The hereafter following has been pronounced on the symposium 'Holland at its Highest' organized by the Section Architecture and Town-planning of the Royal Antiquarian Society of the Netherlands. 'As you all know the title of this symposium is a paraphrase on the title of one of the most legendary publications from the Dutch history of art: 'Holland and its Narrowest'. The author Victor Eugène Louis de Stuers not only was a historian of art and publicist but also a caricaturist. Denouncing the decay and neglect of Dutch monuments in 1873 he described both municipality and church government as 'boundless vandals' responsible for the 'corrosive cancer' with which he meant the decay of our cultural heritage. The major part of the people consist...
The foreign relations of the historiography of architecture in both the Netherlands and other countr...
In the Netherlands a lot of matters are made subordinate to economic interests and the urge for econ...
For some time now the Royal Antiquarian Society of the Netherlands follows with great concern the la...
The hereafter following has been pronounced on the symposium 'Holland at its Highest' organized by t...
In the icily cold night of February 12, 1929 the greater part of the Town Hall in Leiden was reduced...
The Dutch city planning hardly has any relations with the historical and architectural structure of ...
The hereafter following is abstract of the discourse held by Prof. dr. ir. C. L. Temminck Groll in h...
The Dutch Monuments and Historic Buildings Act dates from 1961. Naturally, the Act was primarily int...
Until recently, by Royal Decree (KB) of 7 July 1903, work still proceeded on the ‘Geïllustreerde Bes...
In Dutch history of architecture the first half of the eighteenth century is sometimes defined as th...
In October 2007 Minister of Culture Plasterk presented a list of 100 'top listed buildings' from the...
The article provides insight into the phenomenon of the ‘traditional Dutch room’ as an icon of the D...
With the publication of the twelfth and last part in July 2006 the series ‘Monumenten in Nederland’ ...
The article provides insight into the phenomenon of the ‘traditional Dutch room’ as an icon of the D...
In the seventies of the twentieth century architectural history was still chiefly an elitist academi...
The foreign relations of the historiography of architecture in both the Netherlands and other countr...
In the Netherlands a lot of matters are made subordinate to economic interests and the urge for econ...
For some time now the Royal Antiquarian Society of the Netherlands follows with great concern the la...
The hereafter following has been pronounced on the symposium 'Holland at its Highest' organized by t...
In the icily cold night of February 12, 1929 the greater part of the Town Hall in Leiden was reduced...
The Dutch city planning hardly has any relations with the historical and architectural structure of ...
The hereafter following is abstract of the discourse held by Prof. dr. ir. C. L. Temminck Groll in h...
The Dutch Monuments and Historic Buildings Act dates from 1961. Naturally, the Act was primarily int...
Until recently, by Royal Decree (KB) of 7 July 1903, work still proceeded on the ‘Geïllustreerde Bes...
In Dutch history of architecture the first half of the eighteenth century is sometimes defined as th...
In October 2007 Minister of Culture Plasterk presented a list of 100 'top listed buildings' from the...
The article provides insight into the phenomenon of the ‘traditional Dutch room’ as an icon of the D...
With the publication of the twelfth and last part in July 2006 the series ‘Monumenten in Nederland’ ...
The article provides insight into the phenomenon of the ‘traditional Dutch room’ as an icon of the D...
In the seventies of the twentieth century architectural history was still chiefly an elitist academi...
The foreign relations of the historiography of architecture in both the Netherlands and other countr...
In the Netherlands a lot of matters are made subordinate to economic interests and the urge for econ...
For some time now the Royal Antiquarian Society of the Netherlands follows with great concern the la...