LGBT history in the Netherlands - définition. Qu'est-ce que LGBT history in the Netherlands
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Qu'est-ce (qui) est LGBT history in the Netherlands - définition


LGBT history in the Netherlands         
  • ''[[Lot (biblical person)]] and [[Lot's daughters]]'', [[Joachim Wtewael]]
  • A [[wanted poster]], published in [[Amsterdam]] on September 1, 1730
  • Café 't Mandje at Zeedijk in Amsterdam
  • LGBT people demonstrating against art. 248bis in The Hague, 1969
  • hermaphroditism]], depicted here in an engraving circa 1690, were very similar concepts during the Renaissance.
  • The Homomonument in Amsterdam, consisting of three [[pink triangle]]s
  • sodomites]]" in the [[Netherlands]].
The history of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people in the Netherlands has reflected the shades of tolerance or rigidity which were utilized by the rulers of the country at various periods in its history. Since World War II, the movement for LGBT rights has been galvanized by both events abroad and increasing liberalization domestically.
History of the Netherlands         
  • De Tafelbaai]] by Aernout Smit, 1683
  • The [[Afsluitdijk]], the dike closing off the [[Zuiderzee]], was constructed between 1927 and 1933. Public works projects like this were one way to deal with high unemployment during the [[Great Depression]].
  • ''[[Dam Square]]'' in the late 17th century: painting by [[Gerrit Adriaenszoon Berckheyde]] (Gemäldegalerie, Dresden)
  • [[The Anatomy Lesson of Dr. Nicolaes Tulp]], by [[Rembrandt van Rijn]], 1632 CE
  • Dutch Batavia built in what is now [[Jakarta]], by [[Andries Beeckman]] c. 1656 CE
  • Golden Age of Dutch science and technology]].
  • Protest in The Hague against the [[nuclear arms race]] between the U.S./NATO and the Warsaw Pact, 1983
  • ''Shepherdess With a Flock of Sheep'' by [[Anton Mauve]] (1838–1888), of the [[Hague School]]
  • Indos]]" (Dutch-Indonesian Eurasians) on the Lloydkade in Rotterdam, 20 May 1958
  • Dutch Prime Minister [[Jan Peter Balkenende]] and U.S. President [[George W. Bush]] in the [[Oval Office]] on 5 June 2008
  • Elp]] and [[Hilversum culture]]s in the Bronze Age
  • Charles Bell]]
  • The Inspectors of the Collegium Medicum in Amsterdam, by [[Cornelis Troost]], 1724. This period is known as the "Periwig Era".
  • Dutch civilians celebrating the arrival of [[I Canadian Corps]] troops in [[Utrecht]] after the German surrender, 7 May 1945
  • [[Eustachius De Lannoy]] of the [[Dutch East India Company]] surrenders to Maharaja [[Marthanda Varma]] of the Indian [[Kingdom of Travancore]] after the [[Battle of Colachel]]. (Depiction at [[Padmanabhapuram Palace]])
  • [[Dutch East India Company]] factory in [[Hugli-Chuchura]], [[Mughal Bengal]]. ''Hendrik van Schuylenburgh, 1665''
  • Prince Johan Maurits]] and built 1636–1641, was designed by [[Jacob van Campen]] and [[Pieter Post]].
  • [[Dorestad]] and main trade routes
  • Map of the [[Dutch East Indies]] showing its expansion from 1800 to 1942
  • Administrative divisions of the [[First French Empire]] in 1812, illustrating the incorporation of the Netherlands and its internal reorganisation
  • Expansion of the [[Franks]] from 481 to 870
  • Map showing roughly the distribution of Franks and Frisians c. 716
  • Distribution of the primary Germanic groups c. 1 AD
  • New Amsterdam in 1664 CE
  • [[Johan de Witt]] (born 1625, died 1672), [[Grand Pensionary]] of Holland, painted between 1643 and 1700 after [[Jan de Baen]]
  • [[Desiderius Erasmus]], 1466–1536, [[Rotterdam]] Renaissance humanist, Catholic priest and theologian, by [[Hans Holbein the Younger]], 1523
  • ''Skating fun'', a traditional rural scene by 17th-century Dutch painter [[Hendrick Avercamp]]
  • [[Electrified fence]] along the border between the Netherlands and [[Belgium]] during the [[First World War]]
  • [[Jacqueline, Countess of Hainaut]], 1401–1436, known to the Dutch as "Jacoba of Bavaria"
  • Patriots]] are on the right; the troops of [[stadholder]] [[William V, Prince of Orange]] on the left. (Painted by Jonas Zeuner, 1787)
  • Willem III, Prince of Orange, born 1650, died 1702, reigned as [[William III of England]] from 1689 to 1702 after the [[Glorious Revolution]].
  • William I]] at Scheveningen on 30 November 1813'' by Johan Willem Heyting (1915–1995)
  • abbr=on}}.
