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A Dutch passport, one of the travel documents for Dutch citizens. Visa requirements for Dutch citizens are administrative entry restrictions by the authorities of other states placed on citizens of the Netherlands, the joint nationality of the four countries within the Kingdom of the Netherlands.
This article contains a list of diplomatic missions in the Netherlands. There are currently 110 embassies in The Hague; many countries maintain consulates in other Dutch cities, notably Amsterdam and Rotterdam. Honorary consulates are not included in the list. Map of diplomatic missions in the Netherlands
The Embassy of the Netherlands in Washington, D.C., is the Kingdom of the Netherlands' diplomatic mission to the United States, located at 4200 Linnean Avenue, N.W., Washington, D.C. [1] [2] The Netherlands operates Consulates-General in Atlanta, Chicago, Miami, New York and San Francisco. Residence of the Ambassador of the Netherlands
The embassy participates in Study & Go Abroad fairs in Canada and works on increasing academic partnerships between Canadian and Dutch universities and higher education schools. The consular section of the embassy is open three days per week, but can only be visited by appointment via an online booking system. [1]
Honorary Consulate 800 Wilcrest, 340 Westchase Bangladesh: Consulate-General 35 N Wynden Dr Uptown Barbados: Honorary Consulate 3027 Sleepy Hallow Dr Sugar Land Belgium: Honorary Consulate 2009 Lubbock St Sixth Ward Belize: Consulate-General 7101 Breen Dr Spring Branch Bolivia: Consulate-General 2401 Fountain View Drive, Suite 110 Uptown Botswana
The United States diplomatic mission to the Netherlands consists of the embassy located in The Hague and a consular office located in Amsterdam. In 1782, John Adams was appointed America's first Minister Plenipotentiary to Holland .
Brun was succeeded by the Dutch merchant Antonie Veldkamp in 1883 and by the local Euro-African Jacob Abraham de Veer in 1887. [3] De Veer was the last honorary consul based in Elmina. In 1895, the consulate moved to Cape Coast, and in 1923 to Accra. In 1961, after Ghana became an independent country, the consulate was upgraded to an embassy. [4]
The chancery of the Philippine Embassy in The Hague was designed by architect Jan Hendrik van Sluijters, and built between 1871 and 1872. [7]Purchased by the Philippine government in 1968 during the ambassadorship of Delfin R. Garcia, the three-story French eclectic-style townhouse along Laan Copes van Cattenburch has 13 rooms, a basement and a parking area in the rear. [7]