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Wikipedia

North Brabant

North Brabant (Dutch: Noord-Brabant [ˌnoːrd ˈbraːbɑnt] (listen); Brabantian: Broabant; Brabantian: [ˈbrɑːban]), also unofficially called Brabant, is a province in the south of the Netherlands. It borders the provinces of South Holland and Gelderland to the north, Limburg to the east, Zeeland to the west, and the Flemish provinces of Antwerp and Limburg to the south. The northern border follows the Meuse westward to its mouth in the Hollands Diep strait, part of the Rhine–Meuse–Scheldt delta. North Brabant has a population of 2,562,566[2] as of November 2019. Major cities in North Brabant are Eindhoven (pop. 231,642[4]), Tilburg (pop. 217,259), Breda (pop. 183,873) and its provincial capital 's-Hertogenbosch (pop. 154,205).

North Brabant
Noord-Brabant
Location of North Brabant in the Netherlands
CountryNetherlands
Inclusion1815
Capital's-Hertogenbosch
Largest cityEindhoven
Government
 • King's CommissionerIna Adema (VVD)
 • CouncilStates of North Brabant
Area
 (2017)[1]
 • Total5,082 km2 (1,962 sq mi)
 • Land4,908 km2 (1,895 sq mi)
 • Water174 km2 (67 sq mi)
 • Rank3rd
Population
 (1 November 2019)[2]
 • Total2,562,566
 • Rank3rd
 • Density523/km2 (1,350/sq mi)
  • Rank4th
ISO 3166 codeNL-NB
Religion (2005)Catholic 57%
Protestant 6%
Muslim 4.5%
HDI (2019)0.944[3]
very high · 3rd of 12
Websitewww.brabant.nl
Castle Heeswijk
Themepark Efteling - World of Wonders
Van Gogh statue, Nuenen. Vincent van Gogh was born in Zundert. He lived and studied in various Brabant cities, including Zundert, Tilburg and Nuenen. Many buildings that Van Gogh painted have been designated 'Van Gogh Monument'.

History

The Duchy of Brabant was a state of the Holy Roman Empire established in 1183 or 1190.[5] It developed from the Landgraviate of Brabant and formed the heart of the historic Low Countries, part of the Burgundian Netherlands from 1430 and of the Habsburg Netherlands from 1482, until it was split up after the Dutch revolt. After the War of Independence, Catholics in the Southern Netherlands were systematically and officially discriminated against by the Northern Protestant government until the second half of the 19th century, which had a major influence on the economic and cultural development of the southern part of the Netherlands.

Present-day North Brabant (Staats-Brabant) was adjudicated to the Generality Lands of the Dutch Republic according to the 1648 Peace of Westphalia, while the reduced duchy remained in existence with the Southern Netherlands until it was conquered by French Revolutionary forces in 1794.

Until the 17th century, the area that now makes up the province of North Brabant was mostly part of the Duchy of Brabant, of which the southern part is now in Belgium. During the 14th and 15th centuries, the area experienced a golden age—especially the now-Belgian cities of Brussels, Mechelen, Leuven and Antwerp, and the Dutch cities of Breda, Bergen op Zoom and 's-Hertogenbosch.

After the Union of Utrecht was signed in 1579, Brabant became a battlefield between the Protestant Dutch Republic and Catholic Spain, which occupied the southern Netherlands. As a result of the Peace of Westphalia, the northern part of Brabant became part of the Netherlands as the territory of Staats-Brabant (Statal Brabant) under federal rule, in contrast to the founding provinces of the Dutch Republic, which were self-governing.

Attempts to introduce Protestantism into the region were largely unsuccessful; North Brabant remained strongly Catholic. For over a century, North Brabant served mainly as a military buffer zone. In 1796, when the confederate Dutch Republic became the unitary Batavian Republic, Staats-Brabant became a province as Bataafs Brabant. This status ended with the reorganisation by the invading French, and the area was united into the département of Deux-Nèthes (present province of Antwerp).

In 1815, Belgium and the Netherlands were united in the United Kingdom of the Netherlands, and the province of North Brabant was established and so named to distinguish it from South Brabant in present-day Belgium, which seceded from the Kingdom in 1830. This boundary between the Netherlands and Belgium is special in that it does not form a contiguous line, but leaves a handful of tiny enclaves (and enclaves inside enclaves) on both sides of the border. In fact, the Dutch government generally used the pre-Napoleonic borders in 1815 to divide its provinces, in hommage to the principle of Restoration. A few of these irregularities were corrected (Luyksgestel was exchanged for Lommel), Huijbergen became totally Dutch, but some remain, notably Baarle-Hertog (Belgian) and Baarle-Nassau (Dutch).

When the present province was instituted, its territory was expanded with a part of the province of Holland and the former territory of Ravenstein, which had previously belonged to the Duchy of Cleves, as well as several small, formerly autonomous entities.

In World War II the area was liberated by the allies during Operation Pheasant between October 20 to November 4, 1944.

The period from 1900 until the late 1960s is called Het Rijke Roomse Leven (translated as 'the rich Roman life', with 'Roman' meaning 'Roman Catholic'), an era of strong religious belief.[citation needed] Het Rijke Roomse Leven came about as result of the emancipatory drive of the province's disadvantaged Catholic population and was supported by a Roman Catholic pillar, which was directed by the clergy, and not only encompassed churches, but also Roman Catholic schools and hospitals, which were run by nuns and friars. In those days every village in North Brabant had a convent from which the nuns operated. Politically, the province was dominated by Catholic parties: the Roman Catholic State Party and its post-war successor, the Catholic People's Party, which often held around 75% of the vote.

 
A sign saying, "Welcome to Brabant". North Brabant is often just referred to as "Brabant".

In the 1960s secularisation and the actual emancipation of the Catholic population brought about the gradual dissolution of the Catholic pillar, as church attendance decreased in North Brabant as elsewhere in Western Europe. The influence of Het Rijke Roomse Leven (The Rich Roman [Catholic] Life) remains in the form of education where some schools are still Roman Catholic (today run by professional teachers and not by nuns) and in North Brabant's culture, politics, mentality and customs, such as carnival.[citation needed]

The interpretation of the Roman Catholic identity in North Brabant has shifted during the last 65 years from religious to cultural, but the province still has a distinct Catholic atmosphere when compared to the provinces north of the major rivers. A cultural divide is still found between the "Catholic" south and the "Protestant" north, but with a total of 1.5 million people and 20% of the industrial production in the Netherlands the southern "Catholic" area BrabantStad has become one of the major economically important, metropolitan regions of the Netherlands.[citation needed] As of 2010, Catholics were no longer a majority of the population in the province of North Brabant.[6] Only 1–2% of the total population of the Catholic area attend mass, and these churchgoers consist mostly of people over 65 years old.[7]

Geography

 
Map of North Brabant (2021)

With a population density of 501/km2, North Brabant is above average urbanized.[8] The urbanization is at the center of the province at largest, where the 'kite' (the Brabantse Stedenrij Breda, Tilburg, Eindhoven and 's-Hertogenbosch) is located, the rest of the province has a more rural character. The province has preserved some of its scenic nature well. National parks are found at the Loonse and Drunen Dunes, De Biesbosch and De De Groote Peel, on the marshes of the Meierij at Oisterwijk and Boxtel (within an area called Het Groene Woud), the border park Zoom-Kalmthoutse Heide, and in the forested area around Breda. Also, south of Eindhoven named De Kempen is an area with farmlands and forests. In Heeze, also south of Eindhoven, are the heath areas the Groote Heide (333 ha) and Strabrechtse Heath (1500 ha) located. The Strabrechtse Heide holds also the largest fen of the Netherlands. The Beuven (Beu fen) measures 85 hectares.

