History of Wageningen

The area around the town of Wageningen was settled as early as the 9th century. Located on the north bank of the Nederrijn river, between the Gelderse valley and the Veluwe, a wooded, hilly, glacial moraine, by the 12th century it was part of the Duchy of Guelders, in the Holy Roman Empire. Wageningen received its city charter from Count Otto II on June 12, 1263. Today, it is in the province of Gelderland, in east-central Netherlands.[1][2]

Wageningen coat of arms
Wageningen city flag

Early settlements

Roof tiles have been found near Wageningen with the stamp of the Roman legions. However, there is no evidence of a permanent Roman encampment on the north side of the Rhine river. The Roman settlement of Vada is now thought to have been near the village of Kessel, in North Brabant province, not Wageningen.

The oldest known settlement near Wageningen prior to the establishment of the city is below the bluffs and near the Nederrijn on the eastern edge of the city; near what today is known as Diedenweg (meaning Volksweg; road of the people). At the beginning of the Middle Ages the settlement moved to higher ground, what today is known as Wageningse Berg (Wageningen hill). Remains of a fieldstone chapel and wooden farmhouses have been found in that area.

Between about 350 and 900, a burial site was in use around what today is the corner of Diedenweg and Geertjesweg streets. Presumably the burials came from around Wageningen and Binnenveld.

The hamlet, Dolder, lay in the vicinity of what today is the intersection of Van Uvenweg, Churchillweg and Dolderstraat. Thulere was mentioned in 838, as was Brakel (Bracola), today near the intersection of Julianastraat and Van Uvenweg.

Port and fortified city

Wageningen in 1575, by Jacob van Deventer

In the 12th century a new, settlement came down from Wageningse Berg. A quay was constructed at the west edge of town, with an elevated road, the current Hoogstraat (High Street), connecting it to the base of the hill to the east. At that time, the city's first church also may haven been built. To the north of the High Street, a regular pattern of streets was established. On 12 June 1263, Wageningen was granted city rights by Count Otto II of the Duchy of Guelders.[3]

For the counts and dukes of Guelders, in addition to being a trading port, Wageningen was important as a stronghold against the Bishopric of Utrecht and later the Duchy of Burgundy. In 1526–27, Charles von Egmond, the last Duke of Guelders, gave permission for the building of a fortified castle in Wageningen. Some parts of the walled city were park-like, including the former Northpark (Noorderplantsoen) area.

Castle of Wageningen (1654)

The Wageningen castle was sold in 1702 by the state of Gelderland to Anna Maria Ripperda, widow of Drost (Sheriff) Assueer Torck, and mother of the last sheriff, Lubbert Adolph Torck. The Torck family demolished part of the castle and rebuilt the other part into a small city palace with a baroque garden. In 1722 Lubbert Torck Adolph married the wealthy widow Petronella van Hoorn, daughter of a governor-general of the Dutch East Indies. The previous year, he had inherited Castle Rosendael in Rozendaal, near Arnhem, from his uncle Johan van Arnhem. Torck was politically active as one of the mayors of Wageningen and in The Hague. He invested in the city, building mansions which he leased to pensioners of the Dutch East India Company (VOC) and other wealthy people. One such complex, the Bassecour, existing of four houses, was acquired by the city in 1876, to attract the National Agricultural College (rijkslandsbouwschool).

Wageningen had several known mills. By the Middle Ages, there were two mills on the former Molenweg, now called General Foulkesweg. The last of these mills, named de Eendracht, was demolished around 1996. Once surrounded by farmlands, the 19th century flour mill, de Vlijt continues to operate on Harnjesweg.[4]

Nearby farms

The various neighboring settlements were organized under the same principle structure: farms around an agricultural commons, having on the east side the arable land (at the Wageningen Eng, which was much bigger) and on the west side the meadows of the Binnenveld, evenly parcellated. The Binnenveld was farmed from the 13th century.

Important farms were de Stenen Kamer in Dolder (built 1597, demolished 1954), and de Tarthorst (1731)[5] on Tarthorsterweg, now Haverlanden (demolished in 1969).

Two nearby settlements, de Peppeld (near the present restaurant 't Gesprek) and Leeuwen, remain recognizable. The characteristic livestock drinking pool (kolk) is still present on both properties.

Wageningen region, 1906

Educational institutions

The Landbouwhogeschool Nederland (Wageningen Agricultural College), successor to the National Agricultural and Horticultural College, was established in 1918.[6] This was the beginning of the special development in a small, fortified city of a specialized university that has evolved today into the present the Wageningen University and Research Centre (WUR).

