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the Permanent Court of Arbitration, the International Court of Justice, the International
Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia, the International Criminal Court and the
Special Tribunal for Lebanon. The former four are situated in The Hague as is the EU's
criminal intelligence agency Europol. This has led to the city being dubbed "the world's
legal capital".
The Netherlands is a geographically low-lying country, with about 27% of its area and
60% of its population located below sea level. Significant areas have been gained
through land reclamation and preserved through an elaborate system of polders and dikes.
Much of the Netherlands is formed by the estuary of three important European rivers,
which together with their distributaries form the Rhine-Meuse-Scheldt delta. Most of the
country is very flat, with the exception of foothills in the far south-east and several low-
hill ranges in the central parts created by ice-age glaciers.
Background
The Dutch United Provinces declared their independence from Spain in 1579;
during the 17th century, they became a leading seafaring and commercial
power, with settlements and colonies around the world. After a 20-year
French occupation, a Kingdom of the Netherlands was formed in 1815. In
1830 Belgium seceded and formed a separate kingdom. The Netherlands
remained neutral in World War I, but suffered invasion and occupation by
Germany in World War II. A modern, industrialized nation, the Netherlands is
also a large exporter of agricultural products. The country was a founding
member of NATO and the EEC (now the EU), and participated in the
introduction of the euro in 1999.
Geography
Location :
Western Europe, bordering the North Sea, between Belgium and Germany
Geographic coordinates :
52 30 N, 5 45 E
Map references :
Europe
Area :
Total: 41,526 sq km
Total: 1,027 km
Border countries: Belgium 450 km, Germany 577 km
Maritime claims :
12 nm
Territorial sea:
Contiguous zone: 24 nm
Exclusive fishing zone: 200 nm
Climate :
Natural gas, petroleum, peat, limestone, salt, sand and gravel, arable land
Land use :
Arable land: 21.96%
Perm anent crops: 0.77%
Other: 77.27% (2005)
Irrigated land :
5,650 sq km (2003)
Natu ral hazards :
Flooding
Environment - international agreements :
party to: Air Pollution, Air Pollution-Nitrogen Oxides, Air Pollution-
Persistent Organic Pollutants, Air Pollution-Sulfur 85, Air Pollution-Sulfur
94, Air Pollution-Volatile Organic Compounds, Antarctic-Environmental
Protocol, Antarctic-Marine Living Resources, Antarctic Treaty, Biodiversity,
Climate Change, Climate Change-Kyoto Protocol, Desertification,
Endangered Species, Environmental Modification, Hazardous Wastes, Kyoto
Protocol, Law of the Sea, Marine Dumping, Marine Life Conservation, Ozone
Layer Protection, Ship Pollution, Tropical Timber 83, Tropical Timber 94,
Wetlands, Whaling signed, but not ratified: none of the selected agreements
Geography - note :
Located at mouths of three major European rivers (Rhine, Maas or Meuse,
and Schelde)
PEOPLES
Population :
16,715,999 (July 2009 EST.)
Age structure :
0-14 years: 17.4% (male 1,485,873/female 1,416,999)
15-64 years: 67.7% (male 5,720,387/female 5,604,014)
65 years and over: 14.9% (male 1,070,496/female 1,418,230) (2009 est.)
Median age :
Total: 40.4 years
Male: 39.6 years
Fem ale: 41.2 years (2009 EST.)
Population growth rate :
0.412% (2009 EST.)
Birth rate
10.4 births/1,000 population (2009 EST .)
Death rate :
8.71 deaths/1,000 population (2008 EST.)
Religions
Roman Catholic 30%, Dutch Reformed 11%, Calvinist 6%, other Protestant
3%, Muslim 5.8%, other 2.2%, none 42% (2006)
Languages :
Dutch (official), Frisian (official
Literacy :
Defin ition: age 15 and over can read and write
Total popu lation : 99%
Male:99%
Fem ale:99% (2003 est.)
