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{{short description|15th-century weigh house in Amsterdam}} |
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[[File:Waag Amsterdam 2.jpg|thumb|380px|The Waag]] |
[[File:Waag Amsterdam 2.jpg|thumb|380px|The Waag]] |
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The '''Waag''' ("[[weigh house]]") is a 15th-century building on [[Nieuwmarkt]] square in [[Amsterdam]]. It was originally a [[city gate]] and part of the [[walls of Amsterdam]]. |
The '''Waag''' ("[[weigh house]]") is a 15th-century building on [[Nieuwmarkt]] square in [[Amsterdam]]. It was originally a [[city gate]] and part of the [[walls of Amsterdam]]. Later it served as a [[guildhall]], [[museum]], [[fire station]] and [[anatomical theatre]], among other things. |
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The Waag is the oldest remaining non-religious building in Amsterdam. |
The Waag is the oldest remaining non-religious building in Amsterdam.<ref>{{Cite web |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111114082020/http://www.waag.org/genericcontent/gebouw |title=History of the Waag building. A short history of the oldest secular building in Amsterdam |access-date=26 October 2024 |archive-date=2011-11-14 |website=waag.org |url=http://www.waag.org/genericcontent/gebouw |location=Amsterdam }}, Waag Society]</ref> The building was listed as a national monument (''[[rijksmonument]]'') in 1970.<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://monumentenregister.cultureelerfgoed.nl/monumenten/3848 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231009212922/https://monumentenregister.cultureelerfgoed.nl/monumenten/3848 |archive-date=2023-10-09 |url-status=live |title=Nieuwmarkt 4, 1012 CR te Amsterdam |access-date=26 October 2024 |website=monumentenregister.cultureelerfgoed.nl |language=Dutch |publisher=Rijksdienst voor het Cultureel Erfgoed. Ministerie van Onderwijs, Cultuur en Wetenschap (Dutch Cultural Heritage Agency. Ministry of Education, Culture and Science)}}</ref> |
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The Waag is depicted in [[Rembrandt]]'s 1632 painting ''[[The Anatomy Lesson of Dr. Nicolaes Tulp]]''. The [[Barber surgeon|surgeons]]' guild commissioned this painting for their guildhall in the Waag. |
The Waag is depicted in [[Rembrandt]]'s 1632 painting ''[[The Anatomy Lesson of Dr. Nicolaes Tulp]]''. The [[Barber surgeon|surgeons]]' guild commissioned this painting for their guildhall in the Waag. |
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== History == |
== History == |
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[[File:Amsterdam wall.jpg|thumb|250px|Gate of the Guild of Saint Luke (the painters' guild)]] |
[[File:Amsterdam wall.jpg|thumb|250px|Gate of the Guild of Saint Luke (the painters' guild).]] |
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[[File:090127theatrum anatomicum waag ams.jpg|thumb|250px|Ceiling of the anatomical theatre]] |
[[File:090127theatrum anatomicum waag ams.jpg|thumb|250px|Ceiling of the anatomical theatre.]] |
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[[File:The Anatomy Lesson.jpg|thumb|250px|Rembrandt's ''The Anatomy Lesson of Dr. Nicolaes Tulp'']] |
[[File:Rembrandt - The Anatomy Lesson of Dr Nicolaes Tulp.jpg|thumb|250px|Rembrandt's ''The Anatomy Lesson of Dr. Nicolaes Tulp''.]] |
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[[File:HOFDIJK (1860) DE SINT-ANTONIES WAAG.jpg|thumbnail|250px|The Waag in an 1860 illustration]] |
[[File:HOFDIJK (1860) DE SINT-ANTONIES WAAG.jpg|thumbnail|250px|The Waag in an 1860 illustration.]] |
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[[File:Jacob Olie - Nieuwmarkt Amsterdam september 1902.jpeg|thumb|250px|The Waag, 1902 photograph by Jacob Olie |
[[File:Jacob Olie - Nieuwmarkt Amsterdam september 1902.jpeg|thumb|250px|The Waag, 1902 photograph by [[Jacob Olie]].]] |
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[[File:Amsterdam - Waag.jpg|thumb|250px|The Waag by night. Note the awning added in the 1990s]] |
[[File:Amsterdam - Waag.jpg|thumb|250px|The Waag by night. Note the awning added in the 1990s.]] |
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=== City gate === |
=== City gate === |
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Originally, the building was one of the gates in the city wall, the '''Sint Antoniespoort''' (Saint Anthony's Gate). The gate was located at the end of the [[Zeedijk]] [[levee|dike]], which continued beyond the gate as the Sint Antoniesdijk. After the [[Lastage]] area was added to the city in the 16th century, the Sint Antoniesdijk became the [[Sint Antoniesbreestraat]] and a new Sint Antoniespoort city gate was built near the [[Hortus Botanicus (Amsterdam)|Hortus Botanicus]]. |
