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DELFT , a See also: town of See also: Holland in the province of
See also: South Holland, on the Schie, 5 M. by See also: rail S.E. by S. of the Hague, with which it is also connected by steam-See also: tramway
.
Pop
.
(1900) 31,582
.
It is a quiet, typically Dutch town, with its old brick houses and See also: tree-bordered canals
.
The Prinsenhof, previously a monastery, was converted into a residence for the See also: counts of Orange in 1575; it was here that See also: William the Silent was assassinated
.
It is now used as a William of Orange Museum
.
The New
See also: Church, formerly the church of St
See also: Ursula (14th century), is the See also: burial place of the princes of Orange
.
It is remarkable for its See also: fine tower and See also: chime of bells, and contains the splendid allegorical monument of William the Silent, executed by Hendrik de Keyser and his son Pieter about 1621, and the See also: tomb of Hugo See also: Grotius, See also: born in Delft in 1583, whose statue, erected in 1886, stands in the market-place outside the church
.
The Old Church, founded in the 11th century, but in its See also: present See also: form dating from 1476, contains the monuments of two famous admirals of the 1.7th century, See also: Martin
See also: van See also: Tromp and Piet Hein, as well as the tomb of the naturalist Leeuwenhoek, born at Delft in 1632
.
In the town See also: hall (1618) are some corporation pictures, portraits of the counts of Orange and
See also: Nassau, including several by Michiel van Mierevelt (1567-1641), one of the earliest Dutch portrait painters, and with his son Pieter (1'595-1623), a native of Delft
.
There are also a See also: Roman Catholic church (1882) and a synagogue
.
Two important educational establishments are the See also: Indian
See also: DELHI
Institute for the See also: education of See also: civil service students for the colonies, to which is attached an ethnographical museum; and the Royal Polytechnic school, which almost ranks as a university, and teaches, among other sciences, that of diking
.
A fine collection of See also: mechanical See also: models is connected with the polytechnic school
.
Among other buildings are the See also: modern " See also: Phoenix " See also: club-See also: house of the students; the hospital, containing some anatomical pictures, including one by the two Mierevelts (1617); a lunatic See also: asylum; the Van Renswoude orphanage, the theatre, a school of design, the powder See also: magazine and the See also: state See also: arsenal, originally a warehouse of the See also: East See also: India See also: Company, and now used as a manufactory of artillery stores
.
The name of Delft is most intimately associated with the manufacture of the beautiful See also: faience pottery for which it was once famous
.
(See CERAMICS.) This industry was imported from See also: Haarlem towards the end of the 16th century, and achieved an unrivalled position in the second See also: half of the following century; but it did not survive the French occupation at the end of the 18th century
.
It has, however, been revived in modern times under the name of " New Delft." Other branches of industry are See also: carpet-See also: weaving, distilling, oil and oil-cake manufacture, dyeing, See also: cooperage and the manufacture of arms and bullets
.
There is also an important butter and
See also: cheese market
.
Delft was founded in 1075 by Godfrey III., duke of See also: Lower See also: Lorraine, after his See also: conquest of Holland, and came subsequently into the hands of the counts of Holland
.
In 1246 it received a charter from Count William II
.
(see C
.
Hegel, Skate und Gilden, ii
.
251)
.
In 1536 it was almost totally destroyed by fire, and in 1654 largely ruined by the See also: explosion of a powder magazine
.
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