Like most of the Netherlands, North Brabant is mostly flat but nearly every part of North Brabant is above sea level; therefore, there are not as many canals as in the lower parts of The Netherlands. Although most of the population lives in urban areas, the province is scattered with villages around which most of the land is cultivated.

National Parks in North Brabant are:

De Biesbosch

The Biesbosch (from bies, "rushes", and bosch, "woodland") is an area southwest of Dordrecht formed when the dike on the Meuse burst and the St. Elizabeth's floods on 19 November 1421 engulfed great tracts of land in the southwestern Netherlands and altered the geography of the whole area, inundating over 40,000 hectares/100,000 acres of land. More than four-fifths of the flooded land has been reclaimed since the 18th century. An area of 6,000 hectares/15,000 acres was left as it was, and now forms the Biesbosch nature reserve and bird sanctuary. Until the end of the 1960s the Biesbosch was directly connected with the sea and subject to changing tide levels. As a result, it developed a flora which tolerated brackish water and was the home of numerous waterfowl. Since the damming of the Haringvliet there is no variation in water level, and both flora and fauna have adapted to the new environment. The Biesbosch is crisscrossed by a network of footpaths and bikepaths and by countless rivers and streams which offer excellent facilities for water sports (sailing, surfing). In spite of the large numbers of visitors the natural environment has remained largely unspoiled. The Biesbosch nature reserve can be reached by car only from the east (preferably via Werkendam). The southwest part of the area, with its three large reservoirs of drinking water, is closed to road traffic. The Biesbosch can also be reached by boat from Drimmelen, Geertruidenberg or Lage Zwaluwe.

De Kempen

The historical region of Kempen occupies the southern part of the province of Noord-Brabant and extends south of Eindhoven far into northern Belgium. To the east it reaches as far as the Meuse valley. The surface topography of De Kempen is very uniform. Most of it lies between 5m/15 ft and 35m/115 ft above sea level. The basement rocks are Cretaceous and Tertiary sediments, which are overlaid by Ice Age gravels and sands carried here by rivers of melt-water from the retreating glaciers. It is a typical area of sandy heathland. The infertile soil is suitable only for undemanding crops such as rye, oats, potatoes and fodder plants; this limits the profitability of agriculture. Until a few decades ago Kempen was a region of heathland and sand drifts with a sparse growth of pines, a few scattered villages subsisting on the poor soil and some small towns; and this is still the pattern in much of the region. In recent years, however, the rapid advance of industry has brought about profound changes in this agricultural region. The origins of this industrial development go back 70–100 years. The main concentrations of industry are along the southern frontier of the Netherlands, e.g., at Eindhoven, Helmond, Tilburg, Breda, 's-Hertogenbosch.

De Peel

In the east of Noord-Brabant, near the Limburgish border, is the Peel area, an expanse of moorland extending from Eindhoven to Venlo, on the border with Limburg. Southeast of Asten is a nature reserve (1,300 hectares/3,250 acres; visitor center at Ospeldijk) which has escaped destruction by peat cutting. Mostly boggy, it will appeal to nature lovers with its interesting flora and fauna. Apart from this small area almost the whole of the Peel has been brought into cultivation.[9]

Rivers and deltas

The province is bordered by the river Meuse in the north. Its delta flows through De Biesbosch area, a national park.

Municipalities

North Brabant has been divided into 56 municipalities since 2022. Traditionally, almost every town was a separate municipality, but their number was reduced greatly in the 1990s by incorporating smaller towns into neighbouring cities or by other mergers. The municipalities in North Brabant are:

 
Province of North Brabant, municipalities (2021)

Municipal reclassifications

The following municipal reclassifications took place in the 21st century:

On 1 January 2003 the municipality of Ravenstein merged into the existing municipality of Oss.
On 1 January 2004 the municipalities of Geldrop and Mierlo merged into a new municipality called Geldrop-Mierlo.
On 1 January 2011 the municipality of Lith merged into the existing municipality of Oss.
On 1 January 2015 the municipality of Maasdonk merged into the existing municipalities of 's-Hertogenbosch and Oss.
On 1 January 2017 the municipalities of Veghel, Schijndel, and Sint-Oedenrode merged into a new municipality called Meierijstad, creating the largest municipality of the province of North Brabant in terms of land area.[10]
On 1 January 2019 the municipalities of Aalburg, Werkendam, and Woudrichem merged into a new municipality called Altena, an even larger municipality in terms of land area.
On 1 January 2021 the municipality of Haaren merged into the existing municipalities of Boxtel, Oisterwijk, Tilburg, and Vught.
On 1 January 2022 the municipalities of Landerd and Uden merged into the new municipality of Maashorst, and the municipalities of Boxmeer, Cuijk, Grave, Mill en Sint Hubert, and Sint Anthonis merged into the new municipality of Land van Cuijk.

Economy

The Gross domestic product (GDP) of the province was 116.1 billion € in 2018, accounting for 15.0% of the Netherlands economic output. GDP per capita adjusted for purchasing power was €39,900 or 132% of the EU27 average in the same year.[11]

Employment is found in the agricultural, industrial and service sectors, with agricultural and food processing companies such as Agrifirm, Bavaria, FrieslandCampina, Mars Incorporated, Nutreco, Royal Canin all having large production sites or their headquarters located in the province. The main agricultural products are sweetcorn, wheat and sugar beet, while cows and pigs are held as livestock.

An important economical activity is electronics industry, which developed as a spin-off from Philips. Several companies originated from Philips, such as Signify (formerly Philips Lighting), NXP (producer of semiconductors), and the world's largest supplier of photolithography systems, ASML. There are eight 'innovation campusses' in North Brabant, including the High Tech Campus Eindhoven. In 2017, Brabantian companies applied for 3655 patents, earning a spot in the regional top 5 in Europe.[12]

Other important industries are automobile production (e.g. General Motors in Breda, Tesla in Tilburg) and DAF in Eindhoven, textile and shoes.

In the 20th century, tourism has become an important sector for North Brabant. A tourist attraction is theme park Efteling in Kaatsheuvel, the largest of the Benelux. [13]

Safaripark Beekse Bergen is an Safaripark located between Tilburg and Hilvarenbeek. In terms of area, it is the largest Safaripark in the Benelux. More than 150 animal species are kept, ranging from small mammals to large birds. It is best known for its diversity. You can explore the park on foot, by boat, bus or with your own car. [14]

BrabantStad is a partnership between the municipalities of Breda, Eindhoven, Helmond, 's-Hertogenbosch and Tilburg and the province of North Brabant.[15] According to national rules, BrabantStad is defined as the area of Eindhoven, 's-Hertogenbosch and Tilburg.[16]

Language

A Brabantian speaker, recorded in Slovakia.

Brabantian is not a minority language in the Netherlands. It can be divided in two main dialects: East Brabantian and West Brabantian [nl]. Along with the Hollandic dialects it is one of the two most spoken versions of Dutch. Brabantian has, as compared to the other main Dutch dialects, had a big influence on the development of Standard Dutch. This is because Brabant was the dominant region in the Netherlands when the standardization of Dutch started in the 16th century. The first major formation of standard Dutch also took place in Antwerp, where a Brabantian dialect is spoken. The default language having been developed around this time, it therefore had mainly Brabantian influences. The early modern Dutch written language was initially influenced primarily by Brabantian, with strong influence from Hollandic emerging after the 16th century. Since the Brabantian dialect has developed faster than 16th- and 17th-century Dutch, it has become more diverse than modern Standard Dutch but is still quite similar and very understandable.[17] About one third of the Dutch-speaking population lives in the Brabantian dialect zone. Both in large Brabantian towns such as Breda and Eindhoven and in rural areas many people still speak the original dialect or colloquial Dutch with a typical "southern" tongue. Tilburg and 's-Hertogenbosch have a large number of people speaking the Brabantian dialect.