Originally, the building was one of the gates in the city wall, the '''Sint Antoniespoort''' (Saint Anthony's Gate). The gate was located at the end of the [[Zeedijk]] [[levee|dike]], which continued beyond the gate as the Sint Antoniesdijk. After the [[Lastage]] area was added to the city in the 16th century, the Sint Antoniesdijk became the [[Sint Antoniesbreestraat]] and a new Sint Antoniespoort city gate was built near the [[Hortus Botanicus (Amsterdam)|Hortus Botanicus]]. |
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The city gate was part of the medieval city walls along the [[moat]] formed by the current [[Singel (Amsterdam)|Singel]] canal and |
The city gate was part of the medieval city walls along the [[moat]] formed by the current [[Singel (Amsterdam)|Singel]] canal and the [[Kloveniersburgwal]] and the [[Geldersekade]] canals. These walls were constructed during the period 1481–1494 and consisted of defensive towers and city gates connected by brick walls with a natural stone pediment. All that remains of the walls is some [[sandstone]] in the Geldersekade canal wall. The only remains of the city gates are the Waag and part of the Regulierspoort gate, which is now the bottom half of the [[Munttoren]] tower. The [[Schreierstoren]] is the only remaining defensive tower. |
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The oldest [[gable stone]] in Amsterdam adorns the facade of the tower at the corner of Zeedijk and Geldersekade. It carries the inscription ''MCCCCLXXXVIII de XXVIII dach in April wart d'eerste steen van dese poert gheleit.'' ("The first stone of this gate was laid on 28 April 1488"). The year of construction 1488, as given on the gable stone and in many sources, may |
The oldest [[gable stone]] in Amsterdam adorns the facade of the tower at the corner of Zeedijk and Geldersekade. It carries the inscription ''MCCCCLXXXVIII de XXVIII dach in April wart d'eerste steen van dese poert gheleit.'' ("The first stone of this gate was laid on 28 April 1488"). The year of construction 1488, as given on the gable stone and in many sources, may need to be corrected. There are clues that the gate may be of a much older date. For instance, there are several documents in the city archives of Amsterdam that pre-date 1488 and mention Saint Anthony's Gate. According to building archaeologist Jacqueline de Graauw, the building probably dates back to as early as 1425, because that is when the city was expanded and the Geldersekade and Kloveniersburgwal canals, where the gate was placed, were dug.<ref>"Het veelbewogen leven van een stokoud gebouw", ''Het Parool'', 22 January 2011 (Dutch)</ref> |
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De Graauw also found that Saint Anthony's Gate was originally much smaller, and was heightened at a later date. This is evident from the remains of [[merlon]]s halfway up the towers of the Guild of Saint Eligius and the ''[[schutterij|schuttersgilde]]'' (militia) - the two big towers on either side of the main gate. Also, the front gate, which differs from the main gate in several ways, was probably added to the main gate at a later date. These kinds of additions were commonplace at that time, as a protection against the increasing threat posed by canons. In Haarlem, for example, a front gate was added to the [[Amsterdamse Poort, Haarlem|Amsterdam Gate]] in 1482 which is very similar to the front gate of Saint Anthony's Gate. Presumably the gable stone in Saint Anthony's Gate with the date 1488 refers simply to the addition of the front gate to the already existing main gate.<ref> |
De Graauw also found that Saint Anthony's Gate was originally much smaller, and was heightened at a later date. This is evident from the remains of [[merlon]]s halfway up the towers of the Guild of Saint Eligius and the ''[[schutterij|schuttersgilde]]'' (militia) - the two big towers on either side of the main gate. Also, the front gate, which differs from the main gate in several ways, was probably added to the main gate at a later date. These kinds of additions were commonplace at that time, as a protection against the increasing threat posed by canons. In Haarlem, for example, a front gate was added to the [[Amsterdamse Poort, Haarlem|Amsterdam Gate]] in 1482 which is very similar to the front gate of Saint Anthony's Gate. Presumably the gable stone in Saint Anthony's Gate with the date 1488 refers simply to the addition of the front gate to the already existing main gate.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=De Graauw |first=J. |title=De middeleeuwse bouwgeschiedenis van de Amsterdamse Sint-Anthonispoort. De Waag op de Nieuwmarkt nader onderzocht |journal=Bulletin KNOB |year=2011 |volume=110 |issue=3-4 |pages=117-128 |date=August 2011 |url=https://bulletin.knob.nl/index.php/knob/article/view/deGraauw117 |doi=10.7480/knob.110.2011.3-4.109 |access-date=26 October 2024 |format=PDF |language=Dutch |publisher=KNOB Koninklijke Nederlandse Oudheidkundige Dienst}}. Abstract in English.</ref> |
