REMBRANDT HOUSE, Jewish Quarter

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The area surrounding the Rembrandt House corresponds to what was once the Jewish neighborhood of Amsterdam.

The large number of Jews who had arrived in the Netherlands around 1580 was joined a few decades later by others from East-Central Europe, giving rise to a large community with a strong commercial spirit, open to the medical professions, publishing and, above all, the diamond industry. Rembrandt was in direct contact with many eminent members of the community, and this allowed him to form a particularly deep interpretation of the Old Testament; he also used models from the community to portray characters from the Holy Scriptures.

Amsterdam’s Jews suffered a dramatic fate during the Nazi occupation: out of a total of 140,000 living in the Netherlands before 1941, 80,000 of them in the capital, 107,000 were deported to extermination camps, and only 5,450 survived. This area is no longer a Jewish neighborhood, but the population had already begun to dwindle when many of the wealthier Jewish families had settled in the nearby Plantage residential neighborhood or in other parts of the city, although the places of worship remain in their original areas....

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