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Middelburg, Zeeland

Middelburg (Dutch: [ˈmɪdəlbʏr(ə)x] ) is a city and municipality in the south-western Netherlands serving as the capital of the province of Zeeland. Situated on the central peninsula of the Zeeland province, Midden-Zeeland (consisting of former islands Walcheren, Noord-Beveland and Zuid-Beveland), it has a population of about 48,000.

Middelburg
Location in Zeeland
Middelburg
Location within the Netherlands
Middelburg
Location within Europe
Coordinates: 51°30′N 3°37′E / 51.500°N 3.617°E / 51.500; 3.617
CountryNetherlands
ProvinceZeeland
City HallMiddelburg City Hall
Government
 • BodyMunicipal council
 • MayorHarald Bergmann (VVD)
Area
 • Total53.04 km2 (20.48 sq mi)
 • Land48.42 km2 (18.70 sq mi)
 • Water4.62 km2 (1.78 sq mi)
Elevation3 m (10 ft)
Population
 (January 2021)[4]
 • Total48,964
 • Density1,011/km2 (2,620/sq mi)
DemonymMiddelburger
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Postcode
4330–4341
Area code0118
Websitewww.middelburg.nl

In terms of technology, Middelburg played a role in the Scientific Revolution at the early modern period. The town was historically a center of lens crafting in the Golden Age of Dutch science and technology. The invention of the microscope and telescope is often credited to Middelburg spectacle-makers (including Zacharias Janssen and Hans Lippershey) in the late 16th century and early 17th century.

History edit

 
Middelburg in 1652
 
Middelburg's city hall around 1910

The city of Middelburg dates back possibly to the late 8th century or early 9th century. The first mention of Middelburg was as one of three fortified towns (borgs) erected on Walcheren (then an island) to guard against Viking raids. In 844 a monastery was built on the site, which remained an active Catholic foundation until the Reformation. Foundations for Middelburg's "stately and picturesque" main church were first laid in the 10th century; additional construction continued through the Middle Ages.

Middelburg was granted city rights in 1217. During the Middle Ages, it became an important trading centre in the commerce between England and the rising cities of Flanders, a fact commented on by Geoffrey Chaucer in The Canterbury Tales. The town continued to gain in power and prestige during the 13th and 14th centuries.

From 1559 to 1603, Middelburg was the episcopal see of a Catholic bishopric covering all Zeeland. In the Eighty Years' War, the city was captured by Dutch rebels from the Spanish forces during a long siege (1572–1574). The northern provinces of the Low Countries won their independence from their former Spanish Habsburg rulers and formed the Dutch Republic, a Protestant state. Later, during the 17th century (the Dutch Golden Age), Middelburg became, after Holland's metropolis Amsterdam, the most important center for the Dutch East India Company (VOC) in the Republic of the Seven United Netherlands. As such, Middelburg also played an important role in the 17th century slave trade.[citation needed]

Samuel Ben Israel, son of Menasseh Ben Israel, is buried in Middelburg at the Sephardic burial site located at the 'Jodengang' outside the citywall. Menasseh Ben Israel negotiated with Cromwell the opening of England, and its colonies, to the Jews. Middelburg also has an Ashkenazic burial site, which is located at the Walensingel inside the city wall. In 1994 the synagogue was restored, as it was partially destroyed during the Second World War. This synagogue was the third one to be built in the Netherlands during the Golden Age. In the hall of the railway station there is a plaque of remembrance for the Jews of Zeeland who started their journey to the death camps from the Middelburg train station.

 
Topographic map of Middelburg, as of September 2014

About a third of the old city centre was devastated by bombs and fire in the early phases of World War II, on May 17, 1940. It is still not certain if German bombers or French artillery were responsible.[5] The town was captured and liberated by British troops during Operation Infatuate on 6 November 1944.[6] After the War, as much of the destroyed part of the old town center was rebuilt and restored along pre-War lines as far as was possible. The city's archives, however, had been incinerated during the German bombardment.

