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Maassluis
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==History== [[Image:Maassluis 1867.png|thumb|left|Maassluis in 1867.]] Maassluis was founded circa 1340 as a settlement next to a [[lock (water transport)|lock]] (in Dutch: ''sluis'') in the sea barrier between the [[North Sea]] and [[Rotterdam]]. Originally ''Maeslandsluys'', it was part of [[Maasland|Maesland]]. In 1489 the settlement was sacked. During the [[Eighty Years' War]], [[Philips of Marnix, lord of Sint-Aldegonde]], started to build a defense wall but before its completion, the Spanish captured it in 1573<ref>{{cite EB1911 |wstitle=Maassluis |volume=17 |page=188}}</ref> and Philips of Marnix was taken prisoner. A year later Maeslandsluys was looted by [[mutiny|mutinous]] Spanish troops. On 16 May 1614, Maeslandsluys was separated from Maesland by the counts of Holland and renamed Maassluis. This separation may have been religiously motivated: Maassluis was predominantly Protestant and Maasland Catholic. In 1624 the defense wall was demolished to make way for the Great Church, started in 1629. Construction stopped for five years because privateers from Dunkirk raided fishing boats from Maassluis, throwing their crew overboard. It was finished in 1639. On 4 December 1732, the Garrels Organ was inaugurated. Built from 1730 to 1732 by Rudolf Garrels, a pupil of [[Arp Schnitger]], it was a gift by Govert van Wijn, ship-owner from Maassluis.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://home.planet.nl/~vdkolkm/orgel-en.html|title=The Organ of the Great church of Maassluis}}</ref> In 1811 [[Napoleon Bonaparte]] granted [[town rights]]. During World War II, the working population was transferred to Germany for the war industry. Maassluis' ancient church was hit by allied bombers. [[Image:Gem-Maassluis-OpenTopo.jpg|275px|thumb|''Dutch Topographic map of Maassluis, June 2015'']] [[Image:Maassluis Panorama 4.JPG|275px|thumb|Church: de Grote Kerk]] ===Jewish history=== {{Unreferenced section|date=December 2012}} The Jewish community had its own synagogue, a teacher, a singer and a ritual butcher. Its most common professions were salesman, street trader and butcher. The economy was vulnerable and community growth ended with the industrial revolution. The area became easier to reach and competition became too much. The number of Jews fell from 92 to eight between 1892 and 1930. A cause was the building of a railway in 1881 between Maassluis and Rotterdam. Most Jewish traders moved to Rotterdam, The Hague and Amsterdam, which in the last decade of the 19th century had a growing Jewish population. Integration in Maassluis ended during the Second World War. The Coltof and Van Gelderen families were deported in 1942 and murdered in Auschwitz.
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