Zoutelande
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The village centre (dark green) and the statistical district (light green) of Zoutelande in the municipality of Veere. |
Zoutelande (village in the municipality of Veere, on the former island Walcheren in the province of Zeeland, in the southwest of The Netherlands. On January 1, 2005 it had 1,556 inhabitants. It is located between Dishoek and Westkapelle. Originally, Zoutelande was mainly an agricultural village, this being its most important economic activity. The village's character changed slowly into a tourist resort as the demand for beach recreation rose from about the middle of the 19th century.
) is aZoutelande was a separate municipality until 1966, when it became a part of the new municipality Valkenisse.[1]
Nowadays, tourism is Zoutelande's most important source of existence. It is not for nothing that Zoutelande, together with the beach of Dishoek and Westkapelle, is called "Zeeland's Rivièra", after the famous south-coast of France. It is one of Zeeland's most-visited coasts, and one of the few places in The Netherlands where the beach faces south. Plenty of rooms, studios, bungalows and apartments are available to thousands of visitors every summer; most of the tourists are of German origin, although other nationalities are also widely represented. The remaining agriculture in the area benefits of the demand for accommodation in the form of mini-campings. Bicycle-rental, beachfront establishments, hotels, B&Bs, shops and a nice boulevard are all to be found in and around the village.
Like Domburg, Zoutelande was very famous among Dutch painters, who especially praised the sky over Zeeland. It is said the reflection of the sun on the water colors the sky more brilliantly and transparently than anywhere.
[edit] Monuments
Zoutelande has, just as almost all villages, its monuments, among them the Dutch Reformed Church with a tower in which fragments of late 13th century brick gothic are to be found. In about 1500 the church was formed into a hall church. In 1573 this was returned to its original state by the war damage during the Eighty Years' War. Most people suspect that the tower and church got their present shape about 1738. In 1950 a restoration took place. The parish of the church is connected through legend with Saint Willibrord.
Unfortunately an old monument, the Willibrord Well, was lost due to the building of the present sea dyke. The well, created by Willibrord and dating from the 16th century, according to the legend contained healing water. Because of the building of a new dyke in the 1960s, slightly further inland than the old row of dunes, part of the town had to be demolished. This is the reason why the church, which originally stood in the center of the village, is now almost at the foot of the dyke. In 1984 a new well was built to remember the legend.
Zoutelande also has it own windmill. The round, brick-built, corn mill originates from 1722.