Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
Zadkine's monument "The Destroyed City" in Rotterdam.
Zadkine's monument "The Destroyed City" in Rotterdam. - Credit: F.Eveleens / Wikimedia - License: All Rights Reserved
Culture
bombing of 1940
Rotterdam
World War II
surrender
monument
commemmoration
Zadkine's sculpture The Destroyed City
Rotterdam mayor Ahmed Aboutaleb
Sunday, 14 May 2023 - 17:30

Share this article:

Rotterdam commemorates the bombing of 1940, nearly 900 people were killed

Dozens of people attended a memorial ceremony in Rotterdam on Sunday afternoon to commemorate the bombing 83 years ago on May 14,1940. On Plein 1940 near Zadkine's sculpture The Destroyed City, Mayor Ahmed Aboutaleb laid a wreath.

Aboutaleb stated that Rotterdam reinvented itself after the bombing and that the city will always do one thing, tell the story of the bombing of Rotterdam. He referred to the war that is now raging in Ukraine, that there, too, will come a time when "the weapons finally rest" and Ukrainians must rise again. "In this city we know better than anyone else how that feels and what it takes to do that," the mayor stressed.

Throughout Rotterdam there were Sunday gatherings, laying of wreaths, music, poems and moments of silence. During the commemoration on Plein 1940, two minutes of silence were held at 1:27 p.m. After that, bells rang throughout the city. On May 14,1940, at that time, German bombers destroyed almost the entire city center in less than fifteen minutes. Nearly 900 people lost their lives and 80,000 citizens were left homeless. The attack marked the capitulation of the Netherlands.

#OTD 14 may 1940 at 1:30PM local time, German bombers dropped 1,400 bombs on the Dutch city of Rotterdam, destroying the entire historical centre and killing ~1,000 civilians. #WWII pic.twitter.com/osh8O1jvLQ

— Pawel Sanders #OTD (@changnoi2018) May 14, 2023

In the morning was also the annual commemoration on the Statenweg near number 147. That is the spot where in 1940 the German ultimatum "surrender or the city will be destroyed" was delivered. Not much later the bombing of Rotterdam followed.

Reporting by ANP

More like this

Image
Amsterdam canal
Concerns over municipalities relaxing rules for placing solar panels
Image
A memorial in the Westerbork transit camp
Persecution of Roma and Sinti commemorated in Camp Westerbork
Image
Wim T. Schippers creating his peanut butter floor artwork
Peanut butter floor returns to Rotterdam museum as tribute to Wim T. Schippers
Image
Mosque in the Netherlands
Islamic groups ask for protection for mosques after multiple vandalisms, hate letters
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Dutch parliament resolves internal dispute with former Speaker after mediation
  • Dutch regulator rejects claims Tesla misled regulators on self-driving safety data
  • Suspects in Amsterdam explosion officially investigated for planning ATM bombings
  • Amsterdam tells city stats agency to stop polling voter sentiment, election forecasts
  • Netherlands announces €500 million military aid package for Ukraine

Top stories

  • VU students sentenced for assault, discriminatory remarks after Nazi song dispute
  • Dutch FM: Europe must quickly reduce reliance on U.S. military by 2030
  • Solvinity, company behind DigiD, appeals against government ban on U.S. takeover
  • Utrecht dethrones Noord-Holland as province with highest property values; Up 10.3% in NL
  • Dutch courts give harsher punishments to poorer people, study finds

© 2012-2026, NL Times, All rights reserved.

Footer menu

  • Change Privacy Settings
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Partner Content