Culture

There are many museums, especially in the larger towns which include the North Brabant Museum in 's-Hertogenbosch, the Van Abbemuseum in Eindhoven, the Museum of the Image in Breda, Noordbrabants Natuurmuseum in Tilburg. Also a few towns have a large theater like the Chassé Theater in Breda and the Eindhoven Park Theatre. Large, reputable music venues like the 013 in Tilburg, which boasts the largest space of music venues in the Netherlands, and the Effenaar in Eindhoven offer concerts by major artists. Smaller venues like Mezz Breda, W2 Concert in 's-Hertogenbosch and the smaller halls of the 013 and the Effenaar offer concerts by emerging artists and bigger names in an intimate setting.

Events

Some yearly cultural events in North Brabant are:

Museums

List of museums in North Brabant

Museums of the main cities:

 
The Museum Quarter in 's-Hertogenbosch is a collective for the Design Museum and NoordBrabants Museum
's-Hertogenbosch
Eindhoven
  • There are two museums dedicated to the major topics of the city's industrial heritage: the DAF Museum has a collection of DAF cars, trucks and buses, and the Philips Museum documents the company history of electronics giant Philips and incorporates a 1891 lightbulb workshop.
  • The Designhuis, a public podium and interaction area for modern design and innovation in the former district court house.
  • The Eindhoven Museum, an archaeological open-air museum which focuses on the region's Iron Age and Middle Ages. It merged in 2011 with Museum Kempenland which was a regional museum, which documents the history of the Kempenland region in objects, documents, paint and educational activities. Museum Kempenland's old location, the Steentjeskerk, is closed.
  • Inkijkmuseum ("Look-In museum"; housed in an old linen factory in the Dommelstraat) is a small but special museum: it offers ever-changing exhibits, which are to be viewed through the building's windows.
  • The Van Abbemuseum has a collection of modern and contemporary art, including works by Picasso, Kandinsky, Mondriaan, and Chagall.
  • Wings of Liberation Museum / Bevrijdende Vleugels documents the liberation of the southern Netherlands
Breda
  • Stedelijk Museum Breda, resulting from a 2017 merger of the Breda's Museum and the MOTI (Museum of the Image)
  • Begijnhof Breda Museum
  • General Maczek Museum
  • Beer Commercial Museum
  • NAC Museum (football)
  • Local History Museum / Heemkunde Museum Paulus van Daesdonck
  • Museum Oorlog & Vrede (War and Peace Museum)
  • Stichting Princenhaags Museum
Tilburg
  • Museum of Modern Art – De Pont Foundation
  • Nature museum Brabant
  • Textile Museum
  • Museum of Charity
  • Museum brewery de Roos Hilvarenbeek
  • Museum the Town doctor Hilvarenbeek
  • Liquor and soda museum Hilvarenbeek
  • Boekorgelmuseum Hilvarenbeek
  • Agricultural museum Hilvarenbeek

Cuisine

The Southern Dutch cuisine constitutes the cuisine of the Dutch provinces of North Brabant and Limburg and the Flemish Region in Belgium. It is renowned for its many rich pastries, soups, stews, and vegetable dishes and is often called "Burgundian", which is a Dutch idiom invoking the rich Burgundian court which ruled the Low Countries in the Middle Ages and was renowned for its splendor and great feasts.

It is the only Dutch culinary region which developed an haute cuisine, as it is influenced by both German cuisine and French cuisine, and it forms the base of most traditional Dutch restaurants including typical main courses such as Biefstuk, Varkenshaas, or Ossenhaas, which are premium cuts of meat, generally pork or beef, accompanied by various sauces and potatoes which have been double fried in the traditional Dutch (or Belgian) manner.

Stews, such as hachee, a stew of onions, beef and a thick gravy, contain a lot of flavour and require hours to prepare. Vegetable soups are made from richly flavored stock or bouillon and typically contain small meatballs alongside a variety of different vegetables. Asparagus and witlo(o)f are highly prized and traditionally eaten with cheese and/or ham.

Pastries are abundant, often with rich fillings of cream, custard or fruits. Cakes, such as the Moorkop and Bossche Bol from Brabant, are typical pastries. There are also savory pastries, especially the popular worstenbroodje (a roll with a sausage of ground beef).

The traditional alcoholic beverage of the region is beer. There are many local brands, ranging from Trappist to Kriek. Beer, like wine in French cuisine, is also used in cooking, often in stews.

Sports

 
Rat Verlegh Stadium of NAC Breda
 

Association football

North Brabant is home to 8 professional football clubs, more than any other province in the Netherlands. Two clubs (PSV and RKC Waalwijk) play in the Eredivisie, the highest professional football league in the Netherlands. Six clubs (Helmond Sport, Willem II, FC Den Bosch, FC Eindhoven, TOP Oss and NAC Breda) play in the Eerste Divisie, the second-highest division of professional football in the Netherlands. PSV Eindhoven is the biggest club of North Brabant, and most successful with 24 Eredivisie titles, 1 European Cup and 1 UEFA Cup, among many other domestic cups, and is one of the traditional "big three" clubs in the Netherlands.

class=notpageimage|
Location of professional association football clubs in North Brabant

Hockey

North Brabant is home to 3 hockey clubs that play in the Hoofdklasse. HC Den Bosch ('s-Hertogenbosch), Oranje Zwart (Eindhoven) and MOP (Vught). Oranje Zwart is the most successful of these clubs with many prizes, in the regular competition as well as in Europe. The most recent prizes are National Champions in 2014–2015, 2015-2016 and European Champions in 2014–2015.

Politics

The States of North Brabant (Staten van Noord-Brabant) have 55 seats and are headed by the King's Commissioner (Commissaris van de Koning), currently Ina Adema. Whereas the provincial council (the States-Provincial - Provinciale Staten) is elected by the inhabitants, the Commissioner is appointed by the King and the cabinet of the Netherlands. With 10 seats, People's Party for Freedom and Democracy is the largest party in the council, closely followed by Christian Democratic Appeal and Socialist Party, both with 9 seats.

The daily affairs of the province are taken care of by the Provincial-Executive (Gedeputeerde Staten), which are also headed by the Commissioner; its members (commissioners - gedeputeerden) can be compared with ministers.

States-Provincial

Results in North Brabant in the elections for the States-Provincial:

Results for the States-Provincial
Parties 2007 2011 2015 2019
VVD 11 12 10 10
Forum for Democracy - - - 9
CDA 18 10 9 8
SP 12 8 9 5
D66 1 5 7 5
GreenLeft 2 3 3 5
PVV - 8 7 4
PvdA 8 7 4 3
50PLUS - 1 2 2
Party for the Animals 1 1 2 2
ChristianUnion-SGP 1 0 1 1
Local Brabant - - 1 1
other parties 0 0 0 0
Total 55 55 55 55

Provincial-Executive

As of 7 May the Provincial-Executive of North Brabant is composed of the following individuals.