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From around the beginning of the 16th century, when Amsterdam had completed its surrounding stone city wall, Saint Anthony's Gate appeared as it is depicted in the wood carvings of [[Cornelis Anthonisz]]: a main gate with four towers on the inner (city) side — of which the masons' guild tower was still small — and a front gate with two towers on the outer (canal) side. Between the front gate and main gate, there was a small square covering a subterraneous [[sluice|sluice gate]]. The walls of the towers are almost 2 metres thick. |
From around the beginning of the 16th century, when Amsterdam had completed its surrounding stone city wall, Saint Anthony's Gate appeared as it is depicted in the wood carvings of [[Cornelis Anthonisz]]: a main gate with four towers on the inner (city) side — of which the masons' guild tower was still small — and a front gate with two towers on the outer (canal) side. Between the front gate and main gate, there was a small square covering a subterraneous [[sluice|sluice gate]]. The walls of the towers are almost 2 metres thick. |
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===Weigh house=== |
===Weigh house=== |
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In |
In 1617, the former city gate was repurposed as a [[weigh house]], a public building where various goods were weighed.{{Cite web |url=https://waag.org/en/de-waag-building |website=waag.org |title=History: De Waag |publisher=Waag Futurelab for technology and society |date= |access-date=26 October 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240613200023/https://waag.org/en/de-waag-building/ |archive-date=2024-06-13 |url-status=live |location=Amsterdam}} This new weigh house was needed to relieve the ''Waag op de Dam'', the original weigh house on [[Dam (Amsterdam)|Dam]] square, which had become too small for the needs of the rapidly growing city. |
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An inner courtyard was added in 1617–1618 by covering the area between the front and main gates. A number of [[guild]]s were housed on the top floors of the building: the [[blacksmith]]s' guild, the [[painter's guild]], the [[Stonemasonry|masons]]' guild and the [[Barber surgeon|surgeons]]' guild. Each guild had its own entrance gate. The guild emblems are still visible over these entrances. The gate of the masons' guild includes sculpture work by [[Hendrick de Keyser]]. Over the entrance for the surgeons' guild is the inscription ''Theatrum Anatomicum''. |
An inner courtyard was added in 1617–1618 by covering the area between the front and main gates. A number of [[guild]]s were housed on the top floors of the building: the [[blacksmith]]s' guild, the [[painter's guild]], the [[Stonemasonry|masons]]' guild and the [[Barber surgeon|surgeons]]' guild. Each guild had its own entrance gate. The guild emblems are still visible over these entrances. The gate of the masons' guild includes sculpture work by [[Hendrick de Keyser]]. Over the entrance for the surgeons' guild is the inscription ''Theatrum Anatomicum''. |
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In 1690–1691, a large dome-shaped hall was added, topped by a central octagonal tower. The interior also dates to this time period. |
In 1690–1691, a large dome-shaped hall was added, topped by a central octagonal tower. The interior also dates to this time period. |
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In 1819, a chest of indigo was the last item to be weighed |
The Waag eventually lost its function as a weigh house. In 1819, a chest of indigo was the last item to be weighed there. |
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===19th and 20th centuries=== |
===19th and 20th centuries=== |
