at Oude Turfmarkt 127, built between 1865 and 1869. It stayed the HQ until 1968, when they moved to a new building on Frederiksplein. In 1976 it was turned into a museum for antiquities connected to the University of Amsterdam, in honour of professor Allard Pierson.
      57:18 Westerkerk seen from Prinsengracht, south of the Rozengracht bridge, taken from the Reestraat bridge
      57:29 View through the Leidsegracht to the Krijtberg church in the background, probably during its construction between 1881 and 1883.
      59:00 View over the Kloveniersburgwal towards Nieuwmarkt with De Waag behind the decorations
      59:21 Decorations at the Nieuwe Kerk at Dam square
      59:35 Think this is the inside of the Paleis voor Volksvlijt
      1:02:35 Building in the center is the Nieuwe Waalse Kerk at Keizersgracht 676, which was built between 1854 and 1856 after the Huguenots community bought the house to demolish it and build their church there, as the old one was deemed too small. Since 1989 it lost its function as a church and became a center for art. From 2012 'till present it's used as office space. The two twin buildings on the right of it (Keizersgracht 674 + 672), built in 1671-1672, have quite the history of ownership. Eventually they were bought by the family Van Loon in 1884. One of them functions now as a museum of the family.
      1:03:32 Haarlemmerpoort
      1:04:38 Stadsschouwburg at Leidseplein until 1890
      1:0858 De Waag at Nieuwmarkt
      1:09:42 Statue of Joost van den Vondel, poet and playwright, in the Vondelpark
      1:12:25 Paleis voor Volksvlijt seen from Amstel
      1:13:50 Clear view on Paleis voor Volksvlijt
      1:14:20 Inside of Paleis voor Volksvlijt without exhibitions
      1:15:07 Westerkerk
      1:15:19 Mozes en Aäronkerk
      1:16:06 View from the roof of the Royal Palace towards the Westerkerk before the start of the construction of the Raadhuisstraat through the neighbourhood in 1895 took place. The Warmoesgracht can still be seen there on the left.
      1:16:23 The tower of the Oude Kerk seen from Damrak
      1:16:33 Prinsengracht, viewing towards the Westerkerk from the Prinsenstraat bridge
      1:17:36 Statue of Rembrandt van Reijn on Rembrandtplein
      1:17:50 View on Zuiderkerk from Staalmeesterbrug
      1:18:07 View from the roof of the Royal Palace towards the Nieuwe Kerk
      1:41:00 Leidsepoort at Leidseplein before its demolition in 1864. On the right is the old Stadschouwburg of 1774 before the renovation. The gate was built in 1664.
      1:42:38 Hotel Rondeel on the right has been demolished. It's now Hotel L'Europe. View over Rokin towards the Westerkerk in the background on the left
      1:42:58 Part of same Rokin photo

  • @jonaswhale6451
    @jonaswhale6451 10 месяцев назад

    Venice of the North , born and raised in Amsterdam , you make my day ,,

  • @mennoverheij9489
    @mennoverheij9489 10 месяцев назад +3

    Jarid thanks for all the work! The Concert Gebouw (English: building) at 28:50 is according WikiPedia build in 1884. However, looking at the foto it looks all but not new. Don’t know when exactly this photo was made ofcourse. Furthermore, it looks that around 1850 almost all was already there and around 1900 a lot of buildings look not maintained/abandoned… Hardly any contruction going on these days. I got many questions what was going on these days…

  • @guidokruijver2925
    @guidokruijver2925 10 месяцев назад +1

    I live in Amsterdam and it’s great to step into a time capsule and take a look at the old world !🫵🏼❤️🙏

  • @user-qc6kq9vh3p
    @user-qc6kq9vh3p 11 месяцев назад +2

    great collection of images..thanks for sharing..would have been perfect if you had chosen to show whole images in slideshow, rather than scrolling up and down, as often the interesting antiquitech at the very top of some images and the mudflood basement windows werent shown as the image had morphed to the next one.great work though and thanks again :D

  • @kolla5800
    @kolla5800 6 месяцев назад

    Thank you 😊

  • @purewaterwindow1240
    @purewaterwindow1240 11 месяцев назад +2

    I just wanted to say, as one of the 144k annointed, you were one of the people that taught me some of my pre-ceding knowledge. You are blessed ❤

    • @shazoz77
      @shazoz77 11 месяцев назад

      12K from each tribe of the zodiac

  • @the69dragon
    @the69dragon 11 месяцев назад +4

    WOW!

