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Deventer

City and municipality in Overijssel, Netherlands

This article is about the city in the Netherlands. For the unincorporated community in the United States, see Deventer, Missouri.

City and municipality in Overijssel, Netherlands

Deventer (Dutch:[ˈdeːvəntər]; Sallands: Daeventer) is a city and municipality in the Salland historical region of the province of Overijssel, Netherlands. In the municipality of Deventer had a population of , The city is largely situated on the east bank of the river IJssel, but it also has a small part of its territory on the west bank. In the municipality of Bathmen (with a population of about 5, people) was merged with Deventer as part of a national effort to reduce bureaucracy in the country .

Deventer is one of the oldest cities in the Netherlands.[4] The place is mentioned in 9th-century sources from the Diocese of Utrecht. A charter from AD mentions seven farmsteads in Daventre portu[5] (the Deventer harbor). In AD, Deventer is mentioned as a city in a gift certificate from King Otto I.[6] After the place had acquired more and more rights and privileges over time, it received the municipal lands from Emperor Henry V in This is considered by historians to be the moment of Deventer obtaining the city rights by the inhabitants.[7] The city has the oldest stone house, the oldest walking park and with the Athenaeum library also the oldest scientific library in the Netherlands.

History[edit]

Foundation and development in the Middle Ages[edit]

Deventer was probably founded around AD by the EnglishmissionaryLebuinus, who built a wooden church on the east bank of the river IJssel. In January AD the sack and burning of this church by a Saxon expedition was the cause for the first punitive war waged by Charlemagne to the Saxons, in which, in retribution, the Irminsul (the Saxon sacred tree, probably near modern Paderborn) was destroyed. This was not the first human settlement at the location; between and , remains of a late Roman Iron Age settlement (dated to c AD) were excavated at Colmschate, 4&#;km east of the current city

The village of Deventer, already important because of a trading road crossing the river IJssel, was looted and burnt down by the Vikings in It was immediately rebuilt and fortified with an earthen wall (in the street Stenen Wal remains of this wall have been excavated and restored).

Deventer received city rights in , after which fortifications were built or replaced by stone walls around the city for defense. Between and , Deventer grew to be a flourishing trade city because of its harbour on the river IJssel, which was capable of accommodating large ships. The city eventually joined the Hanseatic League.

One of the commodities it traded in, dried haddock and cod from Norway, gave the citizens the nickname they carry to this day: "Deventer Stokvis". In the 15th century, Deventer had a common mint, where coins for the three IJssel cities Deventer, Zwolle, and Kampen were made.

Deventer is the birthplace of Geert Groote and home to his Brethren of the Common Life, a school of religious thought that influenced Thomas a Kempis and Erasmus in later times. Together with Haarlem it was among the first cities to have printing presses, dating back to as early as From around , it also housed a Latin School, which became internationally renowned, and remained in service in changing forms until Its most well-known student was the scholar Desiderius Erasmus, who was born in and attended the school from to

16th–18th centuries[edit]

Between and , the volume of water flowing through the IJssel decreased, decreasing the importance of Deventer's harbour. The competition with trade centres in Holland, as well as the religious war between and , brought a decline in the city's economy.

In the 18th century, the iron industry came to Deventer. East of the town, so-called "oer", riversand containing iron, was found as early as From this material, ore was produced and brought to town. The main road of the villages Okkenbroek, Lettele and Schalkhaar is still named Oerdijk (Ore Dyke).

Modern times[edit]

In the 19th century, Deventer became an industrial town. Bicycles (Burgers), carpets (Koninklijke Deventer Tapijtfabriek), tins and cans for food and drinks (Thomassen & Drijver), cigars (Horst & Maas en Bijdendijk & Ten Hove), foundry and heavy machinery (Nering Bögel), and textiles (Ankersmit)[8] were produced until the mid to late 20th century. Some of these industries are still thriving today, such as beds and accessories (Auping) and publishing (Wolters Kluwer, now headquartered in Alphen aan den Rijn).

The city's trade and industry are still of some importance. The city is host to a factory producing central heating systems, as well as Wolters Kluwer, a global information services and publishing company.

The Deventer honey cake (Bussink Deventer Koek), produced in Deventer for over years, is still manufactured locally and sold all over the Netherlands and beyond.

