Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
In 2013, the paper was the second largest paid newspaper of the Netherlands after De Telegraaf. [8] After a merger with seven regional newspapers on 1 September 2005 and ongoing reduction in readership, it had an average circulation merger of 365,912 copies in 2014. [8] In 2017, it was down to 341,249 copies.
[2] On 6 July 2021, Dutch investigative journalist and crime reporter Peter R. de Vries was shot in the head after leaving the television studio of RTL Boulevard in Amsterdam, Netherlands. [3] The show's live broadcast of 9 July was cancelled due to concerns for an attack on the studio. [4] [5] The show of 10 July was cancelled by RTL Nederland ...
West Netherlands (West-Nederland) NL3 Utrecht: NL31 Utrecht: NL310 North Holland: NL32 Kop van North Holland NL321 Alkmaar and surroundings NL328 IJmond NL323 Haarlem agglomeration NL324 Zaanstreek: NL325 Greater Amsterdam: NL329 Het Gooi and Vechtstreek: NL327 South Holland: NL33 Leiden and Bollenstreek: NL337 The Hague: NL332 Delft and ...
Five former officeholders (Wim Kok, Dries van Agt, Piet de Jong, Ruud Lubbers and Jan Peter Balkenende) with then Prime Minister Mark Rutte, in July 2011The following is a list of prime ministers of the Netherlands since the inception of that office as a result of a revision of the Constitution of the Netherlands in 1848.
The prime minister of the Netherlands (Dutch: Minister-president van Nederland) is the head of the executive branch of the Government of the Netherlands. [2] [3] [4] Although the monarch is the de jure head of government, the prime minister de facto occupies this role as the officeholder chairs the Council of Ministers and coordinates its policy with the rest of the cabinet.
The minister of defence (Dutch: Minister van Defensie) is the head of the Ministry of Defence and a member of the Cabinet and the Council of Ministers.The incumbent minister is Ruben Brekelmans of the People's Party for Freedom and Democracy (VVD) party who has been in office since 2 July 2024.
The Canon of the Netherlands (Dutch: Canon van Nederland; also known as the Canon of Dutch History) is a list of fifty topics that aims to provide a chronological summary of Dutch history to be taught in primary schools and the first two years of secondary school in the Netherlands. [2] [3] The fifty topics are divided into fourteen sections.
The 8-bit RGB palettes (also known as 3-3-2 bit RGB) use 3 bits for each of the red and green color components, and 2 bits for the blue component, due to the lesser sensitivity of the common human eye to this primary color.