  • @jmc8076
    @jmc8076 8 месяцев назад +1

    Amazing architecture. No doubt so is the build quality. Whoever the orig builders and designers they were incredibly talented.

  • @rfiskillingussoftly6568
    @rfiskillingussoftly6568 11 месяцев назад +1

    I'm just getting started, I know I'm going to like it!

  • @inekeschilderlessen
    @inekeschilderlessen 10 месяцев назад

    prachtig,dank je wel,ineke

  • @akkitty22
    @akkitty22 11 месяцев назад +5

    at 1850s Amsterdam was already built and based on @8:19 seems they were just cleaning up the streets from the mud. Desolate civilization being renovated and claimed. The sculptor appears to be posing and the sculpture appears complete! @8:33 inexplicable doors that open without stairs tell me this was used for vehicles arriving (loading and unloading bay) to the rather large building or new additions. @10:24 the aged brick could probably be side by side compared to 100+ year old brick. If it is the same as the brick lower on this building, then you could add an additional 50+ years to the building, if anyone is good at brick comparisons. You'll note they fixed the other side of the building's worn 50+ year old bricks. @21:39 You see bricked in windows. What's more, you also can follow the line of buildings and visibly see that these were war/cataclysm stricken buildings that were barely put back together. Picture the windows smashed out and you'll see what I mean. The leaning and "to and fro" is palpable and these buildings were repaired from a highly devastated state.

    • @TruDeinoz
      @TruDeinoz 9 месяцев назад

      Are you one of those schizo mudflood people?

  • @TheKultMan
    @TheKultMan 11 месяцев назад +5

    Sometimes i wonder, how many stories of villages dying were from having accidentally discovered radioactive ore before they understood it...
    And if any of the "old world" may have had nukes or something equivalent leading to the dark ages and later to the rediscovering of electricity as a tool

    • @Dorianek8
      @Dorianek8 10 месяцев назад +1

      Lunatic or what

    • @ronald3836
      @ronald3836 10 месяцев назад

      @@Dorianek8 Very much so, lol.

  • @how2pick4name
    @how2pick4name 10 месяцев назад +3

    Hahahaha Cool that you found our archive. It's amazing isn't it? =)
    Edit: Here's a little tidbit. Check the pictures with bridges, there's always someone helping someone pull a cart up the bridge.
    Those were called "bruggetrekkers" or bridge pullers. the most famous one in Amsterdam was Kikkie.

  • @dinorahisaak3216
    @dinorahisaak3216 11 месяцев назад +1

    I really love and appreciate your work and artistic point of view... Your edition are delicious and unique. Thenk to you I was opportunity to see part of my origins. ❤

  • @additional__details
    @additional__details 10 месяцев назад

    All these beautiful pictures of the Paleis voor Volksvlijt really make my heart sink.

  • @LeDrew8
    @LeDrew8 11 месяцев назад

    Quality. God bless 🙏

  • @akkitty22
    @akkitty22 11 месяцев назад +3

    @2:03 appears to have two entrances, maybe two wings? My best guess would be gendered entrances, or at least separate wings for different work types in one wing vs other wing. The tower suggests a college to me because they would ring bell, use a speaker to make announcements or even play sounds/music. The frontal spires appear to be the power spires.

    • @anichtyofagist
      @anichtyofagist 10 месяцев назад +1

      It is a photograph of the Amsterdam Main Post Office, now the Magna Plaza shopping centre, located at Nieuwezijds Voorburgwal 182.

  • @scottbaker-ScottyB
    @scottbaker-ScottyB 11 месяцев назад +4

    Time stamp 18: 46 seems to capture Photon Ethereal Magnetic Energy for transfer battery storage into AC current electricity ?

    • @VenturaIT
      @VenturaIT 11 месяцев назад +1

      Look up bricks for batteries... probably the structures either stored the energy or vibrated to create the energy or both.

  • @fransheuvelmans45
    @fransheuvelmans45 10 месяцев назад

    Breathtaking.