World War II[edit]

Deventer has seen few military engagements throughout its long history, although it was a garrison city of the Dutch cavalry. The IJssel bridge area and harbour were bombed heavily during World War II. The city centre has been largely spared, but many Allied bombs, meant to shell the IJssel railway bridge, came down on buildings in the city centre. The Deventer railway bridge was considered strategically important, being a part of the main railway connection between Amsterdam and the German city of Osnabrück, leading from there to either Berlin, Hamburg or Bremen. The railway bridge, constructed of steel, was difficult to hit. Many bombs were bounced down into the river or its banks, exploding in the areas around the bridge or failing to explode at all. The three heaviest of about 15 attacks were on October 28, causing 35 fatalities; on December 15, killing 33 people; and on February 6, causing the death of 61 people. In the aftermath of this last bombardment, the German occupying forces committed a war crime. The German army used a cool warehouse in Deventer for its military food supplies. In the city centre, the retirement home of the United Foundations, originally dating back as far as the 13th century, caught fire by the shellings, as well as the army food warehouse. The Germans allowed local fire fighters only to extinguish the fire in the cool warehouse. The retirement home burnt down as good as totally. Over twenty of the elderly living there perished in the flames. [9]

The Jewish poet and writer Etty Hillesum lived in Deventer during the war before being deported to Auschwitz.

In Schalkhaar, a village only 2&#;km northeast of the city centre, barracks were used by the German occupying forces to train Nazi policemen. The compound is now a centre for asylum seekers.

In a forested area between Lettele and Okkenbroek, about 10 kilometres east of Deventer, the Germans operated a V-1 flying bomb launching ramp. It was used from December, , until March, Some of the V-1 missiles launched there hit already liberated Belgium, including the city of Antwerp, killing many people. A war monument in the village of Lettele consists of concrete blocks from this launching site, that is a war monument itself as well.[10]

Deventer has been somewhat popular with the film industry. During the production of the film A Bridge Too Far, all of the scenes taking place in nearby Arnhem were filmed in Deventer - as Arnhem itself had lost its historic centre.

By the end of the s, the buildings had reached the boundaries of the municipality. In , for further expansion, the part of the municipality of Diepenveen was annexed that now covers the Keizerslanden, Borgele and Platvoet districts, all three realized in the s; all together roughly the area up to (west of) the Zandwetering.

After a plan to expand the city across the IJssel, the so-called Double City Plan, was deemed unfeasible at the end of the s, Deventer turned its attention to the east again: in part of Diepenveen was once again annexed. On January 1, , the municipality of Diepenveen was dissolved and added to Deventer. The same happened with the municipality of Bathmen on 1 January

Demographics[edit]

Deventer has Inhabitants on 1 July

Inhabitants by nationality[edit]

  • % is Dutch
  • % western migration background
  • % non western migration background

Geography[edit]

Associated hamlets at second level

The population centres in the municipality are:

  • Deventer(see below)
    • Snippeling (a small community about 2&#;km east of the city centre)
    • De Worp, the quarter west of the IJssel river
  • Colmschate(Deventer suburb quarters surrounding eponymous village 4&#;km east of the city centre, ice skating hall, small railway station)
  • Diepenveen, a village 4&#;km to the north, surrounded by forest
  • Lettele, in a forest area
    • Linde
    • Oude Molen (old mill)
    • Zandbelt
  • Okkenbroek
  • Schalkhaar(former centre of Diepenveen municipality including Lettele and Okkenbroek until )
  • Bathmen(independent municipality until )
    • Apenhuizen
    • Dortherhoek
    • Loo
    • Pieriksmars
    • Zuidloo

Climate[edit]

Deventer is in the northern hemisphere. Summer here starts at the end of June and ends in September. Deventer experiences an oceanic climate (Köppen climate classificationCfb) similar to almost all of the Netherlands.

Climate data for Deventer
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Mean monthly sunshine hours 1,
Source: thisisnl.nl [11]

Water[edit]

The Deventer settlement was founded on a river dune on the IJssel. This river has played a major role for the city over the centuries, because of the trade that this waterway brought with it. In the city had received the Katentol on long lease from the Elten stift. This toll, which is named after the Katerveer under Zwolle, had to be paid in the Deventer toll house near the Zandpoort, and generated a lot of money in the Middle Ages.