Name Title/Portfolio Party
Ina Adema King's Commissioner • Administrative Coordination
• Administrative Integrity
• European Committee of the Regions
• Government Duties
• Province Register
• Taskforce Brabant-Zeeland
People's Party for Freedom and Democracy
Christophe van der Maat Executive • Mobility
• Finance
• Organization
• First Deputy King's Commissioner
People's Party for
Freedom and Democracy
Eric de Bie Executive • Energy
• Heritage
• Administrative Renewal
• Second Deputy King's Commissioner
Forum for Democracy
Erik Ronnes Executive • Space
• Living
• Third Deputy King's Commissioner
Christian Democratic Appeal
Wil van Pinxteren Executive • Leisure
• Culture
• Sports
•. Fourth Deputy King's Commissioner
Locally Brabant [nl]
Martijn van Gruijthuisen Executive • Economy
• Knowledge
• Talent Development
• Fifth Deputy King's Commissioner
People's Party for
Freedom and Democracy
Peter Smit Executive • Water
• Soil
• Sixth Deputy King's Commissioner
Forum for Democracy
Elies Lemkes - Straver Executive • Agriculture
• Food
• Nature
• Seventh Deputy King's Commissioner
Christian Democratic Appeal

Voting Results for the House of Representatives

In North Brabant the inhabitants voted as follows for the House of Representatives (Tweede Kamer):

Results for the House of Representatives
Partij 2006 2010 2012
Votes in % Votes in % Votes in %
VVD 14.5 21.0 28.8
PvdA 17.8 16.1 21.5
SP 20.4 13.4 13.8
PVV 6.2 17.4 11.0
CDA 31.8 16.2 9.1
D66 1.6 6.6 7.8
50PLUS - - 2.4
GreenLeft 3.4 5.5 1.8
Party for the Animals 1.4 1.1 1.6
ChristianUnion 1.5 1.0 0.9
SGP 0.4 0.4 0.5
other parties 1.0 1.3 0.9
Total 100.0 100.0 100.0
Turn-out 78.5 73.7 72.7

Religion

Religion in North Brabant (2015)[22]

  Catholicism (48%)
  Not religious (38.8%)
  Islam (4.4%)
  Other (3.3%)
 
St. Catherine's Church, a Roman Catholic church in Eindhoven

Traditionally the province of North Brabant was strongly Roman Catholic. Following the independence of the Netherlands, Catholics faced discrimination by the Protestant government until the mid-19th century. During the 1960s the relatively strong demarcation between the Catholic south on one side and the Calvinist west and north on the other side of the Netherlands started to diminish. In the second half of the 20th century a rapid secularization took place in North Brabant.

In 2006 slightly more than half of the Brabantian people reported adhering to Catholicism. For example, in the Diocese of 's-Hertogenbosch, the eastern part of North Brabant and part of the province of Gelderland, 1,167,000 people reported an association with Roman Catholicism (56.8 percent of the population). However, only 45,645 residents of this area attended the mass on average, which was only 2 percent of the total population of the area. In western North Brabant (Diocese of Breda) the number of people associating themselves with Catholicism also strongly decreased; only 52 percent of the West Brabantians identify as Roman Catholic. Church attendance was even lower in the west, with only 1 percent of the West Brabantian population attending Mass.[23] North Brabant is mostly Roman Catholic by tradition. Residents still use the term and certain traditions as a base for their cultural identity rather than as a religious identity, and the vast majority of the Catholic population is now largely irreligious in practice. Research among Catholics in the Netherlands in 2007 showed that only 27% of the Dutch Catholics could be regarded as theist, while 55% were ietsist or nontheist and 17% were agnostic.[24]

In 2010, about 6% of the population of North Brabant claimed adherence to Protestantism, while 4.5% of the population was Muslim; the latter mainly live in the larger and medium-sized municipalities.[25]

See also

References

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  8. ^ De gemiddelde bevolkingsdichtheid van Nederland bedraagt 403/km² (2012).
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  10. ^ CBS. "In twintig jaar bijna 240 gemeenten minder". www.cbs.nl (in Dutch). Retrieved 30 December 2016.
  11. ^ "Regional GDP per capita ranged from 30% to 263% of the EU average in 2018". Eurostat.
  12. ^ "Brabant in Europese top 5 van octrooi-aanvragen". 7 March 2018.
  13. ^ "Dit zijn de 13 populairste dagattracties van Nederland". 20 April 2017.
  14. ^ "Beekse Bergen Safari Park". www.visitbrabant.com.
  15. ^ Maertens, Christophe (18 January 2019). "Burgemeesters van Ieper, Poperinge, Diksmuide en Veurne voorzichtig positief over 'Westhoek City'". Het Laatste Nieuws (in Dutch).
  16. ^ Windhorst, Peter Pim (26 May 2016). "Wie weet er nou het beste wat BrabantStad is? BrabantStad zelf of de minister?". Omroep Brabant (in Dutch).
  17. ^ . phileon.nl. Archived from the original on 19 June 2014. Retrieved 19 March 2014.
  18. ^ "Glow Eindhoven". Glow Eindhoven. Retrieved 2 December 2009.
  19. ^ "STRP Festival". Strp.nl. Retrieved 5 May 2009.
  20. ^ "De oudste en langste waterlinie". Zuiderwaterlinie.
  21. ^ "Welkom - Stichting Huizinghe De Loet". www.deloet.com.
  22. ^ Helft Nederlanders is kerkelijk of religieus, CBS, 22 December 2016
  23. ^ Kerncijfers 2006 uit de kerkelijke statistiek van het Rooms-Katholiek Kerkgenootschap in Nederland, Rapport nr. 561 oktober 2007, Jolanda Massaar- Remmerswaal dr. Ton Bernts, KASKI, onderzoek en advies over religie en samenleving
  24. ^ God in Nederland (1996–2006), by Ronald Meester, G. Dekker, ISBN 9789025957407
  25. ^ (PDF). forum.nl. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 January 2015. Retrieved 23 March 2014.

External links

  •   Media related to North Brabant at Wikimedia Commons
  •   North Brabant travel guide from Wikivoyage
  • Official website (in Dutch)
  • BOM Foreign Investments - Background information economy Brabant
  • Deltaworks Online - Flood protection of North Brabant and Deltaregion