  • @johnwilson6790
    @johnwilson6790 7 месяцев назад

    amazing

  • @dond3r183
    @dond3r183 10 месяцев назад

    Very Nice video about Amsterdam. Would be nice if someone could do a “The and Now” video 😀

  • @willy2005
    @willy2005 10 месяцев назад

    At 9m30s is that a cannon on that railroad wagon on the point to be lifted unto a ship? The wagon being from Köln and on the side there's text ,to me it looks like " Geb.Krupp".Building a warship for Dutch King or Queen,or for the German Kaiser,or maybe just loading for overseas transport.
    Great work Jared,and a pleasure to watch and dive into the past.!(and make your own story about one of the pictures.
    How come they are all so pristine?

  • @woutervanderweerd7797
    @woutervanderweerd7797 10 месяцев назад

    Respect for the documentary. What i like the most is that there are no cars

  • @Robbeltje
    @Robbeltje 10 месяцев назад

    Jon Levi will love this 🙂

  • @tompommerel2136
    @tompommerel2136 10 месяцев назад +1

    FABULOUS COLLECTION!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @nossapieterse3687
    @nossapieterse3687 10 месяцев назад

    Love the stereo/3D photo's at 5:59

  • @MikePlantus
    @MikePlantus 11 месяцев назад

    Beautifully amazingly speechless

  • @scottbaker-ScottyB
    @scottbaker-ScottyB 11 месяцев назад +3

    Time stamp 26:05 street light appear to be using Metal Halide gas discharge lamps.

  • @Iedereen1Ontdekking
    @Iedereen1Ontdekking 11 месяцев назад

    Fascinating.. thanks!!!
    I have done a few things on Amsterdam on my FB. RC Freedom.
    For instance the building of the Rijksmuseum.. although they say it finished being built after the worlds fair. The shadow is clearly visible on the map of the fair... also the narrative of the Concertgebouw or the Leidseplein or building of Centraal station. I have found a few strange things when observing the photos.. it does not add up.

  • @TheKultMan
    @TheKultMan 11 месяцев назад +4

    I do believe there are old world buildings, and then there are cheap imitations that came much later to hide the real ones.

  • @ralphm8088
    @ralphm8088 10 месяцев назад +1

    It’s my city, I’m just baffled by the amount of buildings that I pass by daily that are still there🤓

    • @ronald3836
      @ronald3836 10 месяцев назад

      All the old buildings of today were already there! 🙂

  • @carolina97848
    @carolina97848 Месяц назад +1

    Wow thanks for sharing these beautiful photo? Like in the whole world !! Maybe from Tartaria ?? The Old World ( 1000 year Reign of Christ ? ) ❤❤

  • @Comakino
    @Comakino 11 месяцев назад +3

    10:10 Absolute beauty. And of course it burned.

  • @SOREBobb-tl9fc
    @SOREBobb-tl9fc 11 месяцев назад +3

    Wow

  • @gisttyler
    @gisttyler 11 месяцев назад +2

    They inherited, like everyone else. Didn’t know how to maintain it.

  • @WilnaBron
    @WilnaBron 9 месяцев назад +1

    Mooie verzameling bijeen gehaald van de Beeldbank Amsterdam.
    Een aantal foto's zijn van latere datum.
    De eerste elektrische tram in Amsterdam reed pas in augustus 1900.

  • @universe7912
    @universe7912 9 месяцев назад

    prachtig apart extraordinary buildings🙂

  • @rientsdijkstra4266
    @rientsdijkstra4266 10 месяцев назад +2

    Small correction. The are nice pictures, and many of the buildings in the pictures are indeed from the Golden Age of Amsterdam (the 17th century), but they where taken in the 19th century, which is normally not regarded as "the golden age" of Amsterdam

  • @Kogacarlo
    @Kogacarlo 10 месяцев назад

    The telephone line poles are amazing.

  • @lallyoisin
    @lallyoisin 11 месяцев назад +1

    It's just an observation but the architecture here does not look like it was buried.
    The one place people had excellent control of water/floods.
    Beautiful architecture.

  • @mmkuyt
    @mmkuyt 9 месяцев назад

    the 'Paleis voor Volksvlijt' (palace for the people's industriousness) was an exibition and leisure centre built of cast iron and glass. constructed between 1859 and 1864, it was destroyed by fire in 1929. Its dome reached a height of 65 meters.