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Location: Heilige Geestkerkhof 25 |
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The Nieuwe Kerk ('new church') was Delft's second parish church, and until the Reformation was called St. Ursula. Early in the 80-Years War it was confiscated by the protestants. The choir is now the mausoleum of the family of Oranje-Nassau, the current royal family, with graves of all Oranges starting with prince Willem I. Location: Markt 80
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The late-Gothic chapel of the former St. Barbaraconvent was built in 1417 and was lengthened later that century. Location : behind Oude Delft 55
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St.-Hippolytuskapel is the name given in 1972 to the chapel of the house of the Sisters of the Holy Spirit, when it returned in Catholic hands after centuries of other uses. It was built ca. 1400. The building underwent several rather imaginative restorations in 1910 and 1924, but the brickwork tower is still original. Location: Oude Delft 118
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The Lutheran church has been used as such since 1764, but the building dates from the second half of the 15th century, and was in 1647 partly turned into a home for the mentally ill. Location: Noordeinde 4a
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The Maria van Jessekerk is a neo-Gothic Roman Catholic church built from 1874 until 1882. It received its current name in 1972, and was named St. Jozef until then. Architect was E.J. Margry, a pupil of P.J.H. Cuypers. Note that the two towers are different, probably an influence from Margry's former tutor. Location: Burgwal 22
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The St. Nicolaas en Gezellen is a big centralizing church, designed by j. van gila and built in 1908-1910. It is in neo-Romanesque style, with influences of Byzantine architecture. Location: Raamstraat 74
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