Coordinates: 51°40′N 5°00′E / 51.667°N 5.000°E / 51.667; 5.000

north, brabant, this, article, about, dutch, province, other, uses, brabant, dutch, noord, brabant, ˌnoːrd, ˈbraːbɑnt, listen, brabantian, broabant, brabantian, ˈbrɑːban, also, unofficially, called, brabant, province, south, netherlands, borders, provinces, so. This article is about the Dutch province For other uses see Brabant North Brabant Dutch Noord Brabant ˌnoːrd ˈbraːbɑnt listen Brabantian Broabant Brabantian ˈbrɑːban also unofficially called Brabant is a province in the south of the Netherlands It borders the provinces of South Holland and Gelderland to the north Limburg to the east Zeeland to the west and the Flemish provinces of Antwerp and Limburg to the south The northern border follows the Meuse westward to its mouth in the Hollands Diep strait part of the Rhine Meuse Scheldt delta North Brabant has a population of 2 562 566 2 as of November 2019 Major cities in North Brabant are Eindhoven pop 231 642 4 Tilburg pop 217 259 Breda pop 183 873 and its provincial capital s Hertogenbosch pop 154 205 North Brabant Noord BrabantProvince of the NetherlandsFlagCoat of armsLocation of North Brabant in the NetherlandsCountryNetherlandsInclusion1815Capital s HertogenboschLargest cityEindhovenGovernment King s CommissionerIna Adema VVD CouncilStates of North BrabantArea 2017 1 Total5 082 km2 1 962 sq mi Land4 908 km2 1 895 sq mi Water174 km2 67 sq mi Rank3rdPopulation 1 November 2019 2 Total2 562 566 Rank3rd Density523 km2 1 350 sq mi Rank4thISO 3166 codeNL NBReligion 2005 Catholic 57 Protestant 6 Muslim 4 5 HDI 2019 0 944 3 very high 3rd of 12Websitewww brabant nl Castle Heeswijk Themepark Efteling World of Wonders Van Gogh statue Nuenen Vincent van Gogh was born in Zundert He lived and studied in various Brabant cities including Zundert Tilburg and Nuenen Many buildings that Van Gogh painted have been designated Van Gogh Monument Contents 1 History 2 Geography 2 1 De Biesbosch 2 2 De Kempen 2 3 De Peel 2 4 Rivers and deltas 2 5 Municipalities 2 5 1 Municipal reclassifications 3 Economy 4 Language 5 Culture 5 1 Events 5 2 Museums 5 3 Cuisine 5 4 Sports 5 4 1 Association football 5 4 2 Hockey 6 Politics 6 1 States Provincial 6 2 Provincial Executive 6 3 Voting Results for the House of Representatives 7 Religion 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksHistory Edit De Groote Peel National Park The Duchy of Brabant was a state of the Holy Roman Empire established in 1183 or 1190 5 It developed from the Landgraviate of Brabant and formed the heart of the historic Low Countries part of the Burgundian Netherlands from 1430 and of the Habsburg Netherlands from 1482 until it was split up after the Dutch revolt After the War of Independence Catholics in the Southern Netherlands were systematically and officially discriminated against by the Northern Protestant government until the second half of the 19th century which had a major influence on the economic and cultural development of the southern part of the Netherlands Present day North Brabant Staats Brabant was adjudicated to the Generality Lands of the Dutch Republic according to the 1648 Peace of Westphalia while the reduced duchy remained in existence with the Southern Netherlands until it was conquered by French Revolutionary forces in 1794 Until the 17th century the area that now makes up the province of North Brabant was mostly part of the Duchy of Brabant of which the southern part is now in Belgium During the 14th and 15th centuries the area experienced a golden age especially the now Belgian cities of Brussels Mechelen Leuven and Antwerp and the Dutch cities of Breda Bergen op Zoom and s Hertogenbosch After the Union of Utrecht was signed in 1579 Brabant became a battlefield between the Protestant Dutch Republic and Catholic Spain which occupied the southern Netherlands As a result of the Peace of Westphalia the northern part of Brabant became part of the Netherlands as the territory of Staats Brabant Statal Brabant under federal rule in contrast to the founding provinces of the Dutch Republic which were self governing Attempts to introduce Protestantism into the region were largely unsuccessful North Brabant remained strongly Catholic For over a century North Brabant served mainly as a military buffer zone In 1796 when the confederate Dutch Republic became the unitary Batavian Republic Staats Brabant became a province as Bataafs Brabant This status ended with the reorganisation by the invading French and the area was united into the departement of Deux Nethes present province of Antwerp In 1815 Belgium and the Netherlands were united in the United Kingdom of the Netherlands and the province of North Brabant was established and so named to distinguish it from South Brabant in present day Belgium which seceded from the Kingdom in 1830 This boundary between the Netherlands and Belgium is special in that it does not form a contiguous line but leaves a handful of tiny enclaves and enclaves inside enclaves on both sides of the border In fact the Dutch government generally used the pre Napoleonic borders in 1815 to divide its provinces in hommage to the principle of Restoration A few of these irregularities were corrected Luyksgestel was exchanged for Lommel Huijbergen became totally Dutch but some remain notably Baarle Hertog Belgian and Baarle Nassau Dutch When the present province was instituted its territory was expanded with a part of the province of Holland and the former territory of Ravenstein which had previously belonged to the Duchy of Cleves as well as several small formerly autonomous entities In World War II the area was liberated by the allies during Operation Pheasant between October 20 to November 4 1944 The period from 1900 until the late 1960s is called Het Rijke Roomse Leven translated as the rich Roman life with Roman meaning Roman Catholic an era of strong religious belief citation needed Het Rijke Roomse Leven came about as result of the emancipatory drive of the province s disadvantaged Catholic population and was supported by a Roman Catholic pillar which was directed by the clergy and not only encompassed churches but also Roman Catholic schools and hospitals which were run by nuns and friars In those days every village in North Brabant had a convent from which the nuns operated Politically the province was dominated by Catholic parties the Roman Catholic State Party and its post war successor the Catholic People s Party which often held around 75 of the vote A sign saying Welcome to Brabant North Brabant is often just referred to as Brabant In the 1960s secularisation and the actual emancipation of the Catholic population brought about the gradual dissolution of the Catholic pillar as church attendance decreased in North Brabant as elsewhere in Western Europe The influence of Het Rijke Roomse Leven The Rich Roman Catholic Life remains in the form of education where some schools are still Roman Catholic today run by professional teachers and not by nuns and in North Brabant s culture politics mentality and customs such as carnival citation needed The interpretation of the Roman Catholic identity in North Brabant has shifted during the last 65 years from religious to cultural but the province still has a distinct Catholic atmosphere when compared to the provinces north of the major rivers A cultural divide is still found between the Catholic south and the Protestant north but with a total of 1 5 million people and 20 of the industrial production in the Netherlands the southern Catholic area BrabantStad has become one of the major economically important metropolitan regions of the Netherlands citation needed As of 2010 Catholics were no longer a majority of the population in the province of North Brabant 6 Only 1 2 of the total population of the Catholic area attend mass and these churchgoers consist mostly of people over 65 years old 7 Geography Edit Map of North Brabant 2021 With a population density of 501 km2 North Brabant is above average urbanized 8 The urbanization is at the center of the province at largest where the kite the Brabantse Stedenrij Breda Tilburg Eindhoven and s Hertogenbosch is located the rest of the province has a more rural character The province has preserved some of its scenic nature well National parks are found at the Loonse and Drunen Dunes De Biesbosch and De De Groote Peel on the marshes of the Meierij at Oisterwijk and Boxtel within an area called Het Groene