Feanwâldsterwâl
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Feanwâldsterwâl ( nl, Veenwoudsterwal) is a village in the
Dantumadiel Dantumadiel () is a municipality in the province of Friesland in the Netherlands. Dantumadiel is a rural municipality characterized by economic activity and agriculture. History The first time Dantumadiel is mentioned was in a document from 12 ...
and
Tytsjerksteradiel Tytsjerksteradiel () is a municipality in the province of Friesland in the Netherlands. It is named after the town of Tytsjerk, whose name is derived from a person named Tiete. Tiete was a daughter of Tryn, after whom the region (Trynwâlden) is n ...
municipality's of
Friesland Friesland (, ; official fry, Fryslân ), historically and traditionally known as Frisia, is a province of the Netherlands located in the country's northern part. It is situated west of Groningen, northwest of Drenthe and Overijssel, north of ...
, the
Netherlands ) , anthem = ( en, "William of Nassau") , image_map = , map_caption = , subdivision_type = Sovereign state , subdivision_name = Kingdom of the Netherlands , established_title = Before independence , established_date = Spanish Netherl ...
. it had a population of around 420 in 2021, however Feanwâldsterwâl is not a statistical entity, and the population count is only an estimation. Together with the village of
Feanwâlden Feanwâlden ( nl, Veenwouden) is a village in the Dantumadiel municipality of Friesland, the Netherlands. It had a population of around 3,430 in 2014. Together with the village of Feanwâldsterwâl, a former hamlet of Feanwâlden, it has a village ...
it has a village interest association group under the name: ''Vereniging van Dorpsbelangen Veenwouden / Veenwoudsterwal e.o.''.


History

The village Feanwâldsterwâl originated as a peat colony of Feanwâlden. It was possibly founded by Gieterse Mennonites from Feanwâlden, alongside the water that has long formed the boundary between the municipalities and former Grietenijen Dantumadiel and Tytsjerksteradiel. The place was mentioned in 1664 as ''Diepswal''. This was the original place name and most of the occupancy at the time was on the waterside of Dantumadiel.Gildemacher, Karel F. (2007). Friese plaatsnamen: alle steden, dorpen en gehuchten. Leeuwarden, Friese Pers/Noordboek (in Dutch) In the 19th century it was given the name ''Veenwoudsterwal'', specifically indicated in 1841. On a map of 1847 one speaks of Diepswal on the waterside of Dantumadiel and Veenwoudsterwal on the side of Tytsjerksteradiel. Later the village is also referred to as ''Diepswal or Veenwoudsterwal''. In 1958 the name ''De Wal'' emerged. Locally it is still called ''De Wâl'' in West Frisian. The main street is also called De Wâl. Until 2009 the official name was Veenwoudsterwal. In 2008 the municipality Dantumadiel decided that it was going the replace all the official Dutch names within the municipality with the West Frisian names. The municipality Tytsjerksteradiel followed the official name change for the village of Veenwoudsterwal meaning that Feanwâldsterwâl was from 2009 the official name for the village. The place was for a time seen as a hamlet of Feanwâlden but eventually got independent village status. According to the municipality of Dantumadiel, it had lost its formal village status in 1923. This was partly the reason why it did not receive its own postal code in 1978, in addition to the fact that it was divided between two municipalities. It took until 2011 that the municipality of Dantumadiel gave it official village status again after a substantial lobby from the village. In terms of postal code it is still divided among Feanwâlden,
Hurdegaryp Hurdegaryp ( nl, Hardegarijp) is a village in the northern part of the Netherlands, in the municipality of Tytsjerksteradiel. Its history dates back to at least the 13th century. It had a population of around 4,788 in January 2017. In Dutch the vi ...
and
Noardburgum Noardburgum ( nl, Noordbergum) is a village in Tytsjerksteradiel municipality in the Friesland province of the Netherlands. It had a population of around 2,250 in January 2017. History The village was first mentioned in 1718 as Bergumer heide. ...
.


Notable people

*


References

{{Tytsjerksteradiel Populated places in Friesland Dantumadiel Tytsjerksteradiel