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After falling into disuse as a weigh house, the Waag served a range of different functions. In the 19th century it was used consecutively as a fencing hall, a furniture workshop, a workshop for oil lamps used for street lighting, a fire station, and as the city archives.<ref> |
After falling into disuse as a weigh house, the Waag served a range of different functions. In the 19th century it was used consecutively as a fencing hall, a furniture workshop, a workshop for oil lamps used for street lighting, a fire station, and as the city archives.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.indewaag.nl/?Gebouw |title=Restaurant - Café In De Waag |language=Dutch |access-date=26 October 2024 |website=www.indewaag.nl}}</ref> In the first half of the 19th century, punishments were carried out in front of the building. There was even a [[guillotine]]. |
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In the 20th century, the building was used primarily as a museum. It was the original location of the Amsterdams Historisch Museum (now [[Amsterdam Museum]]) as well as the [[Joods Historisch Museum]] (Jewish Historical Museum). In the period 1989–1994, the building was not used and stood empty. Eventually the building was handed over to a foundation, Stichting Centrum De Waag, which commissioned [[Philippe Starck]] to design a glass extension that would have required part of the outer wall to be demolished. However, the foundation went bankrupt before these plans were carried out. |
In the 20th century, the building was used primarily as a museum. It was the original location of the Amsterdams Historisch Museum (now [[Amsterdam Museum]]) as well as the [[Joods Historisch Museum]] (Jewish Historical Museum). In the period 1989–1994, the building was not used and stood empty. Eventually the building was handed over to a foundation, Stichting Centrum De Waag, which commissioned [[Philippe Starck]] to design a glass extension that would have required part of the outer wall to be demolished. However, the foundation went bankrupt before these plans were carried out. |
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On 20 September 1991, local residents and preservationists opened the disused building to the press and the public. A general sense of dismay, which also resounded in the city council, led to the appointment of a commission of experts, which proposed to have the building restored under the guidance of an architect with expert knowledge of medieval construction and foundation. |
On 20 September 1991, local residents and preservationists opened the disused building to the press and the public. A general sense of dismay, which also resounded in the city council, led to the appointment of a commission of experts, which proposed to have the building restored under the guidance of an architect with expert knowledge of medieval construction and foundation. {{ill|Walter Kramer (architect)|lt=Walter Kramer|nl|Walter Kramer}} was appointed to lead the restoration. |
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During restoration, the cellars (which had been filled in) were reopened, |
During restoration, the cellars (which had been filled in) were reopened, and a wooden [[awning]] was added to the eastern facade. The paving around the building was changed so that de Waag again became the central point on Nieuwmarkt square. |
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=== 21st century === |
=== 21st century === |
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⚫ | The building is slowly sinking due to the porous soil and the cement that was used for the restoration. In July 2009 it was falsely reported in the media that one of the towers was about to collapse.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.waag.org/news/57148 |website=waag.org |title=Waagtoren op instorten? |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090715051133/http://www.waag.org/news/57148 |archive-date=2009-07-15 |publisher=Waag Society |access-date=26 October 2024 |date=15 July 2009 |language=Dutch}}</ref> However, the foundation will need to be improved or replaced in order to remedy the situation.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.parool.nl/parool/nl/4/AMSTERDAM/article/detail/1071043/2010/12/10/De-Waag-moet-snel-op-nieuwe-fundering.dhtml |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110220223539/http://www.parool.nl/parool/nl/4/AMSTERDAM/article/detail/1071043/2010/12/10/De-Waag-moet-snel-op-nieuwe-fundering.dhtml |archive-date=2011-02-20 |title=De Waag moet snel op nieuwe fundering |trans-title=The Waag needs to get on new foundation soon|website=www.parool.nl |date=10 December 2010 |language=Dutch |publisher=Het Parool}}</ref> In February 2011, a frame was built around the tower to support it and prevent it from collapsing.<ref name="AT5-2011">{{cite news |url=http://www.at5.nl/artikelen/57277/de-waag-scheurt-zichzelf-in-stukken |title=De Waag scheurt zichzelf in stukken |trans-title=De Waag is tearing itself to pieces |language=Dutch |work=[[AT5|AT5 Nieuws]] |location=[[Amsterdam]] |date=February 13, 2011 |accessdate=May 10, 2012 |quote=''De fundering van De Waag op de Nieuwmarkt is zo slecht dat hij helemaal vervangen moet worden'' (The foundation of De Waag on the Nieuwmarkt is so bad that it must be completely replaced)}}</ref> |