The IJssel has also caused many problems over the centuries, because it often overflowed its banks. Nowadays Deventer has a flood defence, but the Welle ('wal', the name of the street over the quay) is still regularly under water during high water. Dike breaches of the IJssel have created many gullies in and around the city , such as the Douwelerkolk and the Klinkenbeltskolk.

In addition to the IJssel, Deventer has a large number of waters. The Schipbeek is a brook partly dug on behalf of the city that rises in Germany and flows into the IJssel near Deventer. In the past, the stream was navigable, so that wood and Bentheimer sandstone could be brought in, among other things. Another waterway that was built for shipping and which flows into the IJssel in Deventer is a branch of the Overijssels canal, through which Deventer was connected to a large system of canals through Overijssel. It was dug in the midth century and opened in

Culture[edit]

Sights[edit]

  • The Grote Kerkhof square (Grand Churchyard)
  • The Saint Lebuïnuskerk (St. Lebuin's Church) in Gothic style, with ceiling paintings and an organ. Its tower can be climbed in summer.
  • The City Hall with a façade built in in Dutch Baroque style
  • The Brink (market square) with houses, shops, and cafes dating from to The market square is also the centre of Deventer nightlife. Alongside this square there is the Bussink "Koekhuisje", where the honey-cake Deventer Koek is sold. Markets take place every Friday (including one on Good Friday, following a medieval tradition) and Saturday.
  • The Waag (Weighing-house) on the edge of the Brink square, built in and restored in The Deventer City Museum is housed inside the Waag. The Museum's collections include industrial and trading history, paintings by Gerard Terborch and Han van Meegeren, silver objects, and prehistoric findings). Thea Beckman's novel Het wonder van Frieswijck ("The Frieswijck Miracle") features the Waag.
    • On the outer wall of the Waag hung until a large kettle that is over years old, said to have been used for a public execution in the late Middle Ages; a man who had produced counterfeit coins was cooked to death in it. According to local tradition, there are holes in the kettle shot by footmen of Napoleon's army around In the kettle has been placed inside the building, at the entrance of the museum.
  • The Speelgoedmuseum (Toy Museum) behind the Waag, housed in an old house in the city called De Drie Haringen ('The Three Herrings')
  • The Great Synagogue of Deventer in Neo-Renaissance style with Moorish influences
  • The medieval Bergkerk (Mountain Church), on top of a small hill (old river dune), now a place for expositions and concerts.
  • The old streets around the Bergkerk, known as Bergkwartier (Mountain Quarter) situated on and around the old river dune.
  • The Broederenkerk (Friars church) in Gothic and neo-Gothic style
  • The Stadsarchief en Athenaeumbibliotheek (City Archive and Athenaeum Library), the oldest scientific library of the Netherlands (founded in ).
  • De Proosdij in the Sandrasteeg is the oldest stone house of the Netherlands still in use. The earliest parts dating back to around

Sports[edit]

Deventer is the home of professional Football club Go Ahead Eagles, who are housed in stadium De Adelaarshorst. De Adelaarshorst is situated in a s neighbourhood and one of the oldest stadiums still in use today.[citation needed] The club was founded in as Be Quick, although the name was soon changed to Go Ahead at the request of the Dutch Football Association. The suffix Eagles was added in , following a suggestion from the then coach, Barry Hughes. Go Ahead Eagles has been the club of Marc Overmars, Paul Bosvelt, and Bert van Marwijk, whilst providing Henk ten Cate and Leo Beenhakker with their first experience of management.

The founded skating rink De Scheg, which is semi-indoor since , is in the top 10 of fastest skating tracks of the Netherlands.[citation needed] It has been the training accommodation of skaters including Olympic champion Mark Tuitert and the retired former world champion sprint Erben Wennemars.

Deventer also houses a number of watersports clubs, due to its situation on the banks of the river IJssel.

Events and festivals[edit]

  • In the first weekend of July, the city centre is the scene of the open air festival "Deventer op stelten" (Deventer on Stilts). Actors and artists give performances in the streets and on the Brink square. Originally all actors used stilts during their acts.
  • In August, Deventer is home to Europe's largest book fair, attracting , visitors.[12]
  • The Dickens Festival in December sees some of the oldest streets and alleys in the city dressed up in the style of the Victorian era. In , the festival attracted , visitors.[13]

Government[edit]

City council[edit]

In the redivision elections of November 17, , a municipal executive was elected for the period This municipal election was earlier than in the rest of the Netherlands, because the municipality of Deventer was merged with the then municipality of Bathmen. The March elections were therefore skipped.

