Appingedam is a city and former municipality in the northeastern Netherlands. Although there is no certainty as to the exact age of Appingedam, historical research demonstrates that the place in which the city would eventually be built had been inhabited for over a millennium. Specifically, the area in which the earliest traces of human settlements have been reported is the Wierde, a quarter located in the northern part of the city centre. Today, a narrow, winding street by the same name runs along the waterfront as a living testimony to the times gone by. The characteristic landmarks of the old Wierde are still recognisable today: the historical East-West Canal, called “Diep,” dug to the south of the Wierde, diked on both sides, still defines the unique layout of the downtown Appingedam.
Nicholas Church (left) and renaissance town hall (right) in Appingedam
The hanging kitchens over the Damsterdiep
This monument to 78 Jews killed at the Auschwitz and Sobibor concentration camps stands in front of the former Synagogue (Appingedam) [nl] at Broerstraat 6
Railway station Appingedam
Aurich is a town in the East Frisian region of Lower Saxony, Germany. It is the capital of the district of Aurich and is the second largest City in East Frisia, both in population, after Emden, and in area, after Wittmund.
Pedestrian zone in Aurich
Ellen Frank, 1938