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The company was founded in 1703, when Izaak Enschedé registered with the Printers Guild in Haarlem. [2]Joh. Enschedé has long been associated with the printing of banknotes; the company printed the "Robin" (Dutch: Roodborstje), the very first Dutch banknote, in 1814. [3]
Enschede is situated at the south-east terminus of the Twentekanaal. There is also a network of bus lines connecting nearly every part of the city with the centre. Enschede also has bus connections to nearby towns and cities, like Hengelo, Oldenzaal and south towards Haaksbergen, Neede and Eibergen.
The Rijksmuseum Twenthe in Enschede, the Netherlands, was founded in 1927 by textile industry Baron Jan Bernard Van Heek.He donated his own private collection and the museum building to the government, thus making it a national museum.
The last part to Enschede was built and subsequently operated jointly with the Dortmund-Gronau-Enschede Railway Company (Dortmund-Gronau-Enscheder Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft, DGEE). The new line was opened on 30 September 1875 and the DGEE opened the last section of the Dortmund–Enschede railway between Coesfeld and Enschede on the same day. Two ...
The last section to Enschede in the Netherlands was built in cooperation with the KWE and opened on 15 October 1875 and subsequently operated jointly. With the opening of Duisburg–Quakenbrück railway by the Rhenish Railway Company four years later, Coesfeld station became an interchange station.
Enschede, a city in the east of the Netherlands; Royal Joh. Enschedé, a Dutch printing company of secure documents; Museum Enschedé; The following people carried the surname Enschedé: Izaak Enschedé (1681–1761), Dutch printer and founder of Royal Joh. Enschedé Father of Johannes Enschedé (1708-1780)
Enschede is the main railway station in Enschede, Netherlands. The station opened on 1 July 1866 and is on the Zutphen–Glanerbeek railway . Between the late 1970s and 2001, the passenger service to Germany stopped.
De Museumfabriek. De Museumfabriek (formerly Jannink Museum of Textiles and Social Life and TwentseWelle) is a museum in Enschede, Netherlands.The new museum is located partly in a renovated Jannink textile factory, in reference to Enschede's textile history, and partly in an adjourning new building designed by the Amsterdam-based firm SeARCH.