Introduction
36km (23 miles) SW of Amsterdam; 20km (12 miles) NE of the Hague
Stately yet bustling, the old heart of Leiden is classic Dutch, and filled with handsome, gabled brick houses along canals spanned by graceful bridges. The Pilgrims lived here for 11 years before sailing to North America. Leiden's proudest homegrown moment came in 1574, when it became the only Dutch town to withstand a Spanish siege. This is also the birthplace of the Dutch tulip trade -- and of Rembrandt. The home of the oldest university in the Netherlands is here too, founded in 1575. With 14 museums, covering subjects ranging from antiquities, natural history, and anatomy to clay pipes and coins, Leiden seems perfectly justified in calling itself Holland's Museumstad (Museum City).
more local info-
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Rijksmuseum voor Volkenkunde (National Ethnography Museum)
Japan has pride of place in a museum that is the legacy of German-born Philipp Franz von Siebold. Between 1823 and 1830 von Siebold collected 5,000...
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Stedelijk Museum De Lakenhal
This fine 17th-century guildhall is now home to Leiden's municipal museum. Its collection of paintings by Dutch artists of the 16th and 17th centuries...
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- Museums
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Rijksmuseum van Oudheden (National Museum of Antiquities)
No visit to Leiden is complete without seeing this museum, the most comprehensive of its kind in the Netherlands. It opened in 1818, and over the...
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- Museums
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