A report on Amstel, Dam Square, Amsterdam and Damrak
Dam Square or the Dam is a town square in Amsterdam, the capital of the Netherlands.
- Dam SquareThe Damrak is an avenue and partially filled in canal at the centre of Amsterdam, running between Amsterdam Centraal in the north and Dam Square in the south.
- DamrakIt flows from the Aarkanaal and Drecht in Nieuwveen northwards, passing Uithoorn, Amstelveen, and Ouderkerk aan de Amstel, to the IJ in Amsterdam.
- AmstelDam Square lies in the historical center of Amsterdam, approximately 750 m south of the main transportation hub, Centraal Station, at the original location of the dam in the river Amstel.
- Dam SquareAmsterdam was founded at the Amstel, that was dammed to control flooding; the city's name derives from the Amstel dam.
- AmsterdamIt links the streets Damrak and Rokin, which run along the original course of the Amstel River from Centraal Station to Muntplein (Mint Square) and the Munttoren (Mint Tower).
- Dam SquareThe street was located on a rak (reach), a straight part of the Amstel river near a dam; hence the name.
- DamrakThe Amstel was formed around 1050 BC when a freshwater river cut into a tidal channel of the IJ which are now Damrak and Rokin.
- AmstelThe river is interrupted at Rokin that is partly filled up, Dam Square, and Damrak that is partly filled up.
- AmstelNeolithic and Roman artefacts have been found in the prehistoric Amstel bedding under Amsterdam's Damrak and Rokin, such as shards of Bell Beaker culture pottery (2200-2000 BC) and a granite grinding stone (2700-2750 BC).
- AmsterdamThe construction of a dam at the mouth of the Amstel, eponymously named Dam, is historically estimated to have occurred between 1264 and 1275.
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