Leidsegracht
{{short description|Canal in Amsterdam}}
{{one source|date=December 2019}}
{{Infobox street
| name = Leidsegracht
| marker_image =
| image = File:Leidsegr.jpg
| image_size =
| caption = Leidsegracht
| image_map = Jordaan - Leidsegracht.svg
| map_caption = Location of Leidsegracht (dark blue)
| postal_code = 1016
| addresses =
| length = {{convert|.5|km}}
| length_ref =
| width =
| location = Amsterdam
| client =
| maint =
| coordinates = {{coord|52.366389|4.883611|display=it}}
| direction_a = East
| terminus_a = Herengracht
| terminus_b = Singelgracht
| junction =
| commissioning_date =
| construction_start_date = 17th century
| completion_date =
| inauguration_date =
| demolition_date =
| north =
| south =
| east =
| west =
}}
The Leidsegracht ({{IPA|nl|ˈlɛitsəˌɣrɑxt}}) is a canal in Amsterdam, Netherlands.
It is a cross-canal in Amsterdam-Center that connects Herengracht, Keizersgracht, Prinsengracht and Lijnbaansgracht and flows into the Singelgracht at Marnixstraat.
History
The Leidsegracht was part of the Expansion of Amsterdam and marked the border between the first and the second phase of the construction of the Grachtengordel (canal belt).
Between 1615 and 1658, the Leidsegracht was the southern boundary of the city.
The canal got its name in 1658 and is named after the city of Leiden.
Cornelis Lely (1854–1929), the hydraulic engineer, governor and minister who made the original plans for the reclamation of the Zuiderzee, was born on Leidsegracht no. 39.
He is depicted on a gable stone between the Zuiderzee and the new IJsselmeer.
Pieter Goemans was inspired to write the classic song Aan de Amsterdamse grachten (On the Amsterdam canals) in 1949 while walking across the bridge where the Prinsengracht and the Leidsegracht intersect.{{cite news|url=http://www.parool.nl/parool/nl/7024/AMSTERDAMS-LIJFLIED/article/detail/2872161/2011/09/07/Amsterdams-lijflied-7-rond-en-over-het-water.dhtml|title=Amsterdams lijflied 7: rond en over het water|date=7 September 2011|work=Het Parool|language=Dutch|accessdate=9 May 2013}}
Almost all canal houses and former warehouses on this canal are now houses.
File:Balthasar Florisz. van Berckenrode - Amsterdam (1625) 1-2.jpg|Map of Amsterdam by Balthasar van Berckenrode (1625). Shows Leidsegracht as the boundary of the buildings at the time, with the still short Prinsengracht (Prince Graft), ending at the Leidsegracht (top center).
File:George Hendrik Breitner, Afb 010104000078.jpg|Leidsegracht 2-22 c. 1904
File:Coincidences (8564001505).jpg |View of the canal
See also
Notes
{{notelist}}{{reflist|30em}}
{{Commons category|Leidsegracht, Amsterdam}}
Sources
{{refbegin}}
{{refend}}
External links
- [http://www.theobakker.net/pdf/verheling.pdf Die Verheelinghe; geschiedenis van de Leidsegracht e.o.], www.theobakker.net
{{authority control}}
{{Canals of Amsterdam}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Leidsegracht}}