The Maritime Research Institute Netherlands (MARIN) was founded in 1932 as the Dutch Ship Model Basin (NSMB). MARIN is a world-renowned institute in the field of maritime and hydrodynamic research. MARIN, today part of WUR, has the status of a major technological institute in the Netherlands.[7]

World War II

The people, city, and institutions of Wageningen suffered greatly during World War II. Yet, the town is famous for its role at the end of the war.

Wageningen was evacuated on May 10, 1940, as Nazi Germany invaded the country.[8] Shortly afterwards, the central part of Wageningen was destroyed by artillery fire. Later the same month, under German occupation, residents began to clear the debris and rebuild the town center.[9] On November 22, 1940, all Jewish staff of the Landbouwhogeschool were suspended from employment; a little over three months later, on March 1, 1941, they were forced to resign.[2]

As of October 1, 1941, Wageningen had about 15,000 residents, including about 34 Dutch Jews and about 200 Jewish refugees. By 1942, most Jews, residents and refugees alike, had been deported to meet their fate at the Sobibor and Auschwitz death camps. On May 20, 1944, the German SS carried out a wave of arrests in Wageningen of local citizens involved in the Dutch Resistance. Among those arrested were sisters, Eltien and Neeltje Krijthe, accused of hiding an illegal radio transmitter. Eltien died at Ravensbrück in 1945.[2]

Major K. Henninger, a German Army Signals officer, negotiating with Canadian forces

Under heavy military pressure, on April 7, 1945, retreating German forces blew up the town's church towers. Ten days later, on April 17, 1945, Wageningen was liberated from the Nazis by Allied forces.

After almost five years of German occupation, on May 4, 1945, at a farm in the Nude district, on the west side of Wageningen, allied forces led by Canadian General Charles Foulkes, and the German military, under General Johannes Blaskowitz, negotiated the way the German soldiers were obliged to act after the Nazi capitulation. The talks continued the next day at the Hotel de Wereld, near the center of the city. The final agreement was signed on May 5, 1945, in de Aula, auditorium of the Agricultural College, next to de Wereld Hotel. The agreement, known as the Dutch Capitulation Act, can be regarded as an elaboration of the total capitulation of the German armed forces for northwest Europe, which also took place on May 4. The document now resides in the Wageningen town hall.[10]

On May 15, 1945, residents were allowed to return to Wageningen.[2]

Until 2005, the capitulation was commemorated annually with a grand parade of former American, British and Canadian soldiers. The Liberation Parade, a richly hued parade of veterans and war material from World War II and other conflicts, began in 2006. The Liberation Parade includes space for charities and elementary school students, as well.

Historical sites

In Wageningen, 60 objects are protected as national monuments, most in the town center.[11][12] An additional 400 objects are protected as local monuments, as well.[13]

See also

References

  1. Kees Gast; Bob Kernkamp; Leo Klep (2013). Geschiedenis van Wageningen (in Dutch) (1st ed.). Blauwdruk. p. 384. ISBN 978-90-75271-74-4.
  2. "History of Wageningen". Casteelsepoort.nl. Archived from the original on 2013-02-22. Retrieved 22 November 2015.
  3. "Een stukje geschiedenis" (in Dutch). Gemeente Wageningen. Archived from the original on 2014-02-21. Retrieved 5 February 2014.
  4. "Geschiedenis Molen de Vlijt". www.molendevlijt.nl. Retrieved 5 February 2014.
  5. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2014-02-23. Retrieved 2014-02-05.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  6. "History of Wageningen UR". www.wageningenur.nl. Retrieved 5 February 2014.
  7. "History of Marin". www.marin.nl. Retrieved 5 February 2014.
  8. "Evacuatie" (in Dutch). wo2meteigenogen.nl. 21 April 2012. Retrieved 5 February 2014.
  9. "Verwoesting stad" (in Dutch). wo2meteigenogen.nl. 21 April 2012. Retrieved 5 February 2014.
  10. "Capitulatie" (in Dutch). wo2meteigenogen.nl. 20 March 2012. Retrieved 5 February 2014.
  11. "Monumentenregister - Provincie: Gelderland, Gemeente: Wageningen" (in Dutch). monumentenregister.cultureelerfgoed.nl. Retrieved 5 February 2014.
  12. "Alle rijksmonumenten in Wageningen" (in Dutch). rijksmonumenten.nl. Retrieved 5 February 2014.
  13. Ronald Stenvert, Chris Kolman, Sabine Broekhoven, Ben Olde Meierink en Marc Tenten (2000). "Monumenten in Nederland, Gelderland, Wageningen" (in Dutch). Rijksdienst voor de Monumentenzorg, Zeist / Waanders Uitgevers. Retrieved 5 February 2014.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)

Note: much of this article is sourced from the corresponding article in the Dutch Wikipedia.

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