The answer is New York.
The Dutch colony of New Amsterdam became the English colony of New York.
The Dutch called this colony New Amsterdam.
That would have been New Amsterdam. Established by the Dutch on what is now Manhatten. The English renamed it New York.
New Amsterdam.
The Dutch sold their colony of New Amsterdam to the English, and this colony eventually became New York.
The Dutch. The city was named after their own capital Amsterdam: New Amsterdam.
There is some strange English in your question, but New York started out as New Amsterdam, a colony and trading post established by the Dutch.
King Charles and then gave the Netherlands to his brother the Duke of York who then renamed it New York
New Amsterdam was a 17th-century Dutch colony established on the southern tip of Manhattan Island, primarily as a trading post. It served as the capital of the Dutch colony of New Netherland, which was focused on fur trading and agriculture. In 1664, the English seized control of the colony and renamed it New York, after the Duke of York. Today, New Amsterdam is recognized as the historical foundation of modern New York City.
New Amsterdam was a DUTCH colony. founded by Petert Stuyvesant. Subsequently it became New York.
Originally New Amsterdam a Dutch Colony it became the English Colony of New York.
New Netherlands is the name of the colony the Dutch established in the New World. It's primary city and default capital was New Amsterdam, which was directly assaulted by the British. The defeat at New Amsterdam forced the Dutch to evacuate any and all colonies in North America.