Modern Middelburg has preserved and regained much of its historic and picturesque character. There are lavish 17th and 18th century merchant houses and storehouses standing along canals, of a similar style as found in cities like Amsterdam. The old city moats are still there, as are two of the city gates, the Koepoort Gate and the Varkenspoort Gate. Part of the 18th century moat and defence works, however, were demolished in the 19th century to make way for a commercial canal that crosses Walcheren from Vlissingen to Veere. The medieval abbey is still in use today, as a museum and as the seat of the provincial government.

Notable locals edit

Historical population
YearPop.±% p.a.
13986,300—    
15767,000+0.06%
160020,000+4.47%
167527,000+0.40%
173925,000−0.12%
179517,687−0.62%
Source: Lourens & Lucassen 1997, pp. 93–94

Ambrosius Bosschaert the Elder (1573–1621) was a still life painter of the Dutch Golden Age who worked most of his life in Middelburg. He had three sons, Johannes Bosschaert (1606/08– 1628/29), Ambrosius Bosschaert II (1609–1645) and Abraham Bosschaert the Younger (1612–1643) who were all Dutch Golden Age painters.

The painter Pieter Gaal (1769–1819) was born, settled and died here, after traveling over Europe to paint.

Another well-known citizen of Middelburg was the admiral and explorer Jacob Roggeveen, who was born in the city in 1659 and died there in 1729. Roggeveen discovered Easter Island (Rapa Nui) in the South Pacific Ocean on Easter Sunday, April 6, 1722. Further discoveries on the same journey included islands of the Tuamotu group, now part of French Polynesia.

Petronella Johanna de Timmerman, scientist and poet, was born here in 1723. In 1774 she was inducted as an honorary member of the academy Kunstliefde Spaart Geen Vlijt. Also, she presented the academy with poems, translated from French plays. She died in Utrecht in 1786.

 
Suzanna Nannette Sablairolles, 1847
 
Pieter Cornelis Boutens, 1905

The arts edit

 
Balthasar Gerbier, 1662
 
Harald Bergmann, 2010

Public thinking and public service edit

 
Cecil Arthur Hoare ca.1930
 
Jan Poortvliet, 1978

Science and business edit

Sport edit

Geography and climate edit

Aside from the town of Middelburg, the municipality also includes several population centres, including: Arnemuiden, Kleverskerke, Nieuw- en Sint Joosland and Sint Laurens. The town is close to the coast but the distance of 10–15 km means the winters are somewhat colder with especially lower winter minima and higher summer maxima. It has a temperate oceanic climate (Cfb) with few extremes. Winters tend to be mild, especially considering the northern latitude, summers are cool and precipitation is spread out evenly over the year. All seasons are warming up by about 0,5 C/decade due to anthropogenic warming. The extremes measured since 2000, 2 km northeast of the town in the countryside with calibrated equipment have been -17,2 C on the 4th of February 2012 and 40,9 C on the 25th of July 2019,[12] the latter unofficially being a new Dutch all-time high record, slightly above the 40,7 C measured at Gilzerijen KNMI and 40,6 C in Westdorpe. Vlissingen KNMI measured -11,0 C and 37,5 C on the same dates, clearly showing how much the influence is diminished just 8 km further inland. The climate is warming due to anthropogenic influences, clearly witnessed by the fact that the previous record of 37,5 C was measured just a year before. Also, in the past minima have been at and probably below -20 C in winter months. Snowcover, days with airfrost and icedays (Tx < 0,0 C) have greatly diminished and with it ice speedskating on the canals, a favourite sport in the winter months, has become very infrequent since 2013 especially.

Gallery edit

Culture and recreation edit

When William of Orange decided to found the first university in the Netherlands in 1575, he initially considered locating it in Middelburg. Ultimately he chose Leiden, however, and Middelburg—as well as all of Zeeland—remained without a university until 2004 when University College Roosevelt (formerly known as Roosevelt Academy), affiliated with Utrecht University, was established. A campus of the HZ University of Applied Sciences is also located in the city, although this institution has its headquarters in the nearby city of Vlissingen.

