Prinsenbeek

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Prinsenbeek is village and a former municipality in the Dutch province North Brabant. The village is situated western of the motorway A16 (Rotterdam - Antwerp) and the TGV-line Amsterdam - Paris. Prinsenbeek is a part of the parish Breda, and it has 11,419 inhabitants (2005). There is a train station on the line Rotterdam - Breda. When it is carnival, Prinsenbeek is calle Boemeldonck (slowtrainswamp).

[edit] History

Initially, the village was called Beek. The Prinsenhoeve at Beek was built in the 14th century, and that is the first appearance of this village. Beek became in 1796 an own parish. On 1 July 1866, the train station Prinsenbeek was built.

The municipality Beek was founded in 1942, during World War II, when the town Princenhage was added to the town Breda. The village, with a church, became a municpalty on its own. In 1951, the name was changed into Prinsenbeek, because there were several more towns called Beek, one in Limburg and one in Gelderland. Because of a royal decision, on 12 January 1951, Prinsenbeek got a town arms, and on 11 October 1963, the town council decided to have a town flag. On 1 July 1976, the area, eastern of the railway was added to Breda. Finally, at the municipal redividing on 1 January 1997, Prinsenbeek was added to Breda.

[edit] Buildings

Prinsenbeek has some civil monuments. The pump at the Markt is a reconstruction from 1975 of the pump from 1874, which was destroyed in 1935.

The Mariachapel was built in 1953, and renamed in 1980 into 'Chapel of Peace', in remembrance of the people who died in the second World War.

The church, built on the Maket square.

A sculpture of a slowtrain, which was used to drive on the railroad.

[edit] External links



 
North Brabant Province

Aalburg | Alphen-Chaam | Asten | Baarle-Nassau | Bergeijk | Bergen op Zoom | Bernheze | Best | Bladel | Boekel | Boxmeer | Boxtel | Breda | Cranendonck | Cuijk | Deurne | Dongen | Drimmelen | Eersel | Eindhoven | Etten-Leur | Geertruidenberg | Geldrop-Mierlo | Gemert-Bakel | Gilze en Rijen | Goirle | Grave | Haaren | Halderberge | Heeze-Leende | Helmond | 's-Hertogenbosch | Heusden | Hilvarenbeek | Laarbeek | Landerd | Lith | Loon op Zand | Maasdonk | Mill en Sint Hubert | Moerdijk | Nuenen, Gerwen en Nederwetten | Oirschot | Oisterwijk | Oosterhout | Oss | Reusel-De Mierden | Roosendaal | Rucphen | Schijndel | Sint Anthonis | Sint-Michielsgestel | Sint-Oedenrode | Someren | Son en Breugel | Steenbergen | Tilburg | Uden | Valkenswaard | Veghel | Veldhoven | Vught | Waalre | Waalwijk | Werkendam | Woensdrecht | Woudrichem | Zundert

Netherlands | Provinces | Municipalities| map

Coordinates: 51°36′N 4°43′E

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