Beauty
The plethora of canals surrounding the central city district with its more than 1,500 architectural monuments are included in the UNESCO World Heritage List and date largely from the 17th-century gold for the Netherlands. Why do they call it "golden"? Thanks to its seafarers from a small fishing village as it was when it was founded in the late 12th century, Amsterdam and the whole of Holland became the world's busiest harbour, trading the most remote points of the geographic map. Trade pushes forward the development of the city in all other spheres - science, culture, art. Formed as a global financial centre, Amsterdam leaves important traces in the economic history of mankind. There have been born a number of prototypes of today's known concepts, such as the Central Bank, as the Bank of Amsterdam, the Stock Exchange (if not at times, it was certainly a leader), the first multinational - the Dutch East India Company. Well, the strenuous development and use of the new financial instruments inevitably gives rise to the first closest to today's speculative "balloons" and crises - just to remember the lameness, but this is another topic. Floating Flower Market (Blumenmarkt). Just from the tulip-traffic, we move on to the other emblematic Amsterdam attraction - the floating colour market on the Single Canal. As is well known, flowers and the Netherlands are inextricably linked and this is evident everywhere in Amsterdam and its beautiful colourful pavilions, where you can choose from an unprecedented number of varieties of tulips and other flowers, bulbs and seeds. If you happen to be in Amsterdam in the spring and have a good time, go to the town of Lises about 35 km and the incredible Kökkenhof garden called the Dutch Flower Garden. It is only open during the two months when the tulips bloom, whose number is ... about four and a half million! If you do not have the time to organize a trip outside the city, you can go to Horus Botanica’s - one of the oldest botanical gardens in the world, founded in 1632. After exploring over 6,000 species of plants grown