Category
page 1New Netherland
Wilmington
seat of New Castle County, and largest city in Delaware, United States
New Netherland
17th-century Dutch colony on the East Coast of North America
Dutch West India Company
Dutch chartered company responsible for trade and colonization in the New World (1621–1792)
New Amsterdam
17th-century Dutch colonial settlement that became New York City
Sleepy Hollow
village in New York, United States
Flushing
neighborhood in Queens, New York City, United States
Beaver Wars
1609–1701 wars between Hurons and Iroquois
Block Island
island in Rhode Island, United States of America
Jamaica
neighborhood of Queens, New York City, United States

Hempstead
village in Nassau County, New York, United States
Dutch colonization of the Americas
Dutch colonies in the Americas
Kill Van Kull
tidal strait between Staten Island, New York and Bayonne, New Jersey, United States
Congregation Shearith Israel
synagogue in New York City
Jonkheer
' (female equivalent: '; in the masculine only; jonkvrouw is used in the feminine, even in French; ) is an honorific in the Low Countries denoting the lowest rank of the nobility. Currently in the Netherlands, jonkheer in general concerns a prefix used by the untitled nobility. In Belgium, this is the lowest title within the nobility system, recognised by the Court of Cassation. It is the cognate and equivalent of the German noble honorific , which was historically used throughout the German-speaking part of Europe, and to some extent also within Scandinavia.
Fort Christina
capital of New Sweden between 1638–1655
Kieft's War
conflict between the colonial province of New Netherland and the Wappinger and Lenape Indians in what is now New York and New Jersey.
Halve Maen
Henry Hudson ship
Willem Usselincx
Flemish merchant
Esopus Wars
two localized conflicts between Dutch settlers and the Esopus tribe of Lenape Indians during the latter half of the 17th century
Peach Tree War
conflict
Midwood
Brooklyn neighborhood
Director-General of New Netherland
Wikimedia list article

Zwaanendael Colony
colonial settlement in present-day Delaware, United States of America
Onrust
thumb|upright|New Netherland as charted by Block in 1614
The Onrust (; ) was a Dutch ship built by Adriaen Block and the crew of the Tyger, which had been destroyed by fire in the winter of 1613. The Onrust was the first ship to be built in what is now New York State, and the first fur trading vessel built in America. The construction took four months in the winter of 1614 somewhere in New York Bay. Help from the local Native population is surmised based on the relationship developed by Jon Rodriquez, left on the island during a previous voyage. The Onrust was 44.5 feet long and capable of car
Old Dutch Church of Sleepy Hollow
church in Sleepy Hollow, New York
Fort Casimir
17th-century Dutch fort in Delaware
Acadia
Acadia (; ) was a colony of New France in northeastern North America which included parts of what are now the Maritime provinces and the Gaspé Peninsula in Eastern Canada, and the U.S. state of Maine to the Kennebec River. Settlers primarily came from what is now known as Nouvelle-Aquitaine, a southwestern region of France, specifically from Poitou-Charentes, the Aquitaine region, as well as Poitou and Anjou. The territory was originally inhabited by various First Nations of the Wabanaki Confederacy who referred to the region as Dawnland.
Dutch Island
island in Newport County, Rhode Island, United States
patroon
thumb | right|Charter of Freedoms and Exemptions (Dutch West India Company) 1630
In the United States, a patroon (; from Dutch patroon ) was a landholder with manorial rights to large tracts of land in the 17th-century Dutch colony of New Netherland on the east coast of North America. Through the Charter of Freedoms and Exemptions of 1629, the Dutch West India Company first started to grant this title and land to some of its invested members. These inducements to foster colonization and settlement (also known as the "Rights and Exemptions") are the basis for the patroon system. By the end of t
Flushing Remonstrance
demand for religious liberty made to Peter Stuyvesant, the Governor of the Dutch colony of New Netherland, in 1657