Woud the border park Zoom Kalmthoutse Heide and in the forested area around Breda Also south of Eindhoven named De Kempen is an area with farmlands and forests In Heeze also south of Eindhoven are the heath areas the Groote Heide 333 ha and Strabrechtse Heath 1500 ha located The Strabrechtse Heide holds also the largest fen of the Netherlands The Beuven Beu fen measures 85 hectares Like most of the Netherlands North Brabant is mostly flat but nearly every part of North Brabant is above sea level therefore there are not as many canals as in the lower parts of The Netherlands Although most of the population lives in urban areas the province is scattered with villages around which most of the land is cultivated National Parks in North Brabant are De Biesbosch National Park North Brabant South Holland 7 100 ha 1994 De Zoom Kalmthoutse Heide Cross Border Park North Brabant Antwerp Belgium 3 750 ha 2001 De Loonse en Drunense Duinen National Park North Brabant 3 400 ha 2002 De Grote Peel National Park North Brabant Limburg 1 340 ha 1993De Biesbosch Edit The Biesbosch from bies rushes and bosch woodland is an area southwest of Dordrecht formed when the dike on the Meuse burst and the St Elizabeth s floods on 19 November 1421 engulfed great tracts of land in the southwestern Netherlands and altered the geography of the whole area inundating over 40 000 hectares 100 000 acres of land More than four fifths of the flooded land has been reclaimed since the 18th century An area of 6 000 hectares 15 000 acres was left as it was and now forms the Biesbosch nature reserve and bird sanctuary Until the end of the 1960s the Biesbosch was directly connected with the sea and subject to changing tide levels As a result it developed a flora which tolerated brackish water and was the home of numerous waterfowl Since the damming of the Haringvliet there is no variation in water level and both flora and fauna have adapted to the new environment The Biesbosch is crisscrossed by a network of footpaths and bikepaths and by countless rivers and streams which offer excellent facilities for water sports sailing surfing In spite of the large numbers of visitors the natural environment has remained largely unspoiled The Biesbosch nature reserve can be reached by car only from the east preferably via Werkendam The southwest part of the area with its three large reservoirs of drinking water is closed to road traffic The Biesbosch can also be reached by boat from Drimmelen Geertruidenberg or Lage Zwaluwe De Kempen Edit The historical region of Kempen occupies the southern part of the province of Noord Brabant and extends south of Eindhoven far into northern Belgium To the east it reaches as far as the Meuse valley The surface topography of De Kempen is very uniform Most of it lies between 5m 15 ft and 35m 115 ft above sea level The basement rocks are Cretaceous and Tertiary sediments which are overlaid by Ice Age gravels and sands carried here by rivers of melt water from the retreating glaciers It is a typical area of sandy heathland The infertile soil is suitable only for undemanding crops such as rye oats potatoes and fodder plants this limits the profitability of agriculture Until a few decades ago Kempen was a region of heathland and sand drifts with a sparse growth of pines a few scattered villages subsisting on the poor soil and some small towns and this is still the pattern in much of the region In recent years however the rapid advance of industry has brought about profound changes in this agricultural region The origins of this industrial development go back 70 100 years The main concentrations of industry are along the southern frontier of the Netherlands e g at Eindhoven Helmond Tilburg Breda s Hertogenbosch De Peel Edit In the east of Noord Brabant near the Limburgish border is the Peel area an expanse of moorland extending from Eindhoven to Venlo on the border with Limburg Southeast of Asten is a nature reserve 1 300 hectares 3 250 acres visitor center at Ospeldijk which has escaped destruction by peat cutting Mostly boggy it will appeal to nature lovers with its interesting flora and fauna Apart from this small area almost the whole of the Peel has been brought into cultivation 9 Rivers and deltas Edit The province is bordered by the river Meuse in the north Its delta flows through De Biesbosch area a national park Municipalities Edit North Brabant has been divided into 56 municipalities since 2022 Traditionally almost every town was a separate municipality but their number was reduced greatly in the 1990s by incorporating smaller towns into neighbouring cities or by other mergers The municipalities in North Brabant are West North Brabant COPOR group Bergen op Zoom Breda Drimmelen Etten Leur Geertruidenberg Halderberge Moerdijk Oosterhout Roosendaal Rucphen Steenbergen Woensdrecht Zundert Mid North Brabant COPOR group Alphen Chaam Altena Baarle Nassau Dongen Gilze en Rijen Goirle Hilvarenbeek Loon op Zand Oisterwijk Tilburg Waalwijk North East North Brabant COPOR group Bernheze Boekel Boxtel s Hertogenbosch Heusden Land van Cuijk Maashorst Meierijstad Oss Sint Michielsgestel Vught South East Brabant COPOR group Asten Bergeijk Best Bladel Cranendonck Deurne Eersel Eindhoven Geldrop Mierlo Gemert Bakel Heeze Leende Helmond Laarbeek Nuenen Gerwen en Nederwetten Oirschot Reusel De Mierden Someren Son en Breugel Valkenswaard Veldhoven Waalre Province of North Brabant municipalities 2021 Municipal reclassifications Edit The following municipal reclassifications took place in the 21st century On 1 January 2003 the municipality of Ravenstein merged into the existing municipality of Oss On 1 January 2004 the municipalities of Geldrop and Mierlo merged into a new municipality called Geldrop Mierlo On 1 January 2011 the municipality of Lith merged into the existing municipality of Oss On 1 January 2015 the municipality of Maasdonk merged into the existing municipalities of s Hertogenbosch and Oss On 1 January 2017 the municipalities of Veghel Schijndel and Sint Oedenrode merged into a new municipality called Meierijstad creating the largest municipality of the province of North Brabant in terms of land area 10 On 1 January 2019 the municipalities of Aalburg Werkendam and Woudrichem merged into a new municipality called Altena an even larger municipality in terms of land area On 1 January 2021 the municipality of Haaren merged into the existing municipalities of Boxtel Oisterwijk Tilburg and Vught On 1 January 2022 the municipalities of Landerd and Uden merged into the new municipality of Maashorst and the municipalities of Boxmeer Cuijk Grave Mill en Sint Hubert and Sint Anthonis merged into the new municipality of Land van Cuijk Economy EditThe Gross domestic product GDP of the province was 116 1 billion in 2018 accounting for 15 0 of the Netherlands economic output GDP per capita adjusted for purchasing power was 39 900 or 132 of the EU27 average in the same year 11 Employment is found in the agricultural industrial and service sectors with agricultural and food processing companies such as Agrifirm Bavaria FrieslandCampina Mars Incorporated Nutreco Royal Canin all having large production sites or their headquarters located in the province The main agricultural products are sweetcorn wheat and sugar beet while cows and pigs are held as livestock An important economical activity is electronics industry which developed as a spin off from Philips Several companies originated from Philips such as Signify formerly Philips Lighting NXP producer of semiconductors and the world s largest supplier of photolithography systems ASML There are eight innovation campusses in North Brabant including the High Tech Campus Eindhoven In 2017 Brabantian companies applied for 3655 patents earning a spot in the regional top 5 in Europe 12 Other important industries are automobile production e g General Motors in Breda Tesla in Tilburg and DAF in Eindhoven textile and shoes In the 20th century tourism has become an important sector for North Brabant A tourist attraction is theme park Efteling in Kaatsheuvel the largest of the Benelux 13 Safaripark Beekse Bergen is an Safaripark located between Tilburg and Hilvarenbeek In terms of area it is the largest Safaripark in the Benelux More than 150 animal species are kept ranging from small mammals to large birds It is best known for its diversity You can explore the park on foot by boat bus or with your own car 14 BrabantStad is a partnership between