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⚫ | The building is slowly sinking due to the porous soil and the cement that was used for the restoration. In July 2009 it was falsely reported in the media that one of the towers was about to collapse.<ref> |
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==Further reading== |
==Further reading== |
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* J. de Graauw, 'De middeleeuwse bouwgeschiedenis van de Amsterdamse Sint-Anthonispoort; De Waag op de Nieuwmarkt nader onderzocht', ''Bulletin KNOB'' 110 (2011), nr 3-4, p. 117-128 (Dutch, but abstract in English) |
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* {{Cite journal |last=De Graauw |first=J. |title=De middeleeuwse bouwgeschiedenis van de Amsterdamse Sint-Anthonispoort. De Waag op de Nieuwmarkt nader onderzocht |trans-title=The medieval building history of Amsterdam's Sint-Anthonispoort. The Waag on the Nieuwmarkt examined more closely |journal=Bulletin KNOB |year=2011 |volume=110 |issue=3-4 |pages=117-128 |date=August 2011 |url=https://bulletin.knob.nl/index.php/knob/article/view/deGraauw117 |doi=10.7480/knob.110.2011.3-4.109 |access-date=26 October 2024 |format=PDF |language=Dutch |publisher=KNOB Koninklijke Nederlandse Oudheidkundige Dienst}} Abstract in English. |
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* E. Kurpershoek, ''De Waag op de Nieuwmarkt'', Amsterdam 1994 (Dutch) |
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* {{Cite book |first=E. |last=Kurpershoek |title=De Waag op de Nieuwmarkt |trans-title=The Waag on the Nieuwmarkt |location=Amsterdam |year=1994 |language=Dutch}} |
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* William R. Veder, ‘Het St. Anthonis poorthuis te Amsterdam’, ''Eigen Haard'' 37 (1911), 218-222, 270-272, 292-294, 358-361, 461-464, 565, 567, 764-768 (Dutch) |
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* {{Cite journal |last=Veder |first=William R. |title=Het St. Anthonis poorthuis te Amsterdam |trans-title=The St. Anthonis gatehouse in Amsterdam |journal=Eigen Haard |volume=37 |year=1911 |pages=218–222, 270–272, 292–294, 358–361, 461–464, 565, 567, 764-768 |language=Dutch}} |
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* J. Wagenaar |
* {{Cite book |first=J. |last=Wagenaar |title=Amsterdam In Zyne Opkomst, Aanwas, Geschiedenissen, Voorregten, Koophandel, Gebouwen etc. |trans-title=Amsterdam In Its Rise, Growth, Accretion, Histories, Privileges, Commerce, Buildings etc |location=Amsterdam |year=1972 |language=Dutch}} Facsimile of the edition of 1760-1767, 3 volumes. |
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==Sources== |
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* Bureau Monumenten en Archeologie Amsterdam, http://www.bma.amsterdam.nl/ |
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==References== |
==References== |
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==External links== |
==External links== |
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{{ |
{{commons category|Waag (Amsterdam)}} |
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* {{Cite web |url=https://waag.org/en/de-waag-building |website=waag.org |title=History: De Waag |publisher=Waag Futurelab for technology and society |date= |access-date=26 October 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240613200023/https://waag.org/en/de-waag-building/ |archive-date=2024-06-13 |url-status=live |location=Amsterdam}} |
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* [http://www.waag.org/genericcontent/gebouw "History of the Waag building", Waag Society] |
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* [http://sketchup.google.com/3dwarehouse/details?mid=a7414f9252056f5cb51ab0295fd8242c&prevstart=0 Three-dimensional model of the Waag] |
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{{Coord|52|22|22|N|4|54|01|E|region:NL|display=title}} |