Cultural institutions edit

Theaters and Concert halls edit

  • Schouwburg
  • Concertzaal Zeeland
  • Spiegeltheater
  • Minitheater
  • Filmtheater Schuttershof
  • UCR Stand up comedy theatre

Sightseeing edit

  • The Abbey
  • Kuiperspoort
  • The "Lange Jan"
  • City Hall
  • Oostkerk
  • Damplein

Sports edit

Middelburg has a rugby club, Oemoemenoe, and four football (soccer) clubs: MZVC, Zeelandia Middelburg, Jong Ambon and FC Dauwendaele. Jong Ambon is translated Young Ambon, and consists of mostly Ambonese players. FC Dauwendaele is the club of the neighborhood of Dauwendaele.

Transportation edit

 
Middelburg railway station.

Middelburg has a railway station with intercity train connections to Vlissingen, Goes, Roosendaal, Rotterdam, The Hague, Leiden, Haarlem, and Amsterdam. Four trains leave every hour in both directions.[15]

Twin cities edit

In popular culture edit

  • In Rafael Sabatini's 1929 novel "The Romantic Prince", set in the late 1460s, Middelburg is the home town of Mister Danvelt and his son Philip. The Danvelt home is a beautiful, gabled house on the Lange Delft, not far from Middelburg's imposing abbey. Philip Danvelt inherits the house and lives there with his wife Johanna when he is arrested by Lord Claude de Rhynsault.[16]
  • In The Canterbury Tales, c.1387, the Merchant speaks of the absolute importance of keeping the sea free of pirates "between Middelburg and Orwell" (the River Orwell in England).

References edit

  1. ^ "Collegeleden" [Members of the board] (in Dutch). Gemeente Middelburg. Retrieved 4 December 2013.
  2. ^ "Kerncijfers wijken en buurten 2020" [Key figures for neighbourhoods 2020]. StatLine (in Dutch). CBS. 24 July 2020. Retrieved 19 September 2020.
  3. ^ . Actueel Hoogtebestand Nederland (in Dutch). Het Waterschapshuis. Archived from the original on 21 September 2013. Retrieved 4 December 2013.
  4. ^ "Bevolkingsontwikkeling; regio per maand" [Population growth; regions per month]. CBS Statline (in Dutch). CBS. 1 January 2021. Retrieved 2 January 2022.
  5. ^ "Middelburg". War over Holland. Retrieved 30 April 2016.
  6. ^ J.N. Houterman, Buffaloes bevrijden Middelburg, 6 november 1944 (Middelburg : Gemeente Middelburg, 1990)
  7. ^ IMDb Database retrieved 30 November 2019
  8. ^ IMDb Database retrieved 30 November 2019
  9. ^ "Paul of Middelburg" . Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 11. 1911.
  10. ^ "Bynkershoek, Cornelius Van" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 04 (11th ed.). 1911.
  11. ^ "Drs. Leopold onze man in Paramaribo". De Telegraaf via Delpher.nl (in Dutch). 11 November 1975. Retrieved 26 December 2021.
  12. ^ Zeel, Meteo (2019-07-25). "Ongekende hitte in de polder". Meteo Zeeland (in Dutch). Retrieved 2020-09-19.
  13. ^ "Home". chocolademuseum.nl.
  14. ^ Zeeuws Archief
  15. ^ "NS Nieuwsarchief". nieuws.ns via ns.nl (in Dutch). ns.nl. Retrieved 3 February 2022.
  16. ^ p166-178 of the House of Stratus edition, ch. 4. The Romantic Prince, Rafael Sabatini, 2001

Literature edit

  • Lourens, Piet; Lucassen, Jan (1997). Inwonertallen van Nederlandse steden ca. 1300–1800. Amsterdam: NEHA. ISBN 9057420082.

External links edit

  • "Middelburg (Holland)" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 18 (11th ed.). 1911.
  •   Middelburg travel guide from Wikivoyage
  • Official city website (in Dutch with a limited English section)
  • Tourism Middelburg