the municipalities of Breda Eindhoven Helmond s Hertogenbosch and Tilburg and the province of North Brabant 15 According to national rules BrabantStad is defined as the area of Eindhoven s Hertogenbosch and Tilburg 16 Language Edit source source source source source source source source source source source source source source A Brabantian speaker recorded in Slovakia Brabantian is not a minority language in the Netherlands It can be divided in two main dialects East Brabantian and West Brabantian nl Along with the Hollandic dialects it is one of the two most spoken versions of Dutch Brabantian has as compared to the other main Dutch dialects had a big influence on the development of Standard Dutch This is because Brabant was the dominant region in the Netherlands when the standardization of Dutch started in the 16th century The first major formation of standard Dutch also took place in Antwerp where a Brabantian dialect is spoken The default language having been developed around this time it therefore had mainly Brabantian influences The early modern Dutch written language was initially influenced primarily by Brabantian with strong influence from Hollandic emerging after the 16th century Since the Brabantian dialect has developed faster than 16th and 17th century Dutch it has become more diverse than modern Standard Dutch but is still quite similar and very understandable 17 About one third of the Dutch speaking population lives in the Brabantian dialect zone Both in large Brabantian towns such as Breda and Eindhoven and in rural areas many people still speak the original dialect or colloquial Dutch with a typical southern tongue Tilburg and s Hertogenbosch have a large number of people speaking the Brabantian dialect Culture EditThere are many museums especially in the larger towns which include the North Brabant Museum in s Hertogenbosch the Van Abbemuseum in Eindhoven the Museum of the Image in Breda Noordbrabants Natuurmuseum in Tilburg Also a few towns have a large theater like the Chasse Theater in Breda and the Eindhoven Park Theatre Large reputable music venues like the 013 in Tilburg which boasts the largest space of music venues in the Netherlands and the Effenaar in Eindhoven offer concerts by major artists Smaller venues like Mezz Breda W2 Concert in s Hertogenbosch and the smaller halls of the 013 and the Effenaar offer concerts by emerging artists and bigger names in an intimate setting Events Edit Some yearly cultural events in North Brabant are Carnaval February Koningsdag national day 27 April Dutch Design Week in Eindhoven international school festival October GLOW Festival Eindhoven in Eindhoven November 18 STRP Festival art amp technology festival in Eindhoven March 19 Breda Jazz Festival in Breda May June Redhead Day Roodharigendag in Breda first weekend of September Incubate in Tilburg September Roadburn Festival in Tilburg April Tilburgse Kermis in Tilburg since 1567 July Equestrian event Indoor Brabant Dressage and Show jumping in s Hertogenbosch March International Vocal Competition s Hertogenbosch September Jazz in Duketown in s Hertogenbosch June Art amp Antiques Fair s Hertogenbosch April Erasmusfestival Even years in s Hertogenbosch Fall Jazz in Catstown in Helmond June Kasteeltuinconcerten Castle Garden Concerts in Helmond July August Extrema Outdoor in Best July Paaspop in Schijndel April Mosh meeting in Roosendaal March Monsters of Mariaheide in Veghel February Museums Edit List of museums in North BrabantMuseums of the main cities The Museum Quarter in s Hertogenbosch is a collective for the Design Museum and NoordBrabants Museum s HertogenboschMuseum Quarter Noordbrabants Museum History and art Design Museum Den Bosch Southern waterline locations 20 Kruithuis Fortress Museum Bastionder information center fortifications Bolwerk St Jan information center Stronghold and Citygate Fort Orthen Fort Isabella and the Citadel Historic Fortresses Maurick Castle Zwanenbroedershuis Historical Brotherhood Museum Huize de Loet Brabantian Mansion Museum 21 Sint Jansmuseum Historical and Architectural Museum Het Oeteldonks Gemintemuzejum carnaval museum Jheronimus Bosch Art Center Museum Slager Museum in honor of the Artist Family Museum Hertogsgemaal Archaeological and Paleontological Museum Museum Gemaal Caners Watermanagement Museum Herzogenbusch Nationaal Monument Kamp Vught WW II concentration camp actually in Vught Geniemuseum actually in Vught Vughts Museum actually in Vught EindhovenThere are two museums dedicated to the major topics of the city s industrial heritage the DAF Museum has a collection of DAF cars trucks and buses and the Philips Museum documents the company history of electronics giant Philips and incorporates a 1891 lightbulb workshop The Designhuis a public podium and interaction area for modern design and innovation in the former district court house The Eindhoven Museum an archaeological open air museum which focuses on the region s Iron Age and Middle Ages It merged in 2011 with Museum Kempenland which was a regional museum which documents the history of the Kempenland region in objects documents paint and educational activities Museum Kempenland s old location the Steentjeskerk is closed Inkijkmuseum Look In museum housed in an old linen factory in the Dommelstraat is a small but special museum it offers ever changing exhibits which are to be viewed through the building s windows The Van Abbemuseum has a collection of modern and contemporary art including works by Picasso Kandinsky Mondriaan and Chagall Wings of Liberation Museum Bevrijdende Vleugels documents the liberation of the southern NetherlandsBredaStedelijk Museum Breda resulting from a 2017 merger of the Breda s Museum and the MOTI Museum of the Image Begijnhof Breda Museum General Maczek Museum Beer Commercial Museum NAC Museum football Local History Museum Heemkunde Museum Paulus van Daesdonck Museum Oorlog amp Vrede War and Peace Museum Stichting Princenhaags MuseumTilburgMuseum of Modern Art De Pont Foundation Nature museum Brabant Textile Museum Museum of Charity Museum brewery de Roos Hilvarenbeek Museum the Town doctor Hilvarenbeek Liquor and soda museum Hilvarenbeek Boekorgelmuseum Hilvarenbeek Agricultural museum HilvarenbeekCuisine Edit The Southern Dutch cuisine constitutes the cuisine of the Dutch provinces of North Brabant and Limburg and the Flemish Region in Belgium It is renowned for its many rich pastries soups stews and vegetable dishes and is often called Burgundian which is a Dutch idiom invoking the rich Burgundian court which ruled the Low Countries in the Middle Ages and was renowned for its splendor and great feasts It is the only Dutch culinary region which developed an haute cuisine as it is influenced by both German cuisine and French cuisine and it forms the base of most traditional Dutch restaurants including typical main courses such as Biefstuk Varkenshaas or Ossenhaas which are premium cuts of meat generally pork or beef accompanied by various sauces and potatoes which have been double fried in the traditional Dutch or Belgian manner Stews such as hachee a stew of onions beef and a thick gravy contain a lot of flavour and require hours to prepare Vegetable soups are made from richly flavored stock or bouillon and typically contain small meatballs alongside a variety of different vegetables Asparagus and witlo o f are highly prized and traditionally eaten with cheese and or ham Pastries are abundant often with rich fillings of cream custard or fruits Cakes such as the Moorkop and Bossche Bol from Brabant are typical pastries There are also savory pastries especially the popular worstenbroodje a roll with a sausage of ground beef The traditional alcoholic beverage of the region is beer There are many local brands ranging from Trappist to Kriek Beer like wine in French cuisine is also used in cooking often in stews Sports Edit Rat Verlegh Stadium of NAC Breda King Willem II Stadium of Willem II Association football Edit North Brabant is home to 8 professional football clubs more than any other province in the Netherlands Two clubs PSV and RKC Waalwijk play in the Eredivisie the highest professional football league in the Netherlands Six clubs Helmond Sport Willem II FC Den Bosch FC Eindhoven TOP Oss and NAC Breda play in the Eerste Divisie the second highest division of professional football in the Netherlands PSV Eindhoven is the biggest club of North Brabant and most successful with 24 Eredivisie titles 