Education expenditures :
5.3% of GDP (2005)
GOVERNMENT
Country name :
Convention al long form: Kingdom of the Netherlands
Convention al short form: Netherlands
Local lon g form: Koninkrijk der Nederlanden
Local sh ort form : Nederland
Government type
Constitutional monarchy
Administrative divisions :
Executive branch
ECONOMY
Economy - overview :
The Netherlands has a prosperous and open economy, which depends heavily
on foreign trade. The economy is noted for stable industrial relations,
moderate unemployment and inflation, a sizable current account surplus, and
an important role as a European transportation hub. Industrial activity is
predominantly in food processing, chemicals, petroleum refining, and
electrical machinery. A highly mechanized agricultural sector employs no
more than 3% of the labor force but provides large surpluses for the food-
processing industry and for exports. The Netherlands, along with 11 of its EU
partners, began circulating the euro currency on 1 January 2002. The country
has been one of the leading European nations for attracting foreign direct
investment and is one of the four largest investors in the US. The pace of job
growth reached 10-year highs in 2007, but economic growth fell sharply in
2008 as fallout from the world financial crisis constricted demand and raised
the specter of a recession in 2009.
COMMUNICATIONS
Teleph ones - main lin es in use :
7.334 million (2007)
Teleph ones - mobile cellular :
17.3 million (2006)
Radio broadcast stations :
AM 4, FM 567, shortwave 1 (2008)
Internet hosts :
10.983 million (2008)
Transportation
Airports :
27 (2008)
Heliports :
1 (2007)
Pipelines :
gas 3,816 km; oil 365 km; refined products 716 km (2008)
Railways :
total: 2,801 km
Ports and terminals :
Amsterdam, IJmuiden, Rotterdam, Terneuzen, Vlissinge
Military
Military branches :
Royal Netherlands Army, Royal Netherlands Navy (includes Naval Air
Service and Marine Corps), Royal Netherlands Air Force (Koninklijke
Luchtmacht, KLu), Royal Military Police (2009 )
Military expen ditu res :
1.6% of GDP (2005 est.
Culture
he Netherlands has had many well-known painters. The 17th century, when the Dutch
republic was prosperous, was the age of the "Dutch Masters", such as Rembrandt van
Rijn, Johannes Vermeer, Jan Steen, Jacob van Ruysdael and many others. Famous
Dutch painters of the 19th and 20th century wereVincent van Gogh and Piet
Mondriaan. M. C. Escher is a well-known graphics artist. Willem de Kooningwas born
and trained in Rotterdam, although he is considered to have reached acclaim as an
American artist. Han van Meegeren was an infamous Dutch art forger.
The Netherlands is the country of philosophers Erasmus of Rotterdam and Spinoza. All
of Descartes' major work was done in the Netherlands. The Dutch scientist Christiaan
Huygens (1629–1695) discovered Saturn's moon Titan and invented the pendulum
clock. Antonie van Leeuwenhoek was the first to observe and describe single-celled
organisms with a microscope.
In the Dutch Golden Age, literature flourished as well, with Joost van den
Vondel and P.C. Hooft as the two most famous writers. In the 19th
century, Multatuli wrote about the bad treatment of the natives in Dutch colonies.
Important 20th century authors include Harry Mulisch, Jan Wolkers, Simon Vestdijk,Cees
Nooteboom, Gerard (van het) Reve and Willem Frederik Hermans. Anne Frank's Diary
of a Young Girl was published after she died in The Holocaust and translated from Dutch
to all major languages.
Replicas of Dutch buildings can be found in Huis ten Bosch, Nagasaki, Japan. A similar
Holland Village is being built in Shenyang, China.
Windmills, tulips, wooden shoes, cheese and Delftware pottery are among the items
associated with the Netherlands by tourists.
Something that is also very Dutch is the anual Sinterklaas celebration, including the
tradition of Zwarte Piet. During recent years the role of Zwarte Piet has become part of a
recurring debate in the Netherlands. Present-day observations in the Netherlands under
controversy include holiday revellers blackening their faces, wearing afro wigs and bright
red lipstick, and walking the streets throwing candyto passers-by.