middelburg, zeeland, middelburg, dutch, ˈmɪdəlbʏr, city, municipality, south, western, netherlands, serving, capital, province, zeeland, situated, central, peninsula, zeeland, province, midden, zeeland, consisting, former, islands, walcheren, noord, beveland, . Middelburg Dutch ˈmɪdelbʏr e x is a city and municipality in the south western Netherlands serving as the capital of the province of Zeeland Situated on the central peninsula of the Zeeland province Midden Zeeland consisting of former islands Walcheren Noord Beveland and Zuid Beveland it has a population of about 48 000 MiddelburgCity and municipalityMiddelburg StadhuisFlagCoat of armsLocation in ZeelandMiddelburgLocation within the NetherlandsShow map of NetherlandsMiddelburgLocation within EuropeShow map of EuropeCoordinates 51 30 N 3 37 E 51 500 N 3 617 E 51 500 3 617CountryNetherlandsProvinceZeelandCity HallMiddelburg City HallGovernment 1 BodyMunicipal council MayorHarald Bergmann VVD Area 2 Total53 04 km2 20 48 sq mi Land48 42 km2 18 70 sq mi Water4 62 km2 1 78 sq mi Elevation 3 3 m 10 ft Population January 2021 4 Total48 964 Density1 011 km2 2 620 sq mi DemonymMiddelburgerTime zoneUTC 1 CET Summer DST UTC 2 CEST Postcode4330 4341Area code0118Websitewww wbr middelburg wbr nlIn terms of technology Middelburg played a role in the Scientific Revolution at the early modern period The town was historically a center of lens crafting in the Golden Age of Dutch science and technology The invention of the microscope and telescope is often credited to Middelburg spectacle makers including Zacharias Janssen and Hans Lippershey in the late 16th century and early 17th century Contents 1 History 2 Notable locals 2 1 The arts 2 2 Public thinking and public service 2 3 Science and business 2 4 Sport 3 Geography and climate 4 Gallery 5 Culture and recreation 5 1 Cultural institutions 5 2 Theaters and Concert halls 5 3 Sightseeing 5 4 Sports 6 Transportation 7 Twin cities 8 In popular culture 9 References 9 1 Literature 10 External linksHistory edit nbsp Middelburg in 1652 nbsp Middelburg s city hall around 1910The city of Middelburg dates back possibly to the late 8th century or early 9th century The first mention of Middelburg was as one of three fortified towns borgs erected on Walcheren then an island to guard against Viking raids In 844 a monastery was built on the site which remained an active Catholic foundation until the Reformation Foundations for Middelburg s stately and picturesque main church were first laid in the 10th century additional construction continued through the Middle Ages Middelburg was granted city rights in 1217 During the Middle Ages it became an important trading centre in the commerce between England and the rising cities of Flanders a fact commented on by Geoffrey Chaucer in The Canterbury Tales The town continued to gain in power and prestige during the 13th and 14th centuries From 1559 to 1603 Middelburg was the episcopal see of a Catholic bishopric covering all Zeeland In the Eighty Years War the city was captured by Dutch rebels from the Spanish forces during a long siege 1572 1574 The northern provinces of the Low Countries won their independence from their former Spanish Habsburg rulers and formed the Dutch Republic a Protestant state Later during the 17th century the Dutch Golden Age Middelburg became after Holland s metropolis Amsterdam the most important center for the Dutch East India Company VOC in the Republic of the Seven United Netherlands As such Middelburg also played an important role in the 17th century slave trade citation needed Samuel Ben Israel son of Menasseh Ben Israel is buried in Middelburg at the Sephardic burial site located at the Jodengang outside the citywall Menasseh Ben Israel negotiated with Cromwell the opening of England and its colonies to the Jews Middelburg also has an Ashkenazic burial site which is located at the Walensingel inside the city wall In 1994 the synagogue was restored as it was partially destroyed during the Second World War This synagogue was the third one to be built in the Netherlands during the Golden Age In the hall of the railway station there is a plaque of remembrance for the Jews of Zeeland who started their journey to the death camps from the Middelburg