Museum Amstelkring
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Contrasting sharply with its surroundings in the shabbiest corner of the Red Light District, this lovely 17th-century house has a surprise in store. Concealed in its upper floors is a hidden church,Ons’ Lieve Heer op Solder(Our Dear Lord in the Attic), a rare, perfectly preserved example of the many clandestine churches that were built after the Alteration. Local Catholics worshipped here from 1663 to 1887, when nearby St Nicolaaskerk was built. Its little-changed interiors transport you back in time to the Dutch Golden Age.
More on Amsterdam’s churches More on the Dutch Golden Age
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1. The Building
The spout-gabled canal house was built in 1661 for Jan Hartman, a Catholic merchant. He combined its attic with the attics of two smaller houses behind to create the hidden church, which was extended in c.1735.
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2. The Front Parlour
This was the merchant’s shop, with the wood-floored office behind and a separate entrance for customers. The family and their guests entered though the porch into the dimlylit marble corridor.
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3. The Sael
Adhering to strict rules of proportion and symmetry, the family’s formal reception room(sael) is a superb example of the Dutch Classical style fashionable in the 17th century. It contrasts with the simpler Canal Room, which would not have been used to receive guests.
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4. The Chaplain’s Room
Formerly the servants’ quarters, the Chaplain’s Room is in a corner on a bend in the stairs. It’s a tiny, enclosed bedroom with a box bed, simply furnished as it would have been for the priest of the clandestine church, who lived in the house.
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5. The Clandestine Church
At the top of the stairs, the clandestine church(schuilkerk) proves a charming and highly unusual sight. In c.1735 it was remodelled in Baroque style, with the addition of two tiers of galleries, suspended from the roof by cast-iron rods, to provide extra seating.
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6. The Folding Pulpit
With space-saving in mind, the ingenious pulpit was designed to fold away under the left column of the altar when not in use. The altar painting isThe Baptism of Christ by Jacob de Wit (1695–1754).
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7. The Maria Chapel and Peat Room
The congregation kept warm with footwarmers fuelled by peat stored in this room above the Maria chapel, which now houses the church’s silver.
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8. The Confessional
In 1739, this living room in the middle of the three houses became the church’s confessional. One of the two wooden confessional boxes still remains.
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9. The Rear Houses
The rear houses were gradually taken over by the church, but there are still signs of their original use as family rooms.
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10. The Kitchen
Once part of the sacristan’s secret living quarters, the charming 17th-century kitchen has Delft wall tiles, an open hearth, stone sink and black-and-white floor.
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