It was day 38, our last day in Europe, and we'd arranged meet meet friends in
Amsterdam, for lunch. After a great lunch at what has become our
favourite little restaurant in Amsterdam, just off the
Museumplein, Darryl says, "Why don't we just pop over to Haarlem?" My reaction, "Yikes, we have to pack! We're leaving tomorrow."
So it was that Darryl, Gail, Hanne and I found ourselves in
Haarlem's Grote Markt. And, so it was that
Laurens Janszoon Coster became the subject of a postcard picture.
Imperceptible on this postcard is the letter "A" Coster is holding aloft. Why the "A"? Because Coster is the Netherlands' answer to
Johann Gutenberg. Initially, Haarlem claimed to have been the place where the printing press was invented. I think we can now confidently say that Gutenberg, in
Mainz, Germany, can claim that distinction.
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Statue of Laurens Janszoon Coster in the Grote Markt, Haarlem (2012-05-16) |