train station nbsp Topographic map of Middelburg as of September 2014About a third of the old city centre was devastated by bombs and fire in the early phases of World War II on May 17 1940 It is still not certain if German bombers or French artillery were responsible 5 The town was captured and liberated by British troops during Operation Infatuate on 6 November 1944 6 After the War as much of the destroyed part of the old town center was rebuilt and restored along pre War lines as far as was possible The city s archives however had been incinerated during the German bombardment Modern Middelburg has preserved and regained much of its historic and picturesque character There are lavish 17th and 18th century merchant houses and storehouses standing along canals of a similar style as found in cities like Amsterdam The old city moats are still there as are two of the city gates the Koepoort Gate and the Varkenspoort Gate Part of the 18th century moat and defence works however were demolished in the 19th century to make way for a commercial canal that crosses Walcheren from Vlissingen to Veere The medieval abbey is still in use today as a museum and as the seat of the provincial government Notable locals editHistorical populationYearPop p a 13986 300 15767 000 0 06 160020 000 4 47 167527 000 0 40 173925 000 0 12 179517 687 0 62 Source Lourens amp Lucassen 1997 pp 93 94Ambrosius Bosschaert the Elder 1573 1621 was a still life painter of the Dutch Golden Age who worked most of his life in Middelburg He had three sons Johannes Bosschaert 1606 08 1628 29 Ambrosius Bosschaert II 1609 1645 and Abraham Bosschaert the Younger 1612 1643 who were all Dutch Golden Age painters The painter Pieter Gaal 1769 1819 was born settled and died here after traveling over Europe to paint Another well known citizen of Middelburg was the admiral and explorer Jacob Roggeveen who was born in the city in 1659 and died there in 1729 Roggeveen discovered Easter Island Rapa Nui in the South Pacific Ocean on Easter Sunday April 6 1722 Further discoveries on the same journey included islands of the Tuamotu group now part of French Polynesia Petronella Johanna de Timmerman scientist and poet was born here in 1723 In 1774 she was inducted as an honorary member of the academy Kunstliefde Spaart Geen Vlijt Also she presented the academy with poems translated from French plays She died in Utrecht in 1786 nbsp Suzanna Nannette Sablairolles 1847 nbsp Pieter Cornelis Boutens 1905The arts edit Hortensia del Prado 1627 a Dutch horticulturalist and noblewoman Adrianus Valerius ca 1575 1625 a Dutch poet and composer Jacob van Geel ca 1585 1648 a Dutch Golden Age painter Christoffel van den Berghe ca 1590 ca 1645 a Dutch Golden Age painter of landscapes Balthasar van der Ast 1593 94 1657 a Dutch Golden Age painter Pieter de Putter ca 1600 1659 a Dutch still life painter Daniel de Blieck ca 1610 1673 a Dutch Golden Age painter draughtsman and architect Philips Angel I 1616 1683 a Dutch still life painter Ariana Nozeman 1626 1628 1661 the first actress in The Netherlands Pieter Borsseler ca 1633 ca 1687 a Dutch portrait painter prominent in England Pieter Bustijn 1649 1729 a composer organist harpsichordist and carillon player Adriaen Coorte ca 1665 ca 1707 a Dutch Golden Age painter of still lifes Barend Cornelis Koekkoek 1803 1862 a Dutch landscape artist and lithographer Suzanna Sablairolles 1829 1867 a Dutch stage actress Anna Adelaide Abrahams 1849 1930 a Dutch still life painter Henri Eduard Beunke 1851 1925 a Dutch writer known for his literary regionalistic work Herman Johannes van der Weele 1852 1930 a Dutch painter of the 2nd Hague School Pieter Cornelis Boutens 1870 1943 a Dutch poet classicist and mystic Joost Baljeu 1925 1991 a Dutch painter sculptor and writer Paul van der Feen born 1978 a Dutch saxophonist Carolyn Lilipaly born 1969 a Dutch news anchor and actress 7 Stefan de Vries born 1970 a Dutch writer and journalist 8 nbsp Balthasar Gerbier 1662 nbsp Harald Bergmann 2010Public thinking and public service edit Paul of Middelburg 1446 1534 a Flemish scientist and Bishop of Fossombrone 9 Philippe van Lansberge 1561 1632 a Dutch Calvinist Minister astronomer and mathematician John Forbes c 1568 1634 founded a Church of