Olst-Wijhe
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Olst-Wijhe | |
Country | Netherlands |
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Province | Overijssel |
Area (2006) | |
- Municipality | 118.38 km² (45.7 sq mi) |
- Land | 114.16 km² (44.1 sq mi) |
- Water | 4.22 km² (1.6 sq mi) |
Population (1 January 2007) | |
- Municipality | 17,330 |
- Density | 152/km² (393.7/sq mi) |
Source: CBS, Statline. | |
Time zone | CET (UTC+1) |
- Summer (DST) | CEST (UTC+2) |
Olst-Wijhe is a municipality in the province of Overijssel, eastern Netherlands. It borders the Overijssel municipalities of Zwolle to the north, Raalte to the north and east and Deventer to the south; and the Gelderland municipalities of Voorst, Epe and Heerde to the west.
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[edit] History and economic activities
Both of the municipality's main towns, Olst and Wijhe, are old towns. Olst, which is believed to have been founded sometime during the seventh century, is first mentioned in chronicles in 947 (as "Holsto"), Wijhe in 960 (as "Wie"). Traditionally, agriculture (fruit and cereals), cattle, meat processing and the production of bricks in open-air brickworks along river IJssel were the prime sources of income in the area.
Nowadays, the towns are mainly commuter residences for people working in Deventer and Zwolle; both towns have had a railroad station on the Zwolle–Nijmegen main line (route 3600) since 1866. The surrounding land still relies heavily on agriculture. There is some small industry in Olst (machinery manufacturing) and Wijhe (meat processing).
[edit] Merger of municipalities
The present municipality was created on January 1, 2001 through the merger of the two former municipalities of Olst and Wijhe as part of a nation-wide bid to reduce administrative overhead on the municipal level. The newly merged municipality retained the name of its largest constituent part, Olst, pending approval of a definitive new name. After proposed neutral names containing neither "Olst" nor "Wijhe" met with little enthusiasm, it was decided to simply name the municipality Olst-Wijhe as of January 1, 2002.
Although the town of Wijhe has more inhabitants than the town of Olst, the latter was chosen to be the formal seat of the municipality as the former municipality of Olst was larger in both area and population than the former municipality of Wijhe. Because of sensitive feelings concerning the merger, particularly in Wijhe, this fact is downplayed and municipal services are spread over both main towns.
[edit] Geographical features
Olst-Wijhe is dominated by river IJssel, which flows through it and in some parts forms the border between the provinces Overijssel and Gelderland. Although this border largely runs along river IJssel, there are two left-bank exclaves opposite the towns of Olst and Wijhe, in which the villages of Welsum and Welsumerveld (south exclave) and Marle (north exclave) are situated. There are cable ferries between Olst and Welsum and between Wijhe and Vorchten in the municipality of Heerde (there is no direct connection between Marle and the rest of Overijssel).
Olst-Wijhe is part of the low-lying Salland region. The one-metre contour line (above mean sea level) runs roughly parallel to the river; the municipality's interior is characterised by flat or gently rolling grasslands and woodlands of at about 10-15 metres above mean sea level.
Apart from river IJssel, several more streams flow through the municipality's territory. They are called wetering ("waterway") and are natural streams that were gradually channelised in the eighteenth, nineteenth and twentieth centuries. From west to east, these are Zandwetering, Soestwetering, Groote Vloedgraven, Oude Wetering and Nieuwe Wetering. All these streams flow in a south-north direction and come together at one point or other to eventually form the Zwarte Water river near the city of Zwolle. On the left side of river IJssel, near the exclave of Welsum, there are several more wetering streams, all but one of them on the Gelderland side of the border; the exception being the easternmost of these, the Terwoldsche Wetering, which forms the western border between Olst-Wijhe and Voorst.
[edit] Population centres
The municipality consists of the following villages and hamlets (with 2007 population figures): Boerhaar (722), Boskamp (1,142), Den Nul (548), Duur (183), Eikelhof and Overwetering (309), Elshof (419), Fortmond (107), Hengforden (419), Herxen (316), Marle (74), Middel (213), Olst (4,905), Welsum and Welsumerveld (603), Wesepe (1,188) and Wijhe (6,107).
[edit] Things to see and do
[edit] General: mansions and windmills
- There are numerous mansions and country houses strewn around the municipality, most of them built in the eighteenth century. These include Groot Hoenlo, Klein Hoenlo, De Haere, Wijnbergen, De Hei and Nijenhuis. The mansions themselves are all still inhabited or used for commercial purposes and so cannot be visited, but their grounds are all open to visitors to stroll around. The mansion of Nijenhuis (near the border with Raalte) has been converted into an art gallery (a.o. Permeke, Van Gogh) with sculpture garden (a.o. Zadkine). There are windmills at Welsum, Olst (two), Boskamp, Wesepe and Wijhe. Of these, the ones at Welsum, Olst (one) and Wijhe are still fully functional.
[edit] Eikelhof
- The murder cross, erected in medieval times to commemorate/atone for a highway murder and source of many apocryphal mythical stories. It bears the legend:
INT JAER UNSES HEREN MCCCC EN XCIII
STIERF HIER JOHAN LUCKENS
BID VOER DE SELE
(In the year of Our Lord 1493 | Johan Luckens died here | pray for the soul)
[edit] Fortmond
- The Fortmond Natural Reserve along the IJssel river
[edit] Olst
- A Romanesque Protestant church completed in 1264, partly built from its predecessor's sandstone, otherwise from brick
- Het Baken van Overijssel ("The Overijssel Beacon"), an installation of modern art made of aluminium at the eastern bank of river IJssel, signifying the entrance to Overijssel province
[edit] Welsum
- A saddle-roofed Protestant church (nineteenth-century nave, sixteenth-century steeple)
[edit] External links
- Official website of the Municipality of Olst-Wijhe
- Detailed geographical map
- Sontimanti, web site containing subpages about Olst and the Eikelhof cross (pages in English and Dutch)
- Museum of Regional Geology (page in Dutch)
- Resources for the village of Wesepe (page in Dutch)
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Almelo | Borne | Dalfsen | Deventer | Dinkelland | Enschede | Haaksbergen | Hardenberg | Hellendoorn | Hengelo | Hof van Twente | Kampen | Losser | Oldenzaal | Olst-Wijhe | Ommen | Raalte | Rijssen-Holten | Staphorst | Steenwijkerland | Tubbergen | Twenterand | Wierden | Zwartewaterland | Zwolle |
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