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Holland is one of the most popular countries in western Europe for tourists.
Its convenient location and excellent connections with neighboring countries makes it an attractive holiday destination for 5 million tourists every
year. Anyone interested in history or culture will enjoy visiting any
one of the 600 Dutch museums which house collections ranging from
17th century paintings to toys, skates, clocks, money boxes, ceramics
in Utrecht The most famous are
the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam
with its collection of important paintings by Rembrandt, the Vincent van
Gogh Museum in Amsterdam,
the Mauritshuis in The
Hague and Het Loo Palace in Apeldoorn.
The Open Air Museums in Enkhuizen and Arnhem
are also extremely popular. They contain buildings such as farmhouses,
cottages and industrial premises which have been transported to the
new site brick by brick, together with permanent exhibitions depicting
the Dutch way of life in previous centuries. The Netherlands
has much to offer by way of contemporary art, for example the Stedelijk
Museum in Amsterdam,
the Van Abbemuseum in Eindhoven
and the Kröller Müller in Otterlo (near Arnhem).
Numerous art galleries mount exhibitions of the latest developments in
the art world. Each of the Dutch towns and cities has its own distinctive
character. Amsterdam
with its canals, bridges and 17th century houses attracts millions of
visitors every year. In the summer months, people enjoy relaxing and meeting
friends at the many pavement cafés, in winter they are to be found in
the numerous restaurants and bars. The
Hague and Rotterdam are
equally distinctive and remarkably dissimilar. The
Hague is the official residence of Queen Beatrix. It is also the home
of parliament and government ministries, a city of promenades, shopping
arcades and parks, only a few minutes from the seaside resort of Scheveningen.
Rotterdam is primarily famous
as a port. Delfshaven is the ancient heart of the city with the pilgrim's
church dating from 1641. The new city center with its ultra-modern, sometimes
futuristic architecture, testifies to the enormous effort put into
rebuilding the city after the Second World War.
Another aspect why tourists visit Holland
is because of its flowers The flower season begins in March and ends in
September. But visitors can enjoys flowers in Holland
all the year round. For example the Kerstflora (X-mas Flora) Show held
every year in December is a five day show of house plants and flowers
grown under glass. Aalsmeer, close to Amsterdam,
is the home of the world biggest flower auction. The bulb fields are in
bloom from the end of March to the end of May, depending on the weather.
Millions of tulips daffodils and hyacinths in countless varieties cover
the polders of South Holland. Even when spring is over, Holland
is still a garden. Many foreigners think of Holland
as a flat country of windmills and water where everyone wear clogs. But
that is only part of the total picture. There are still a thousand or
so windmills to be seen and many people in country areas do indeed still
wear clogs. But Holland is first
and foremost a modern country with extensive facilities for recreation
and tourism, and excellent conference facilities and hotel
accommodation for international meetings.
More information about Holland surf to www.holland.nl
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