Fusilladeplaats Rozenoord

Fusilladeplaats Rozenoord is a World War II memorial in the Dutch city of Amsterdam.

'Rozenoord' was originally a rose garden, whose name was adopted during the 1930s by a teahouse by the Amsteldijk [nl], a dyke in Amsterdam.

Between 18 January and 14 April 1945, German occupation forces shot dead more than 100 Dutch civilians at Fusilladeplaats Rozenoord (at least that many have been identified, several of them resistance fighters).

The inscription on the memorial plaque reads:Op deze plaats werden in delaatste maanden van deTweede Wereldoorlog meer dan100 Nederlanders door de Duitsebezetter gefusilleerd An English translation:At this place, during the last months of the Second World War, the German occupiers shot dead more than 100 Dutch people.In 2014, Dutch artist and sculptor Ram Katzir [nl] designed another memorial (Monument Rozenoord [nl]) for Fusilladeplaats Rozenoord.

It consists of an arrangement of empty chairs on concrete plates with the names of the known victims.

The memorial plaque