{{Coord|52|22|22|N|4|54|01|E|region:NL|display=title}} |
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{{Amsterdam}} |
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[[Category:Gates in the Netherlands]] |
[[Category:Gates in the Netherlands]] |
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[[Category:Guildhalls in the Netherlands]] |
[[Category:Guildhalls in the Netherlands]] |
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[[Category:Rijksmonuments in Amsterdam]] |
[[Category:Rijksmonuments in Amsterdam]] |
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[[Category: |
[[Category:Tourist attractions in Amsterdam]] |
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[[Category:Weigh houses]] |
[[Category:Weigh houses]] |
Latest revision as of 20:11, 26 October 2024
The Waag ("weigh house") is a 15th-century building on Nieuwmarkt square in Amsterdam. It was originally a city gate and part of the walls of Amsterdam. Later it served as a guildhall, museum, fire station and anatomical theatre, among other things.
The Waag is the oldest remaining non-religious building in Amsterdam.[1] The building was listed as a national monument (rijksmonument) in 1970.[2]
The Waag is depicted in Rembrandt's 1632 painting The Anatomy Lesson of Dr. Nicolaes Tulp. The surgeons' guild commissioned this painting for their guildhall in the Waag.
History
[edit]City gate
[edit]Originally, the building was one of the gates in the city wall, the Sint Antoniespoort (Saint Anthony's Gate). The gate was located at the end of the Zeedijk dike, which continued beyond the gate as the Sint Antoniesdijk. After the Lastage area was added to the city in the 16th century, the Sint Antoniesdijk became the Sint Antoniesbreestraat and a new Sint Antoniespoort city gate was built near the Hortus Botanicus.
The city gate was part of the medieval city walls along the moat formed by the current Singel canal and the Kloveniersburgwal and the Geldersekade canals. These walls were constructed during the period 1481–1494 and consisted of defensive towers and city gates connected by brick walls with a natural stone pediment. All that remains of the walls is some sandstone in the Geldersekade canal wall. The only remains of the city gates are the Waag and part of the Regulierspoort gate, which is now the bottom half of the Munttoren tower. The Schreierstoren is the only remaining defensive tower.
The oldest gable stone in Amsterdam adorns the facade of the tower at the corner of Zeedijk and Geldersekade. It carries the inscription MCCCCLXXXVIII de XXVIII dach in April wart d'eerste steen van dese poert gheleit. ("The first stone of this gate was laid on 28 April 1488"). The year of construction 1488, as given on the gable stone and in many sources, may need to be corrected. There are clues that the gate may be of a much older date. For instance, there are several documents in the city archives of Amsterdam that pre-date 1488 and mention Saint Anthony's Gate. According to building archaeologist Jacqueline de Graauw, the building probably dates back to as early as 1425, because that is when the city was expanded and the Geldersekade and Kloveniersburgwal canals, where the gate was placed, were dug.[3]
De Graauw also found that Saint Anthony's Gate was originally much smaller, and was heightened at a later date. This is evident from the remains of merlons halfway up the towers of the Guild of Saint Eligius and the schuttersgilde (militia) - the two big towers on either side of the main gate. Also, the front gate, which differs from the main gate in several ways, was probably added to the main gate at a later date. These kinds of additions were commonplace at that time, as a protection against the increasing threat posed by canons. In Haarlem, for example, a front gate was added to the Amsterdam Gate in 1482 which is very similar to the front gate of Saint Anthony's Gate. Presumably the gable stone in Saint Anthony's Gate with the date 1488 refers simply to the addition of the front gate to the already existing main gate.[4]
From around the beginning of the 16th century, when Amsterdam had completed its surrounding stone city wall, Saint Anthony's Gate appeared as it is depicted in the wood carvings of Cornelis Anthonisz: a main gate with four towers on the inner (city) side — of which the masons' guild tower was still small — and a front gate with two towers on the outer (canal) side. Between the front gate and main gate, there was a small square covering a subterraneous sluice gate. The walls of the towers are almost 2 metres thick.
