New York. The Big Apple. The City That Never Sleeps.
It's one of the most famous city names on Earth. Recognizable in every language. Synonymous with ambition, skyscrapers, and yellow taxis.
But it almost wasn't.
For one brief, bizarre year in the 17th century, the greatest city in America was called something else entirely:
New Orange.
The Dutch Strike Back
Let's rewind to 1673.
New York - then called New Amsterdam - had been under English control since 1664, when they seized it from the Dutch in a bloodless takeover. They renamed it New York, after the Duke of York.
But the Dutch weren't done.
In August 1673, a Dutch fleet recaptured the city during the Third Anglo-Dutch War. They sailed into the harbor, forced the English to surrender, and raised their flag over the colony once more.
Now came the question: what to call it?
They couldn't go back to New Amsterdam - that was the old name, the pre-English name. This was a new Dutch conquest. It needed a new Dutch name.