Famous Natives
Bernard Accama artist
Jan Adderman musician
Christijan Albers race car driver
Alexia of the Netherlands princess
Amber singer, songwriter
Elly Ameling concert singer
Louis Andriessen composer
Culture
Culture
lourishing from the 12th cent. onward, the earliest literature of the Low Countries displays a strong
French and somewhat weaker German influence in its vocabulary and literary style. Middle Dutch
literature shows the same general characteristics as the contemporary vernacular literatures; thus
the bourgeois spirit was expressed in the works of Jacob van Maerlant and in the Dutch versions of
Reynard the Fox. Hadewijch, John Ruysbroeck, and Gerard Groote spoke the language of mysticism.
By the 14th cent., chivalry and scholasticism had waned, and by the 15th cent. mysticism was
transformed as moral piety. Among the best-known of Dutch medieval dramas are Mary of Nimmegen
and the morality play Elckerlijk, closely related to Everyman.
The greatest Dutch figure of the Renaissance, Erasmus, wrote in Latin, but other humanists-Jan van
der Noot, Dirck Coornhert, Hendrick Spieghel, and the painter and poet Karel van Mander-used
vernacular. Reformation polemics were represented by the Catholic Anna Bijns, and the Protestant
Philip van Marnix. With the establishment of the republic and the subsequent commercial prosperity,
came the Golden Age of Dutch literature; this is the period of the masters Pieter Corneliszoon Hooft
and Joost van den Vondel, of the homely verse of Jacob Cats, of the comedies of Gerbrand Bredero,
and of the works of Constantijn Huygens.
After the 17th cent. Flemish and Dutch literature declined. Pieter Langendijk and Joseph Addison's
imitator Justus van Effen, the novelists Elisabeth Wolff and Agatha Deken, were the chief Dutch
writers in the 18th cent. In the 19th cent. Dutch and Flemish literature expanded on European lines,
with the novelists Jacob van Lennep, Anna Bosboom-Toussaint, Eduard Dekker, and the Belgian
Hendrik Conscience, and the poets Isaäc Da Costa, Hendrik Tollens, Everhardus Potgieter, and the
Belgians Guido Gezelle, Albrecht Rodenbach, Pol de Mont, and Nicolaas Beets.
The 1880s saw a reorientation of Dutch letters under foreign influence, especially under that of
French naturalism and the English poets Keats and Shelley. By 1900, impressionistic themes were
emerging in poetry. The new forces were seen in novelists and short-story writers, such as Louis
Couperus, and in the Belgians Stijn Streuvels and Felix Timmermans. Among the better-known poets
are Roland Holst, Pieter Boutens, and Herman Gorter in the Netherlands, and Karel van de Woestijne
in Belgium. The successful dramatist Herman Heijermans has a significant place in 20th-century
Dutch literature.
After the 1940s, the psychological novel came to typify Flemish literature. The physician Simon
Vestdijk, perhaps the greatest Dutch writer of the 20th cent., wrote psychological novels that
revealed the influence of existentialism. His contemporary Gerrit Achterberg explored similar themes
of life and death in his powerful poems. The diary of Anne Frank is only the best known of a vast
number of works that concern the Dutch experience during World War II. The character of Dutch
poetry was altered after the war when Lucebert (Lubertus Swaanswijk), whose work was related to
the internationalist CoBrA group, rejected rhyme and meter and introduced surrealist elements into
his verse. In fiction, the works of postwar Dutch writers such as Anna Blaman, Alfred Kossman, and
Adriaan Van der Veen reveal the influence of both the Nazi occupation and existentialism. Indeed, the
existentialist influence is found even in fictional works of the 1960s in which writers such as Willem
F. Hermans, Jan Wolkers, and Harry Mulisch express their overpowering sense of absurdity and
despair.
The Netherlands is a small country situated between Germany and the North sea. It is a very modern
country, whose achievements of civilization amaze the world.
The netherlands is also the most liberal country in today's world. There is no place for conservatism.
Liberalism is very important not only in economy, but also in society and culture.
The Netherlands is also a very beautiful country. There are not, however, any mountain landscapes, but in order to admire
wonderful architecture, it is enough to visit the first town on the way.