Scotland Isaac Beeckman 1588 1637 a Dutch philosopher and scientist Sir Balthazar Gerbier 1592 1663 an Anglo Dutch courtier diplomat art advisor miniaturist and architectural designer Paulus van de Perre ca 1598 1653 in London a Dutch politician and diplomat negotiated with Oliver Cromwell Adam Boreel 1602 1665 a Dutch theologian and Hebrew scholar Margaretha Sandra 1629 1674 a Dutch military heroine in the siege of Aardenburg in 1672 Frederik van Leenhof 1647 1715 a controversial Dutch pastor and philosopher Adrian Beverland 1650 1716 in London a Dutch humanist scholar banished in 1679 and settled in England Cornelius van Bynkershoek 1673 1743 a Dutch jurist and legal theorist 10 Stephanus Versluys 1694 1736 the 21st Governor of Dutch Ceylon Reynier de Klerck 1710 1780 Governor General of the Dutch East Indies 1778 1780 Laurens Pieter van de Spiegel 1736 1800 was Grand Pensionary of Zeeland Piet Meertens 1899 1985 a Dutch scholar of literature dialects and ethnology Etty Hillesum 1914 1943 in Auschwitz the Dutch author of confessional letters and diaries Hendricus Leopold 1918 2008 a Dutch diplomat first Ambassador of the Netherlands to Suriname 11 Albert de Vries born 1955 a Dutch politician alderman of Middelburg 2002 2012 Han Polman born 1963 a Dutch politician King s Commissioner of Zeeland since 2013 Harald Bergmann born 1965 a Dutch politician Mayor of Middelburg since 2012 nbsp Cecil Arthur Hoare ca 1930 nbsp Jan Poortvliet 1978Science and business edit Zacharias Janssen 1585 ca 1632 a Dutch spectacle maker lived mostly in Middelburg Alexander Daniell 1599 1668 the sole proprietor of the Manor of Alverton Cornwall 1630 1668 Pieter van Abeele 1608 1684 a medallist perfected the technique of pressing hollow medals Jan Goedart 1617 1668 a Dutch naturalist entomologist and painter Steven Blankaart 1650 1704 a Dutch physician iatrochemist and entomologist Pieter Boddaert 1730 1795 a Dutch physician and naturalist Franz Zacharias Ermerins 1808 1871 a Dutch physician and medical editor Jan Adrianus Herklots 1820 1872 a Dutch zoologist researched carcinology and the echinoderms Cecil Hoare FRS 1892 1984 a British protozoologist and parasitologist Lili Bleeker 1897 1985 a Dutch entrepreneur and physicist designed and made optical instruments Cees Maas born 1947 former chief financial officer of the ING GroupSport edit Jan Poortvliet born 1955 a retired football defender with 531 club caps Elisabeth Willeboordse born 1978 a female judoka bronze medallist at the 2008 Summer OlympicsGeography and climate editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Aside from the town of Middelburg the municipality also includes several population centres including Arnemuiden Kleverskerke Nieuw en Sint Joosland and Sint Laurens The town is close to the coast but the distance of 10 15 km means the winters are somewhat colder with especially lower winter minima and higher summer maxima It has a temperate oceanic climate Cfb with few extremes Winters tend to be mild especially considering the northern latitude summers are cool and precipitation is spread out evenly over the year All seasons are warming up by about 0 5 C decade due to anthropogenic warming The extremes measured since 2000 2 km northeast of the town in the countryside with calibrated equipment have been 17 2 C on the 4th of February 2012 and 40 9 C on the 25th of July 2019 12 the latter unofficially being a new Dutch all time high record slightly above the 40 7 C measured at Gilzerijen KNMI and 40 6 C in Westdorpe Vlissingen KNMI measured 11 0 C and 37 5 C on the same dates clearly showing how much the influence is diminished just 8 km further inland The climate is warming due to anthropogenic influences clearly witnessed by the fact that the previous record of 37 5 C was measured just a year before Also in the past minima have been at and probably below 20 C in winter months Snowcover days with airfrost and icedays Tx lt 0 0 C have greatly diminished and with it ice speedskating on the canals a favourite sport in the winter months has become very infrequent since 2013 especially Gallery edit nbsp Dam and Prins Hendrikdok nbsp Former city hall nbsp Kloveniersdoelen nbsp View at the Lange Jan from the station nbsp The Londense Kaai nbsp Near