An issue that has occupied the municipal council and public opinion in Deventer since was the housing of municipal officials and public services in a (new) municipal office adjacent to the old town hall of Deventer. In , the college fell over it. At the end of January , the Municipal Executive approved an adapted design for the new city office by architect Michiel Riedijk. However, a 'popular poll' by telephone two weeks later would have shown that only 13% of the population of Deventer supported the plans. On March 21 that year, a large majority of the city council voted in favor of the municipal office. In October , the Council of State ruledpositive about the arrival of the municipal office, after objections were raised. On December 6 of that year, the official opening act for construction was performed. In December , the complex was completed and municipal staff moved in. In November , the architect received the Abe Bonnema Prize for the design.

Economy[edit]

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This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (February )

Business[edit]

Education[edit]

Deventer is also home to one of the three campuses of Saxion University of Applied Sciences (Saxion Hogeschool), a polytechnical school offering internationally recognized Bachelor's degrees and Master's degrees in a wide range of fields, including engineering, economics, social work, investigations and health care.[14] The other campuses are located in Enschede and Apeldoorn.

In the Secondary Colonial Agricultural School was founded, which grew out of the National Agricultural School Wageningen. After decolonization took effect, the name was changed into Tropical Agricultural School. In the school was transformed into the National Higher School for Tropical Agriculture. After a merger with study programs from Boskoop, Wageningen and Velp, it became the International Agricultural College Larenstein. The school was located at the Ceintuurbaan/Brinkgreverweg intersection. The building was given a residential destination in

Transport[edit]

Rail[edit]

Since , Deventer has two train stations, Deventer railway station and Deventer Colmschate station. Previously, Deventer has known several so-called stopping points. Most of them closed around In addition to the current rail connections from Deventer train station, over the Arnhem–Leeuwarden railway, Apeldoorn–Deventer railway, and Deventer–Almelo railway lines, a train connection existed from to on the Deventer–Ommen railway line. This was operated by the Overijsselsche Lokaalspoorweg-Maatschappij Deventer - Ommen (OLDO), but had to stop the train service due to competition from the bus.

Public transport[edit]

In the 19th and 20th centuries, Deventer was connected to the extensive tram network of the Achterhoek. The tram line between Deventer and Borculo was operated from to by the Geldersch-Overijsselsche Stoomtram Maatschappij (GOSM) and its successors. Another tram company, the Tramweg Maatschappij Zutphen-Emmerik, operated the tram line between Deventer and Zutphen. The tram station of Deventer stood on the Pothoofd. It was not combined with Deventer train station because the trams were too heavy to drive over two intermediate bridges. It seemed unprofitable for the tram company to reinforce two bridges, so they used the Pothoofd as a terminal station. After the Second World War, the tram lines were dismantled.

Since the end of , bus transport has been provided by Keolis Nederland under the name RRReis, with the exception of the lines from the Achterhoek, which are provided by Arriva.

[edit]

Public thinking & public service[edit]

  • Lebuinus (??-ca) the Apostle of the Frisians and patron of Deventer
  • Saint Radboud (before – ) Bishop of Utrecht to
  • Geert Groote (–) a Dutch Roman Catholic deacon, founder of the Brethren of the Common Life[15]
  • Gerlac Peterssen (ca – ) a Dutch mystic [16]
  • Alexander Hegius von Heek (ca–) a German humanist who settled in Deventer [17]
  • Jacobus Revius (–) a Dutch poet, Calvinist theologian and church historian
  • Samuel Holland (–) a Royal Engineer and Surveyor General of British North America
  • Abraham Josias Sluysken () last Governor of the Dutch Cape Colony
  • Rutger Jan Schimmelpenninck (–) a Dutch jurist, ambassador, politician and Grand Pensionary of the Batavian Republic
  • Frans Adam van der Duyn van Maasdam () nobleman, officer and politician
  • Louis Gerlach Pareau (–) a theologian and academic, co-founded Groningen theology
  • Willem Jan Knoop (–) a Dutch lieutenant-general, military historian, and politician
  • W. R. van Hoëvell (–) a minister in the Dutch East Indies, politician and reformer
  • Elisabeth van Dedem Lecky (–) a Dutch-Irish writer, historian and suffragist
  • Martinus Theunis Steyn (–) a South African lawyer, politician and statesman [18]
  • Han Hollander (–) the first Dutch radio sports journalist
  • Etty Hillesum (–) wrote about the persecutions of the Jews during the German occupation
  • Bé Udink (–) a Dutch politician, government minister, diplomat and businessman
  • Willem Scholten (–) a Dutch politician, government minister and economist
  • Jomanda (born ) a controversial Dutch healing medium
  • Guusje Ter Horst (born ) a retired Dutch politician and psychologist
  • Paula Diez (born ) a Spanish student who got famous with a tik tok video
  • Caroline van der Plas leader of the BBB political party and member of the house of Netherlands representatives since