  • St Elizabeth Flood]] of 18–19 November 1421, with Dordrecht at the front left
  • [[Johannes Vermeer]]'s ''[[Girl with a Pearl Earring]]''
  • Calvinist]])}}
  • A town in [[Zuid Beveland]] inundated in 1953
  • Tribes during the [[Roman Empire]]
  • nl}} looking towards Muntplein)
  • [[Peter Stuyvesant]], Director-General of [[New Netherland]] (New York). His provincial capital, [[New Amsterdam]], was located at the southern tip of the island of [[Manhattan]].
  • The Low Countries in the late 14th century CE
  • Population growth 1900–2000
  • Adrian VI]] (1522–1523).
  • Dutch Prime Minister [[Mark Rutte]] and U.S. President [[Donald Trump]] in the [[Oval Office]] on 18 July 2019
  • Queen Wilhelmina]], queen of the Netherlands from 1890 to 1948
  • An early 16th-century tapestry depicting the near baptism of [[Redbad, King of the Frisians]], who died in 719
  • Egmond Tympanum]], depicting the two visitors on either side of Saint Peter.
  • Johannes H. Koekkoek]]
  • Rotterdam was destroyed by German bombers on 14 May 1940. 814 people died in the [[Rotterdam Blitz]].
  • Fighting between Belgian rebels and the Dutch military expedition in [[Brussels]] in September 1830
  • The ''Semper Augustus'' was the most expensive tulip sold during the short-lived bubble of 1636–1637, the [[tulip mania]].
  • Map of Dutch Republic by Joannes Janssonius
  • [[Leo Belgicus]], a map of the [[low countries]] drawn in the shape of a lion, by [[Claes Jansz. Visscher]] (II), 1611 CE
  • Prince Maurits]] at the [[Battle of Nieuwpoort]], 1600 CE, by Paulus van Hillegaert
  • [[William IV, Prince of Orange]], stadholder from 1747 to 1751 CE
  • Title page of the 1637 [[Statenvertaling]], the first Bible translated from the original Hebrew and Greek into Dutch, commissioned by the Calvinist [[Synod of Dort]], used well into the 20th century
  • [[Battle of Dogger Bank (1781)]] by [[Thomas Luny]]
  • An account of the first [[trekboer]]s
  • nl}} or Valkhofkapel) in [[Nijmegen]], one of the oldest buildings in the Netherlands
  • Groot-Zundert]], van Gogh was a Dutch post-Impressionist painter whose work, notable for its rough beauty, emotional honesty and bold color, had a far-reaching influence on [[20th-century art]].
  • Province of Luxembourg]] (Waals-Luxemburg, to Belgium in 1839)<br />'''5''' [[Grand Duchy of Luxembourg]] (German Luxemburg; borders after 1839)<br />In blue, the borders of the [[German Confederation]].
  • "The Second Day of the Four Day Battle of 1666"
  • Wilhelmina of Prussia]] with three of their five children. From left to right: the future [[William I of the Netherlands]], Frederick, and Frederica Louise Wilhelmina.
  • [[Saint Willibrord]], [[Anglo-Saxon]] missionary from [[Northumberland]], Apostle to the Frisians, first bishop of Utrecht
DUTCH HISTORY
Netherlands/history; Dutch history; History of Netherlands; History of the netherlands; Netherlands/History; History of Holland; History of Christianity in The Netherlands; History of Christianity in the Netherlands; Medieval netherlands; Netherlands in the middle ages; Medieval holland; Holland in the middle ages; The netherlands in the middle ages; The medieval netherlands; Holland in the Middle Ages; Prehistoric the Netherlands; Decolonization of the Dutch East Indies
The history of the Netherlands is a history of seafaring people thriving in the lowland river delta on the North Sea in northwestern Europe. Records begin with the four centuries during which the region formed a militarized border zone of the Roman Empire.
Sport in the Netherlands         
  • Women's national volleyball team
  • Velden]])
  • [[Marianne Vos]], one of the most successful female cyclists of all-time
  • [[Max Verstappen]], Formula One World Champion driver for [[Red Bull Racing]].
  • The [[Netherlands national baseball team]] during the [[2013 World Baseball Classic]].
  • kickboxers]] ever.
  • Ice skating is one of the most popular sports.
  • [[Sven Kramer]], speed skater
  • Match of the Eredivisie ice hockey league
OVERVIEW OF SPORT IN THE NETHERLANDS
Sports of Netherlands; Sports in the Netherlands; Sport in Netherlands; Handball in the Netherlands; Swimming in the Netherlands; Athletics in the Netherlands; Speed skating in the Netherlands; Tennis in the Netherlands; Figure skating in the Netherlands; Basketball in the Netherlands
Approximately 5 million of the 17 million people in the Netherlands are registered to one of the 35,000 sports clubs in the country. About two thirds of the population older than 15 years participates in sports weekly.