What is LessonUp
Search
Channels
Log in
Register
‹
Return to search
3.1 Amsterdam: staple market of the world
Goals
This week's goal is in Teams. You have to download the file to your laptop!
1 / 20
next
Slide 1:
Slide
Geschiedenis
Middelbare school
havo
Leerjaar 2
This lesson contains
20 slides
, with
interactive quizzes
,
text slides
and
3 videos
.
Lesson duration is:
60 min
Start lesson
Save
Share
Print lesson
Items in this lesson
Goals
This week's goal is in Teams. You have to download the file to your laptop!
Slide 1 - Slide
Golden Age / Republic?
Slide 2 - Slide
Amsterdam
Slide 3 - Mind map
The Republic in the Golden Age
3.1 Amsterdam: staple market of the world
Slide 4 - Slide
VOC huis 17e eeuw
VOC huis nu
Slide 5 - Slide
Slide 6 - Slide
Lesson objective
By the end of this lesson, you can explain how Amsterdam became the staple market of Europe and what impact it had on agriculture in the Republic.
Slide 7 - Slide
What do you think of when you think of Amsterdam?
Slide 8 - Mind map
We're moving!
Amsterdam was a small rectangular port on the Amstel river until the early 17th century
Amsterdam became too smal -->city expansion: Between 1610 and 1620
Canals surround the city centre (Singel, Herengracht, Prinsengracht and Keizersgracht)
Rich and poor live and work separately
Slide 9 - Slide
Slide 10 - Slide
Golden Turn
Heerengracht
Goudsbloemgracht
Jordaan
Slide 11 - Slide
Slide 12 - Video
City residents and staple market
Dutch economy of trade and industry.
Farmers could no longer provide inhabitants with enough food --> grain imported from the Baltic Sea
Stored in grain warehouses
Amsterdam sold this when there was a shortage to other countries.
With grain from east, immediately iron/wood from Sweden.
Slide 13 - Slide
Baltic Sea Trade
Wine from France
Cloths from Flanders and Spices from Asia
Everything was piled up in warehouses -->
staple market
of Europe
Grain was the main trade product: first and most important international trade of the Dutch around the East Sea for centuries.
Slide 14 - Slide
Slide 15 - Video
Amsterdam is growing tremendously!
Before Amsterdam, Antwerp was the most important trading city in Europe. Their capital was growing and that's what
merchant
capitalism was all about.
When Spanish troops invaded Antwerp in 1585, that changed. Many Antwerp merchants fled to Amsterdam.
Because of the Antwerp refugees, refugees from other areas and the growth of the birth rate, Amsterdam grew enormously.
Slide 16 - Slide
Slide 17 - Video
Specialisation and commercial agriculture
People started specialising in crafts: Leiden (Lakenhal) + Haarlem became textile city. Delft = Delft-blue
Slide 18 - Slide
Golden Age
Name for the long period of prosperity and welfare for the Republic in the seventeenth century.
What about slave trade? Is the name 'Golden Age' still fitting knowing that a part of the wealth was possible through slavery?
Slide 19 - Slide
Lesson objective
By the end of this lesson, you can explain how Amsterdam became the staple market of Europe and what impact it had on agriculture in the Republic.
Slide 20 - Slide
More lessons like this
Goal 1 Amsterdam: staple market of the world (3.2)
15 days ago
- Lesson with
17 slides
Geschiedenis
Middelbare school
havo
Leerjaar 2
3.1 Amsterdam: staple market of the world
April 2024
- Lesson with
15 slides
Geschiedenis
Middelbare school
havo
Leerjaar 2
2.1 Trade and industry in the Republic
October 2023
- Lesson with
22 slides
Geschiedenis
Middelbare school
vwo
Leerjaar 2
Rich and Poor chapter 5
December 2023
- Lesson with
17 slides
Geschiedenis
Middelbare school
vwo
Leerjaar 2
3.2 Netherlands and Europe
March 2023
- Lesson with
37 slides
Geschiedenis
Middelbare school
vwo
Leerjaar 2
2.1 Trade and industry in the Republic
August 2022
- Lesson with
29 slides
Geschiedenis
Middelbare school
vwo
Leerjaar 2
3.2 - The Netherlands and Europe- II
February 2023
- Lesson with
16 slides
History
Middelbare school
vwo
Leerjaar 2
Lesson 1: Amsterdam: Centre of world trade
September 2023
- Lesson with
11 slides
Geschiedenis
Middelbare school
havo
Leerjaar 2