University. AMSTERDAM. 43. Route. 3¢0 Since 4808 (comp. p. 372) the old Court of Admiralty, in the Oudezyds-Voorburgwal, has served as a Town Hall (Raadhuis, Pl. D, 3; adm., see p. 367). The vestibule and the council-hall contain some paintings by Corn. Anthoniss (corporation-piece, 1538), Nic. Elias, J. Backer, and others; in the purgomaster’s room (seldom accessible) is a *Corporation-piece by F. Bol. The municipal University (Pl. E, 4), which originated in the Atheneum Illustre founded in 1632 and received its present or- ganization in 1877, has four faculties with over 56 professors, 36 lecturers and readers, and about 1000 students. It occupies an old Oudemannenhuis (alms-house), built in 1754, and is entered from the passage between the Oudezyds-Voorburgwal and the Kloveniers-Burgwal. The senate-hall is adorned with portraits of eminent scholars, some of the earlier of which are by Mierevelt and Lievens and some of the later by Ther. Schwartse, Jan Veth, and Josselin de Jongh. In addition to the municipal university there is a Free University also, foun in 1880 on a reformed evangelical basis; it has 16 professors and is supported by bequests and voluntary subscriptions. b. East Quarters of the Town. Tramways to the Zoological Garden, see Nos. 9 & 10 on p. 865. The Waterloo-Plein and the Jonas Daniel Meyer- Plein (Pl. E, F, 3) are im- portant junctions. The district to the E. of the Zwanen-Burgwal, bounded on the by the Binnen-Amstel and on the N. by the Houtkoopers-Burg- (P1. B, F, 3, 4), is the old Jewish Quarter, which is still almost exclusively occupied by Jews. The most interesting times for a visit are Frid. evening, 1 hr. before the beginning of the Sabbath, Sat. evening after sunset, and Sun, after 10am. The Jews of Amsterdam possess ten Synagogues. The largest are the High German Synagogue (Pl. 15; F, 4), in the Nieuwe Amstel-Straat, and the synagogue of the Portuguese Jews (Pl. 16; F, 3), in the Muider- Straat, erected in 1670 by Dorsman. ‘The latter, said to be an imitation of the Temple of Solomon, possesses a large number of costly vessels (adm. on application to the sacristan), The persecution of the Jews in Spain during the 14th and 45th cent., in Portugal a little later, and finally also in the Spanish Netherlands, drove many of them to seek an asylum at Amsterdam, where they enjoyed com- plete religious toleration, though civil rights were not granted to them until 1796. Many German and Polish Jews also, in order to escape from the persecutions to which they were subjected in their own countries, flocked to Amsterdam, which they regarded almost as a second Jerusalem. The wealth of the Jewish community was such as to render it one of the most influential in the city. In the numerous dissensions between the States General and the Stadt- holders, the Jews always took the part of the latter. i en er