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Photography
Related: About this forumA few photos from my recent trip to the Netherlands
Canal
Commemorative brass plaque
Scattered throughout Europe, planted in city streets and sidewalks, commemorative brass plaques eternalize the lives that were lost in the Holocaust. Called the Stolpersteine (in English: stumbling stones), the plaques commemorate the victims of the Nazi regime.
Caucasian Wingnut in the garden of the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam
Wager Cup - circa 1625, Silver
The tiny archer (a Roman Soldier) can spin around, keeping his balance by means of the semicircular metal rid with a bird bird on both ends. The empty cup was probably placed on the table among the guests. The archer was spun and when he stopped, his arrow pointed to the person who had to give the first toast.

Solly Mack
(95,493 posts)Callalily
(15,180 posts)ChazInAz
(2,945 posts)Loved the Netherlands.
The Stolpersteiner stopped me dead in my tracks on one of my perambulations. I quite literally stumbled to a stop when I read some of the plaques in a Jewish neighborhood, and tears filled my eyes. Took me a while to get going again.
Budapest's shoe monumental had the same effect.
Callalily
(15,180 posts)Diamond_Dog
(38,125 posts)I wonder if they skate on the canals in the winter.
Callalily
(15,180 posts)anciano
(1,929 posts)Thank you for sharing them.
Callalily
(15,180 posts)Grumpy Old Guy
(4,042 posts)Callalily
(15,180 posts)Jeebo
(2,510 posts)The last time I was there was April 2007. That whole country is literally picture-postcard pretty, and these pictures show it. I spent most of one day at the Rijksmuseum, and I spent many hours wandering around the canal streets in Amsterdam. In all of my trips there but one, I stayed in a canal house that I found on a bed-and-breakfast site on the internet that was built in 1602, as I recall. That house itself is a fascinating place. Was your canal picture in Amsterdam? It looks like it was. I would love to visit Amsterdam again, but I'm afraid I'm just too old and frail now to be doing that kind of traveling.
-- Ron
Callalily
(15,180 posts)CaliforniaPeggy
(154,868 posts)Ive never been there but I wish I couldve.
These are all great. Thanks for sharing them.
Callalily
(15,180 posts)LearnedHand
(4,944 posts)In Norwegian they're called "snublesteiner." The specific commemoration is the snublestein marks the last spot the person stood freely before being carted off to the camps or murdered outright.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stolperstein
Callalily
(15,180 posts)LoisB
(11,437 posts)Callalily
(15,180 posts)eppur_se_muova
(39,758 posts)Where's the red hat ?