The arts[edit]

  • Jan Pieterszoon Sweelinck (–) a Dutch composer, organist and pedagogue
  • Bartholomeus Breenbergh (–) a Dutch Golden Age painter of Italianate landscapes
  • Gerard Ter Borch (–) a Dutch Golden Age genre painter
  • Justus Hiddes Halbertsma (–) a Frisian writer, poet, minister and linguist
  • Han van Meegeren (–) a Dutch painter, portraitist and art forger
  • Truus Schröder-Schräder (–) a Dutch socialite, involved with avant-garde artists and architects of the De Stijl movement, lived in the Rietveld Schröder House
  • Mannus Franken (–) a Dutch filmmaker, developed the Indonesian cinema[19]
  • Jan Kleinbussink (born ) a classical musician, cantor-organist of the Lebuïnus Church
  • Pieter Jan Brugge (born ) a Dutch film producer[20]
  • Rob Voerman (born ) a Dutch graphic artist, sculptor and installation artist
  • Clara Wildschut (), a Dutch composer

Science & business[edit]

Sport[edit]

International relations[edit]

Deventer is twinned with four cities:

Gallery[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^"Kerncijfers wijken en buurten " [Key figures for neighbourhoods ]. StatLine (in Dutch). CBS. 24 July Retrieved 19 September
  2. ^"Postcodetool for KT". Actueel Hoogtebestand Nederland (in Dutch). Het Waterschapshuis. Retrieved 27 March
  3. ^"Bevolkingsontwikkeling; regio per maand" [Population growth; regions per month]. CBS Statline (in Dutch). CBS. 1 January Retrieved 2 January
  4. ^"Diverse overzichten van de stadsrechten in Nederland". Archived from the original on Retrieved
  5. ^Otten, Dirk (). Lebuïnus, een gedreven missionaris (in Dutch). Uitgeverij Verloren. ISBN&#;.
  6. ^Koch, A.C.F.; Kruisheer, Jaap (). Sammlung (in Dutch). Uitgeverij Verloren. ISBN&#;.
  7. ^"Deventer". thisisnl.nl. Retrieved
  8. ^Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: "OPGEDOEKT, documentaire over Ankersmit Deventer". YouTube.
  9. ^Source: Klakkende laarzen aan de IJssel () by K.H. Vos, , Arko Editors, ISBN (in Dutch), pp. , 93
  10. ^"V1 Feuerstellung Lettele - Lettele - thisisnl.nl".
  11. ^"Climate Deventer (The Netherlands)". Retrieved October 22,
  12. ^"Algemene informatie". thisisnl.nl. Archived from the original on Retrieved
  13. ^"Dickens Festijn weer goed voor bezoekers". thisisnl.nl. Retrieved
  14. ^Saxion. "Get Ready for a Smart World | Saxion University of Applied Sciences | Saxion". Hogeschool Saxion. Retrieved
  15. ^"Groot, Gerhard"&#;. Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol.&#;12 (11th&#;ed.).
  16. ^"Gerlac Peterssen"&#;. Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol.&#;
  17. ^"Hegius, Alexander"&#;. Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol.&#;13 (11th&#;ed.).
  18. ^"Steyn, Martinus Theunis"&#;. Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol.&#;25 (11th&#;ed.).
  19. ^IMDb Database retrieved 23 February
  20. ^IMDb Database retrieved 21 February
  21. ^"Groenveldt, John"&#;. Dictionary of National Biography. Vol.&#;
  22. ^ ab"Twin Cities of Tartu". © City of Tartu. Retrieved
  23. ^"Working visit and celebration 25 years partnership Sibiu-Deventer". Retrieved 3 Jan

External links[edit]

Источник: thisisnl.nl