1 European Cup and 1 UEFA Cup among many other domestic cups and is one of the traditional big three clubs in the Netherlands TOP Oss FC Den Bosch FC Eindhoven PSV Helmond Sport Willem II RKC Waalwijk NAC Bredaclass notpageimage Location of professional association football clubs in North Brabant Hockey Edit North Brabant is home to 3 hockey clubs that play in the Hoofdklasse HC Den Bosch s Hertogenbosch Oranje Zwart Eindhoven and MOP Vught Oranje Zwart is the most successful of these clubs with many prizes in the regular competition as well as in Europe The most recent prizes are National Champions in 2014 2015 2015 2016 and European Champions in 2014 2015 Politics EditThe States of North Brabant Staten van Noord Brabant have 55 seats and are headed by the King s Commissioner Commissaris van de Koning currently Ina Adema Whereas the provincial council the States Provincial Provinciale Staten is elected by the inhabitants the Commissioner is appointed by the King and the cabinet of the Netherlands With 10 seats People s Party for Freedom and Democracy is the largest party in the council closely followed by Christian Democratic Appeal and Socialist Party both with 9 seats The daily affairs of the province are taken care of by the Provincial Executive Gedeputeerde Staten which are also headed by the Commissioner its members commissioners gedeputeerden can be compared with ministers States Provincial Edit Results in North Brabant in the elections for the States Provincial Results for the States Provincial Parties 2007 2011 2015 2019VVD 11 12 10 10Forum for Democracy 9CDA 18 10 9 8SP 12 8 9 5D66 1 5 7 5GreenLeft 2 3 3 5PVV 8 7 4PvdA 8 7 4 350PLUS 1 2 2Party for the Animals 1 1 2 2ChristianUnion SGP 1 0 1 1Local Brabant 1 1other parties 0 0 0 0Total 55 55 55 55 See also States of North Brabant more information Provincial Executive Edit As of 7 May the Provincial Executive of North Brabant is composed of the following individuals Name Title Portfolio PartyIna Adema King s Commissioner Administrative Coordination Administrative Integrity European Committee of the Regions Government Duties Province Register Taskforce Brabant Zeeland People s Party for Freedom and DemocracyChristophe van der Maat Executive Mobility Finance Organization First Deputy King s Commissioner People s Party for Freedom and DemocracyEric de Bie Executive Energy Heritage Administrative Renewal Second Deputy King s Commissioner Forum for DemocracyErik Ronnes Executive Space Living Third Deputy King s Commissioner Christian Democratic AppealWil van Pinxteren Executive Leisure Culture Sports Fourth Deputy King s Commissioner Locally Brabant nl Martijn van Gruijthuisen Executive Economy Knowledge Talent Development Fifth Deputy King s Commissioner People s Party for Freedom and DemocracyPeter Smit Executive Water Soil Sixth Deputy King s Commissioner Forum for DemocracyElies Lemkes Straver Executive Agriculture Food Nature Seventh Deputy King s Commissioner Christian Democratic AppealVoting Results for the House of Representatives Edit In North Brabant the inhabitants voted as follows for the House of Representatives Tweede Kamer Results for the House of Representatives Partij 2006 2010 2012Votes in Votes in Votes in VVD 14 5 21 0 28 8PvdA 17 8 16 1 21 5SP 20 4 13 4 13 8PVV 6 2 17 4 11 0CDA 31 8 16 2 9 1D66 1 6 6 6 7 850PLUS 2 4GreenLeft 3 4 5 5 1 8Party for the Animals 1 4 1 1 1 6ChristianUnion 1 5 1 0 0 9SGP 0 4 0 4 0 5other parties 1 0 1 3 0 9Total 100 0 100 0 100 0Turn out 78 5 73 7 72 7Religion EditReligion in North Brabant 2015 22 Catholicism 48 Not religious 38 8 Protestant Church in the Netherlands 5 6 Islam 4 4 Other 3 3 St Catherine s Church a Roman Catholic church in Eindhoven Traditionally the province of North Brabant was strongly Roman Catholic Following the independence of the Netherlands Catholics faced discrimination by the Protestant government until the mid 19th century During the 1960s the relatively strong demarcation between the Catholic south on one side and the Calvinist west and north on the other side of the Netherlands started to diminish In the second half of the 20th century a rapid secularization took place in North Brabant In 2006 slightly more than half of the Brabantian people reported adhering to Catholicism For example in the Diocese of s Hertogenbosch the eastern part of North Brabant and part of the province of Gelderland 1 167 000 people reported an association with Roman Catholicism 56 8 percent of the population However only 45 645 residents of this area attended the mass on average which was only 2 percent of the total population of the area In western North Brabant Diocese of Breda the number of people associating themselves with Catholicism also strongly decreased only 52 percent of the West Brabantians identify as Roman Catholic Church attendance was even lower in the west with only 1 percent of the West Brabantian population attending Mass 23 North Brabant is mostly Roman Catholic by tradition Residents still use the term and certain traditions as a base for their cultural identity rather than as a religious identity and the vast majority of the Catholic population is now largely irreligious in practice Research among Catholics in the Netherlands in 2007 showed that only 27 of the Dutch Catholics could be regarded as theist while 55 were ietsist or nontheist and 17 were agnostic 24 In 2010 about 6 of the population of North Brabant claimed adherence to Protestantism while 4 5 of the population was Muslim the latter mainly live in the larger and medium sized municipalities 25 See also EditBrabantian Brabantse Stedenrij BrabantStad Campine De Peel Generality Lands Samenwerkingsverband Regio Eindhoven Uden VeghelReferences Edit Oppervlakte a b CBS Statline opendata cbs nl Sub national HDI Area Database Global Data Lab hdi globaldatalab org Retrieved 13 September 2018 CBS Statline opendata cbs nl Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Brabant duchy Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press Kerkgebouwen en parochies KASKI Kerncijfers 2006 uit de kerkelijke statistiek van het Rooms Katholiek Kerkgenootschap in Nederland Rapport nr 561 oktober 2007 Jolanda Massaar Remmerswaal dr Ton Bernts KASKI onderzoek en advies over religie en samenleving De gemiddelde bevolkingsdichtheid van Nederland bedraagt 403 km 2012 10 Top Rated Tourist Attractions in Eindhoven planetware com CBS In twintig jaar bijna 240 gemeenten minder www cbs nl in Dutch Retrieved 30 December 2016 Regional GDP per capita ranged from 30 to 263 of the EU average in 2018 Eurostat Brabant in Europese top 5 van octrooi aanvragen 7 March 2018 Dit zijn de 13 populairste dagattracties van Nederland 20 April 2017 Beekse Bergen Safari Park www visitbrabant com Maertens Christophe 18 January 2019 Burgemeesters van Ieper Poperinge Diksmuide en Veurne voorzichtig positief over Westhoek City Het Laatste Nieuws in Dutch Windhorst Peter Pim 26 May 2016 Wie weet er nou het beste wat BrabantStad is BrabantStad zelf of de minister Omroep Brabant in Dutch Taal in Nederland Brabants phileon nl Archived from the original on 19 June 2014 Retrieved 19 March 2014 Glow Eindhoven Glow Eindhoven Retrieved 2 December 2009 STRP Festival Strp nl Retrieved 5 May 2009 De oudste en langste waterlinie Zuiderwaterlinie Welkom Stichting Huizinghe De Loet www deloet com Helft Nederlanders is kerkelijk of religieus CBS 22 December 2016 Kerncijfers 2006 uit de kerkelijke statistiek van het Rooms Katholiek Kerkgenootschap in Nederland Rapport nr 561 oktober 2007 Jolanda Massaar Remmerswaal dr Ton Bernts KASKI onderzoek en advies over religie en samenleving God in Nederland 1996 2006 by Ronald Meester G Dekker ISBN 9789025957407 FORUM Instituut voor Multiculturele Vraagstukken PDF forum nl Archived from the original PDF on 8 January 2015 Retrieved 23 March 2014 External links Edit Wikisource has the text of a 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article about North Brabant Media related to North Brabant at Wikimedia Commons North Brabant travel guide from Wikivoyage Official website in Dutch BOM Foreign Investments Background information economy Brabant Deltaworks Online Flood protection of North Brabant and Deltaregion Coordinates 51 40 N 5 00 E 51 667 N 5 000 E 51 667 5 000 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title North Brabant amp oldid 1135221919, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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