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Hoorn
—  Municipality  —
Hoorn Skyline
Flag of Hoorn
Flag
Hoorn wapen 2
Coat of arms
LocatieHoorn
Coordinates: 52.65°0′0″N 5.07°0′0″E / 52.65, 5.07
Country Netherlands
Province North Holland
Area(2006)
 • Total 53.26 km2 (20.56 sq mi)
 • Land 20.32 km2 (7.85 sq mi)
 • Water 32.94 km2 (12.72 sq mi)
Population (30 November 2010)
 • Total 70,681
 • Density 3,478/km2 (9,010/sq mi)
  Source: CBS, Statline.
Time zone CET (UTC+1)
 • Summer (DST) CEST (UTC+2)
Website www.hoorn.nl
Hoorn - Hoofdtoren

The Hoofdtoren (harbour) from the lake

Hoorn, Venidse 1

This is in the old city centre, where the port used to be. Most of the old port disappeared with the building of the Afsluitdijk

Hoorn [ˈɦoːr(ə)n]  (Speaker Icon listen) is a municipality and a town in the Netherlands, in the province of North Holland. It is located on the IJsselmeer, 35 kilometres north of Amsterdam, and acquired city rights in 1357. Hoorn has 70,196 inhabitants (CBS: 3 March 2010). The area of the municipality is 52.49 km² (32.62 km² consists of water, mainly the Markermeer), and consists of the following villages and/or districts: Blokker, Hoorn, Zwaag, and parts of Bangert and De Hulk.

Cape Horn, the most southerly point of the Americas, was named after the town by Willem Schouten, who rounded it in 1616. The Hoorn Islands are also named after this city.

Naming[]

The origin of the name Hoorn - even in old spelling Hoern(e) or Hoirne - is surrounded in myths. Hoorn's name, according to Old Frisian legends is derived from the stepson of King Redbad (Radboud), called Hornus. Other stories about the origin of the name is derived from a sign depicting a post horn in early 14th century hanging outside one of the establishments situated on the Roode Steen Square. A third version says that the name was derived from the horn shape of one of its first ports. The author of the 'Origo Civitatis Hornensis' (see page. 256, 'Uit de schemer van Hoorns verleden') assumes that name Hoorn was derived from Damphoorn. Damphoorn is the medieval name for a weed that could be made into whistles, which grew in abundance in the area outside the dykes of Hoorn. Chronicler Velius rejects this statement because there are no old historical entries that Hoorn was called Damphoorn. He wrote: The name was from the start Hoorn: not (against better judgment) derived from the weed Damphoorn, if t'ghemeyne ghevoelen van noch heden hout (De name was van eersten af Hoorn: niet (behoudens beter oordeel) van het kruyt Damphoorn, als t'ghemeyne ghevoelen van noch heden hout). Velius also rejects the assertion that the name origin Dampter Horn: a neighbourhood of the village Dampten, which flooded and had fallen into disuse.

The name could also be derived from the name of Hornicwed. The medieval meaning of Hornic meaning corner, with wed or wedor being the medieval word for water. Many places and neighbourhoods in the Netherlands are called, even today; Heurne, Huurne and Horn. Hornicwed would therefore refer to the location of a corner on the coastline. It is also sometimes argued that it is a corner in a dike, but this raises doubts: the coast of the Zuiderzee was originally further away from Hoorn compared to the present day: the Westfriese Omringdijk ran, originating from the West, in a straight line to Schardam and in front of this dyke there were then low-lying tracts of land, where the village of Dampten was located according to Velius. This area was abandoned and flooded after 1391, after the abandonment of the old dyke. A new dyke was build further inland, resulting in a bay which is now the Hoornse Hop. Hoorn was already in existence then. We can also look at the meaning of Hornicwed. We still see this in our current word: uitthoek, which refers to a certain (occupied) area at some distance, which could be located on the waterfront (wed).