When the city expanded beyond its walls the late 16th century, Saint Anthony's Gate lost its function as a city gate. Shortly thereafter, during the years 1603–1613, the walls were demolished. In 1614, the present Nieuwmarkt square was created by covering the canal on either side of the gate. In addition, the square was raised, causing part of the brickwork of the gate to disappear below ground. This makes the building appear shorter than it actually is.
Weigh house
[edit]In 1617, the former city gate was repurposed as a weigh house, a public building where various goods were weighed."History: De Waag". waag.org. Amsterdam: Waag Futurelab for technology and society. Archived from the original on 2024-06-13. Retrieved 26 October 2024. This new weigh house was needed to relieve the Waag op de Dam, the original weigh house on Dam square, which had become too small for the needs of the rapidly growing city.
An inner courtyard was added in 1617–1618 by covering the area between the front and main gates. A number of guilds were housed on the top floors of the building: the blacksmiths' guild, the painter's guild, the masons' guild and the surgeons' guild. Each guild had its own entrance gate. The guild emblems are still visible over these entrances. The gate of the masons' guild includes sculpture work by Hendrick de Keyser. Over the entrance for the surgeons' guild is the inscription Theatrum Anatomicum.
In 1690–1691, a large dome-shaped hall was added, topped by a central octagonal tower. The interior also dates to this time period.
The Waag eventually lost its function as a weigh house. In 1819, a chest of indigo was the last item to be weighed there.
19th and 20th centuries
[edit]After falling into disuse as a weigh house, the Waag served a range of different functions. In the 19th century it was used consecutively as a fencing hall, a furniture workshop, a workshop for oil lamps used for street lighting, a fire station, and as the city archives.[5] In the first half of the 19th century, punishments were carried out in front of the building. There was even a guillotine.
In the 20th century, the building was used primarily as a museum. It was the original location of the Amsterdams Historisch Museum (now Amsterdam Museum) as well as the Joods Historisch Museum (Jewish Historical Museum). In the period 1989–1994, the building was not used and stood empty. Eventually the building was handed over to a foundation, Stichting Centrum De Waag, which commissioned Philippe Starck to design a glass extension that would have required part of the outer wall to be demolished. However, the foundation went bankrupt before these plans were carried out.
On 20 September 1991, local residents and preservationists opened the disused building to the press and the public. A general sense of dismay, which also resounded in the city council, led to the appointment of a commission of experts, which proposed to have the building restored under the guidance of an architect with expert knowledge of medieval construction and foundation. Walter Kramer was appointed to lead the restoration.
During restoration, the cellars (which had been filled in) were reopened, and a wooden awning was added to the eastern facade. The paving around the building was changed so that de Waag again became the central point on Nieuwmarkt square.
21st century
[edit]Following the restoration, the building was rented out. Waag Society, a foundation that aims to foster experimentation with new technologies, art and culture, is housed on the upper floors. The ground floor is now Restaurant-Café In de Waag.
The building is slowly sinking due to the porous soil and the cement that was used for the restoration. In July 2009 it was falsely reported in the media that one of the towers was about to collapse.[6] However, the foundation will need to be improved or replaced in order to remedy the situation.[7] In February 2011, a frame was built around the tower to support it and prevent it from collapsing.[8]
Further reading
[edit]- Commelin, C. (1693). Beschryvinge van Amsterdam, zynde een naukeurige verhandelinge van desselfs eerste oorspronk etc [Description of Amsterdam, being a precise treatise of its first origin etc.] (in Dutch). Amsterdam. 2 volumes.