towngate the Kuiperspoort nbsp Molen de Hoop nbsp Herengracht nbsp HerengrachtCulture and recreation editWhen William of Orange decided to found the first university in the Netherlands in 1575 he initially considered locating it in Middelburg Ultimately he chose Leiden however and Middelburg as well as all of Zeeland remained without a university until 2004 when University College Roosevelt formerly known as Roosevelt Academy affiliated with Utrecht University was established A campus of the HZ University of Applied Sciences is also located in the city although this institution has its headquarters in the nearby city of Vlissingen Cultural institutions edit Zeeuws Museum Vleeshal Sjakie s Chocolademuseum 13 Zeeuws Archief 14 Zeeuwse Bibliotheek Centrum Beeldende Kunst University College Roosevelt Theaters and Concert halls edit Schouwburg Concertzaal Zeeland Spiegeltheater Minitheater Filmtheater Schuttershof UCR Stand up comedy theatre Sightseeing edit The Abbey Kuiperspoort The Lange Jan City Hall Oostkerk Damplein Sports edit Middelburg has a rugby club Oemoemenoe and four football soccer clubs MZVC Zeelandia Middelburg Jong Ambon and FC Dauwendaele Jong Ambon is translated Young Ambon and consists of mostly Ambonese players FC Dauwendaele is the club of the neighborhood of Dauwendaele Transportation edit nbsp Middelburg railway station See also Middelburg railway station Middelburg has a railway station with intercity train connections to Vlissingen Goes Roosendaal Rotterdam The Hague Leiden Haarlem and Amsterdam Four trains leave every hour in both directions 15 Twin cities edit nbsp Folkestone United Kingdom nbsp Glogow Poland nbsp Nagasaki Japan nbsp Simeria Romania nbsp Teiuș Romania nbsp Vilvoorde BelgiumIn popular culture editIn Rafael Sabatini s 1929 novel The Romantic Prince set in the late 1460s Middelburg is the home town of Mister Danvelt and his son Philip The Danvelt home is a beautiful gabled house on the Lange Delft not far from Middelburg s imposing abbey Philip Danvelt inherits the house and lives there with his wife Johanna when he is arrested by Lord Claude de Rhynsault 16 In The Canterbury Tales c 1387 the Merchant speaks of the absolute importance of keeping the sea free of pirates between Middelburg and Orwell the River Orwell in England References edit Collegeleden Members of the board in Dutch Gemeente Middelburg Retrieved 4 December 2013 Kerncijfers wijken en buurten 2020 Key figures for neighbourhoods 2020 StatLine in Dutch CBS 24 July 2020 Retrieved 19 September 2020 Postcodetool for 4331BK Actueel Hoogtebestand Nederland in Dutch Het Waterschapshuis Archived from the original on 21 September 2013 Retrieved 4 December 2013 Bevolkingsontwikkeling regio per maand Population growth regions per month CBS Statline in Dutch CBS 1 January 2021 Retrieved 2 January 2022 Middelburg War over Holland Retrieved 30 April 2016 J N Houterman Buffaloes bevrijden Middelburg 6 november 1944 Middelburg Gemeente Middelburg 1990 IMDb Database retrieved 30 November 2019 IMDb Database retrieved 30 November 2019 Paul of Middelburg Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 11 1911 Bynkershoek Cornelius Van Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 04 11th ed 1911 Drs Leopold onze man in Paramaribo De Telegraaf via Delpher nl in Dutch 11 November 1975 Retrieved 26 December 2021 Zeel Meteo 2019 07 25 Ongekende hitte in de polder Meteo Zeeland in Dutch Retrieved 2020 09 19 Home chocolademuseum nl Zeeuws Archief NS Nieuwsarchief nieuws ns via ns nl in Dutch ns nl Retrieved 3 February 2022 p166 178 of the House of Stratus edition ch 4 The Romantic Prince Rafael Sabatini 2001 Literature edit Lourens Piet Lucassen Jan 1997 Inwonertallen van Nederlandse steden ca 1300 1800 Amsterdam NEHA ISBN 9057420082 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Middelburg Middelburg Holland Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 18 11th ed 1911 nbsp Middelburg travel guide from Wikivoyage Official city website in Dutch with a limited English section Tourism Middelburg Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Middelburg Zeeland amp oldid 1174006982, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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