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This spring is the 400th anniversary of the founding of New York — or, to be precise, of the Dutch colony that became New York once the English took it over. That settlement gave rise to a city unencumbered by old ways and powered by pluralism and capitalism: the first modern city, you might say. Yes, New Netherland, the Dutch colony, and New Amsterdam, the city that became New York, created the conditions for New York’s ascent, and helped shape America as a place of tolerance, multiethnicity and free trade. But the Dutch also established slavery in the region and contributed to the removal of Native peoples from their lands. Efforts to commemorate the occasion have been slowed, in part, by controversy and confusion because we can’t agree on what our past means.
Organizations: New, York Historical Society Locations: New York, New Netherland, New Amsterdam, Independence
Opinion | What the Dutch Lost When They Lost Manhattan
  + stars: | 2024-02-14 | by ( Peter Coy | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Considering the diverging fortunes of the two islands since that year, this appears at first blush to be the worst deal in history for the Dutch, who formally gained Rhun and lost Manhattan. Likewise, the Dutch didn’t gain Rhun, because they had already seized it to tighten their ruthless monopoly of the nutmeg trade. The 1667 Treaty of Breda, which ended the Second Anglo-Dutch War (out of four), merely acknowledged the facts on the ground. On paper, the deal was even worse for the Dutch than if it had been only an island-for-island exchange. (A separate treaty allowed Dutch ships to carry some cargoes to England without tariffs.)
Persons: Let’s, , New Netherland Organizations: Times, Manhattan, British Locations: Rhun, Indonesia, Manhattan, New Amsterdam, Breda, New, Albany, Connecticut, Delaware, Caribbean, Suriname, South America, today’s Ghana, Dutch, England
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