History[]

Founded in 716, Hoorn rapidly grew to become a major harbour town. During Holland's 'Golden Age' (or 'Golden Century'), Hoorn was an important home base for the Dutch East India Company (VOC) and a very prosperous centre of trade. The Hoorn fleet plied the seven seas and returned laden with precious commodities. Exotic spices such as pepper, nutmeg, cloves, and mace were sold at vast profits. With their skill in trade and seafaring, sons of Hoorn established the town's name far and wide. Jan Pieterszoon Coen (1587–1629) is famous for his violent raids in Dutch Indies (now Indonesia), where he "founded" the city of Batavia in 1619 (now Jakarta). He has a big statue on the Rode Steen square in the center of Hoorn.

In 1618 Willem Ysbrandtsz Bontekoe (1587–1657) undertook his first and only voyage for the VOC. His story of his travel and hardship found its way into the history books when he published his adventures in 1646 under the title Journael ofte gedenckwaerdige beschrijvinge van de Oost-Indische reyse van Willem Ysbrantsz. Bontekoe van Hoorn, begrijpende veel wonderlijcke en gevaerlijcke saecken hem daer in wedervaren (‘Journal, or memorable description, of the East-Indian voyage of Willem Ysbrantz. Bontekoe of Hoorn, comprising many wondrous and dangerous things experienced by him’). In 1616, the explorer Willem Corneliszoon Schouten braved furious storms as he rounded the southernmost tip of South America. He named it Kaap Hoorn (Cape Horn) in honour of his home town.

Hoorn's fortunes declined somewhat in the eighteenth century. The prosperous trading port became little more than a sleepy fishing village on the Zuiderzee. Following the Napoleonic occupation, there was a period during which the town gradually turned its back on the sea. It developed to become the market for the entire West Frisian agricultural region. Stallholders and shopkeepers devoted themselves to trading in dairy produce and seeds. When the railway and metalled roads came to Hoorn in the late nineteenth century, the town rapidly took its rightful place as a conveniently located and readily accessible centre in the network of towns and villages which make up the province of Noord-Holland. In 1932, the Afsluitdijk, or Great Enclosing Dyke, was completed and Hoorn was no longer a seaport.

The years after the Second World War saw a period of renewed growth. At the centre of a flourishing horticultural region, Hoorn developed an extremely varied economy. During the 1960s, Hoorn was designated an 'overflow' city to relieve pressure on the overcrowded Randstad region. Thousands of people swapped their cramped little apartments in Amsterdam for a family house with garden in one of Hoorn's modern new developments.

On 26 March 2007, Hoorn celebrated 650 years as a city: in 1357 Hoorn was awarded city rights by the Count of Holland after a lump sum payment of 1500 "schilden" to the Count.

Museums[]

Hoornmuseum

Westfries Museum

  • Affichemuseum
  • Historisch Museum Turkije-Nederland
  • Museumstoomtram Hoorn-Medemblik
  • Museum van de 20e Eeuw
  • Speelgoedmuseum De Kijkdoos
  • Westfries Museum
  • Oudheidskamer Kaap Hoornvaarders

Local government[]

The municipal council of Hoorn consists of 35 seats, which are divided as follows:

  • VVD - 6
  • VOCHoorn - 5
  • PvdA - 5
  • Fractie Tonnaer - 5
  • CDA - 3
  • D66- 3
  • GroenLinks - 3
  • SP - 2
  • Hoornse Senioren Partij - 2
  • Hoorns Belang - 1

Railway connections[]

Hoorn is connected to the Dutch railway network, and has two stations: Hoorn and Hoorn Kersenboogerd. Also, it is the starting point of the historical railway between Hoorn and Medemblik.

Template:Direct destinations from Hoorn

Twin cities[]

The City Of Hoorn has a twin city status with:

  • Belgium Beersel, Belgium, since 1979
  • Malaysia Malacca Town, Malaysia, since 1989
  • Czech Republic Příbram, Czech Republic, since 1992

Closest cities, towns and villages[]

Cities (within 100 km)[]

Towns (within 50 km)[]

Villages[]

Hoorn is approximately latitudinal with the towns of Norwich (England) and Berlin (Germany).

References[]

External links[]

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