- De Graauw, J. (August 2011). "De middeleeuwse bouwgeschiedenis van de Amsterdamse Sint-Anthonispoort. De Waag op de Nieuwmarkt nader onderzocht" [The medieval building history of Amsterdam's Sint-Anthonispoort. The Waag on the Nieuwmarkt examined more closely] (PDF). Bulletin KNOB (in Dutch). 110 (3–4). KNOB Koninklijke Nederlandse Oudheidkundige Dienst: 117–128. doi:10.7480/knob.110.2011.3-4.109. Retrieved 26 October 2024.
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: date and year (link) Abstract in English. - Kurpershoek, E. (1994). De Waag op de Nieuwmarkt [The Waag on the Nieuwmarkt] (in Dutch). Amsterdam.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - Veder, William R. (1911). "Het St. Anthonis poorthuis te Amsterdam" [The St. Anthonis gatehouse in Amsterdam]. Eigen Haard (in Dutch). 37: 218–222, 270–272, 292–294, 358–361, 461–464, 565, 567, 764–768.
- Wagenaar, J. (1972). Amsterdam In Zyne Opkomst, Aanwas, Geschiedenissen, Voorregten, Koophandel, Gebouwen etc [Amsterdam In Its Rise, Growth, Accretion, Histories, Privileges, Commerce, Buildings etc] (in Dutch). Amsterdam.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) Facsimile of the edition of 1760-1767, 3 volumes.
References
[edit]- ^ "History of the Waag building. A short history of the oldest secular building in Amsterdam". waag.org. Amsterdam. Archived from the original on 2011-11-14. Retrieved 26 October 2024., Waag Society]
- ^ "Nieuwmarkt 4, 1012 CR te Amsterdam". monumentenregister.cultureelerfgoed.nl (in Dutch). Rijksdienst voor het Cultureel Erfgoed. Ministerie van Onderwijs, Cultuur en Wetenschap (Dutch Cultural Heritage Agency. Ministry of Education, Culture and Science). Archived from the original on 2023-10-09. Retrieved 26 October 2024.
- ^ "Het veelbewogen leven van een stokoud gebouw", Het Parool, 22 January 2011 (Dutch)
- ^ De Graauw, J. (August 2011). "De middeleeuwse bouwgeschiedenis van de Amsterdamse Sint-Anthonispoort. De Waag op de Nieuwmarkt nader onderzocht" (PDF). Bulletin KNOB (in Dutch). 110 (3–4). KNOB Koninklijke Nederlandse Oudheidkundige Dienst: 117–128. doi:10.7480/knob.110.2011.3-4.109. Retrieved 26 October 2024.
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: date and year (link). Abstract in English. - ^ "Restaurant - Café In De Waag". www.indewaag.nl (in Dutch). Retrieved 26 October 2024.
- ^ "Waagtoren op instorten?". waag.org (in Dutch). Waag Society. 15 July 2009. Archived from the original on 2009-07-15. Retrieved 26 October 2024.
- ^ "De Waag moet snel op nieuwe fundering" [The Waag needs to get on new foundation soon]. www.parool.nl (in Dutch). Het Parool. 10 December 2010. Archived from the original on 2011-02-20.
- ^ "De Waag scheurt zichzelf in stukken" [De Waag is tearing itself to pieces]. AT5 Nieuws (in Dutch). Amsterdam. February 13, 2011. Retrieved May 10, 2012.
De fundering van De Waag op de Nieuwmarkt is zo slecht dat hij helemaal vervangen moet worden (The foundation of De Waag on the Nieuwmarkt is so bad that it must be completely replaced)
External links
[edit]- "History: De Waag". waag.org. Amsterdam: Waag Futurelab for technology and society. Archived from the original on 2024-06-13. Retrieved 26 October 2024.