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Groesbeek

Groesbeek

FieldValue
<!-- Name and transliteration -->nameGroesbeek
settlement_typeTown and former municipality
<!-- Images, nickname, motto -->image_skylineHervormde kerk, Groesbeek. Provincie Gelderland.jpg
image_captionReformed church in Groesbeek
image_flagFlag of Groesbeek.svg
flag_size100x67px
image_shieldCoat of arms of Groesbeek.svg
shield_size100x80px
shield_alt
image_mapMap - NL - Municipality code 0241 (2009).svg
map_altHighlighted position of Groesbeek in a municipal map of Gelderland
map_captionLocation in Gelderland (municipality of Groesbeek before 2015)
pushpin_mapNetherlands Gelderland#Netherlands
pushpin_label_positionleft
pushpin_mapsize250
pushpin_map_captionLocation in the province of Gelderland in the Netherlands##Location in the Netherlands
coordinates
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_nameNetherlands
subdivision_type1Province
subdivision_name1Gelderland
subdivision_type2Municipality
subdivision_name2Berg en Dal
<!-- Geographic information -->unit_prefMetric
<!-- for references: use <ref> tags -->area_footnotes
<!-- square kilometers -->area_total_km223.68
elevation_footnotes{{cite web
urlhttp://www.ahn.nl/postcodetool
titlePostcodetool for 6562AH
languagenl
workActueel Hoogtebestand Nederland
publisherHet Waterschapshuis
access-date4 July 2014
url-statusdead
archive-urlhttps://web.archive.org/web/20130921053543/http://www.ahn.nl/postcodetool
archive-date21 September 2013
elevation_m34
elevation_max_footnotestags --
elevation_min_footnotestags --
elevation_min_m
population_footnotes
population_total12,910
population_as_of2021
population_density_km2auto
population_demonymGroesbekenaar, Groesbeker
<!-- Other information -->timezoneCET
utc_offset+1
timezone_DSTCEST
utc_offset_DST+2
postal_code_typePostcode
postal_code6560–6562
area_code_typeArea code
area_code024
website

tags --| area_footnotes = |access-date=4 July 2014 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130921053543/http://www.ahn.nl/postcodetool |archive-date=21 September 2013 Groesbeek () is a town and former municipality in the province of Gelderland, the Netherlands. In January 2015 the former municipality merged with Millingen aan de Rijn and Ubbergen. The larger area was known as Groesbeek until January 2016, when its name was changed to Berg en Dal.

Description

Groesbeek is named after a small stream called the Groesbeek (beek being Dutch for "stream" or "brook"), which no longer exists in its original form. Hills and forests surround the town, and because of this, Groesbeek was isolated in the past, with a close community and a strong dialect.

Geography

Groesbeek and Kranenburg are situated on the banks of the Groesbeek, a small stream in the Groesbeek valley, a large valley between the Nijmeegse heuvelrug and Reichswald. The Groesbeek valley was carved out by glaciers during the Saale glacial, marking the southernmost expansion of ice-age glaciers in the Netherlands. The hills surrounding the valley in which Groesbeek lies are technically the terminal moraines of those glaciers, but in contrast to the hills in the central and eastern Netherlands, these hills are rising by 0.5-0.8 mm/year due to tectonic uplift.

Due to this, the topography is much more varied here than in other higher grounds with similar origins in the Netherlands. Finally, during the Younger Dryas stadial, large amounts of loess were deposited in the valley, making it extremely fertile, while the hills around it are composed to this day of sandy loam unsuitable for intensive agriculture, so that the area has been covered with thick forests to this day. This contributed to the isolation of the area, especially considering the extent of the forests in the Middle Ages was much larger than today. The isolation of the valley was only alleviated by the arrival of the railway in 1865 and finally lifted in the interbellum by the construction of a high capacity paved road to nearby Nijmegen.

World War II

During Operation Market Garden the 82nd Airborne Division landed near Groesbeek. In the subsequent fighting the town was nearly completely destroyed and inhabitants were evacuated. The National Liberation museum is based in Groesbeek on one of the landing sites of operation Market Garden, and the Groesbeek Canadian War Cemetery also resides there.

Modern Groesbeek

Annual wine harvest festival in Groesbeek

Because of much better infrastructure and a generally increased amount of mobility among the Dutch after WW2, modern Groesbeek has transformed from a small village dependent on agriculture and forestry into a sprawling commuter town of nearby Nijmegen. The town itself is surrounded by hills and forests, including a three-kilometre wide band of woodlands, Dekkerswald, separating it from Heilig Landstichting and Nijmegen proper. In the last decade a viniculture industry has sprung up in Groesbeek, making the area the northernmost vinicultural centre in Europe, and the only such area in the Netherlands, owing to the highly fertile loess soil, generally warmer summers, and new variations of grapes which do better in the humid climate.

Despite having under 20,000 inhabitants, Groesbeek has one football club, (De Treffers), playing in the Tweede Divisie, the country's highest amateur level. Another club, Achilles '29, accepted promotion to the national first division in 2013 (the first club that accepted promotion in many years). There are also four other football teams: Germania, D.V.S.G., Groesbeekse boys and Rood-Wit.

The town is also well known as the setting of the third day of the Nijmeegse Vierdaagse when walkers participating in this international event have to pass through the town and the surrounding hills.

Groesbeek is also famous for having one of the biggest parades in the Netherlands on the Sunday of the Catholic carnival. Because of its success, places are now limited as the parade.

In the area

The town has two notable museums: the Freedom Museum and the Bible Open Air Museum. The Groesbeek Canadian War Cemetery and Memorial is located about two kilometers north of the town.

References

References

  1. "Kerncijfers wijken en buurten 2021".
  2. (24 October 2015). "Naam Berg en Dal toch op kombord Groesbeek". de Gelderlander.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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