Difference between revisions of "Holland" - New World Encyclopedia

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{{dablink|This article is about a region in the [[Netherlands]]. "Holland" is also informally used in [[English language|English]] and other languages, including sometimes the [[Dutch language]] itself, to mean the whole of the modern country of the [[Netherlands (terminology)|Netherlands]]. For other uses, see [[Holland (disambiguation)]].}}
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{{dablink|This article is about a region in the [[Netherlands]]. For other uses of "Holland", see [[Holland (disambiguation)]].<br> This article is specifically about Holland, not the Netherlands. For information about the country of the Netherlands as a whole, refer to articles about the [[Netherlands|Netherlands]].<br> Information specifically about Holland can also be found in the articles on [[North Holland]] and [[South Holland]].}}  
  
'''Holland''' is a region in the central-western part of [[the Netherlands]] with a population of 6.1 million people. Holland was a [[county]] of the [[Holy Roman Empire]], ruled by the [[Count of Holland]], and later became the dominant province of the [[Republic of the Seven United Provinces]] (1581&ndash;1795).
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[[Image:Holland position.svg|thumb|200px|upright|North and South Holland shown together within the Netherlands.]]
[[Image:Holland position.svg|thumb|300px|North and South Holland shown together within the Netherlands]]
 
[[Image:North Holland 1st-10th Century.jpg|thumb|right|300px|Approximate landscape in the Northern Netherlands during the 1st century AD (left) and the 10th century AD (right)]]
 
==Geography==
 
  
The name ''Holland'', first appearing in the sources in 866 for the region around [[Haarlem]] and used for the county from 1064, is derived from ''holtland'' ("wooded land"), a usual spelling variation until the 14th century. Popular, but [[fake etymology|incorrect, etymology]] holds that it is derived from ''hol land'' ("hollow land"), inspired by the [[lowland|low-lying]] [[geography]] of both the Dutch Holland and the English region ([[Holland, Lincolnshire]]). Apart from coastal [[dunes]] most of the surface consists of [[polder]] landscape, lying well below sea-level and only kept from flooding by continuous drainage, for which in earlier centuries the typical Dutch [[windmill]]s were used. In recent millennial the geography of the region has been extremely dynamic with the western coastline shifting up to thirty kilometers to the east, the [[Frisian Islands|Frisian Isles]] becoming detached from the north of Holland and the main [[Rhine]] and [[Meuse River|Maas]] rivers changing their course repeatedly and dramatically. In the last thousand years this process has been complicated by human activities. Behind the row of coastal dunes a large and high [[peat]] plateau had grown, protecting the land against the sea. In the tenth century this area was brought under cultivation; the drainage had extreme soil shrinkage as result, lowering the surface up to fifteen meters. In [[Zeeland|Zealand]] and [[Frisia]] this led to [[Floods in the Netherlands|catastrophic storm floods]] literally washing away entire regions and the sea hollowed Holland out from behind, forming the [[Zuiderzee]]. Only drastic administrative intervention saved the county from utter destruction. The Counts and large monasteries took the lead in this, building the first really heavy emergency [[Dike (construction)|dykes]] to bolster critical points. Later special administrative bodies were formed, the ''[[waterschap]]pen'' ("waterscapes"), with the power to enforce on penalty of death any decision they made regarding [[water management]]. They constructed an extensive dyke system with complete coverage of all polders, protecting the land from further incursions by the sea. From the 16th century onward, the ''Hollanders'' took the offensive and began [[land reclamation]] programmes, making polders of many lakes. As a result of all this historical maps bear little resemblance to the present situation.
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'''Holland''' is a region in the western part of [[the Netherlands]]. A maritime and economic power in the 17th century, Holland today consists of the Dutch provinces of [[North Holland]] and [[South Holland]].
  
The area is today divided between two [[provinces of the Netherlands]]: [[North Holland]] ''(Noord-Holland)'' and [[South Holland]] ''(Zuid-Holland)'' that were created in 1840, and make up roughly 13% of the area of the Netherlands. A few regions that were historically Hollandic became part of other provinces as a result of reforms during the French occupation (1795-1813). [[Moerdijk|Willemstad]] and surroundings, the [[Biesbosch]] and the [[Land van Altena]] became eventually part of [[North Brabant]] in 1818. In 1942, after the [[Battle of the Netherlands]] the Germans ordered the [[island]]s of [[Vlieland]] and [[Terschelling]] to go to [[Friesland]]. This was not changed back after [[World War II]]. In 1950, the island of [[Urk]] went to [[Overijssel]] (in 1986 to [[Flevoland]]). More recent territorial changes are the transfer of [[Oudewater]], [[Woerden]] and [[Vianen]] from South Holland to the [[Utrecht (province)|province of Utrecht]], in 1970, 1989 and 2002 respectively.
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== The name "Holland" ==
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[[Image:Counts of Holland Arms.svg|150px|thumb|left|[[Coat of arms]] of Holland]]
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The name "Holland" first appeared in the sources in [[866]] for the region around [[Haarlem]] and was by [[1064]] being used for the name of the entire county. By this time the inhabitants of Holland were referring to themselves as "Hollanders".<ref>Antheun Janse, "Een zichzelf verdeeld rijk" in Thimo de Nijs and Eelco Beukers (eds.), 2003, ''Geschiedenis van Holland'', Volume 1, p. 73</ref> "Holland" is derived from the Middle Dutch term ''holtland'' ("wooded land"). This spelling variation remained in use until around the 14th century, at which time the name stabilised as "Holland" (alternative spellings at the time: "Hollant" or "Hollandt"). Popular, but [[fake etymology|incorrect, etymology]] holds that "Holland" is derived from ''hol land'' ("hollow land") and was inspired by the [[lowland|low-lying]] [[geography]] of Holland.
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== Usage ==
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The proper name of the area in both Dutch and English is "Holland". "Holland" is a part of the Netherlands. "Holland" is informally and quite incorrectly used in [[English language|English]] and other languages, including sometimes the [[Dutch language]] itself, to mean the whole of the modern country of the [[Netherlands (terminology)|Netherlands]]. (This example of [[pars pro toto]] or [[synecdoche]] is similar to the tendency to refer to Great Britain as "England".)
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The people of Holland are referred to as "Hollanders" in both Dutch and English. Today this refers specifically to people from the current provinces of North Holland and South Holland. Strictly speaking, the term "Hollanders" does not refer to people from the other provinces in the Netherlands, but colloquially "Hollanders" is sometimes mistakenly used in this wider sense.
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When referring to the Netherlands as a whole, the [[adjective]] is "Dutch". "Dutch" is not used as an adjective for "Holland" in a modern context because "Dutch" refers to all of the Netherlands, not just Holland. However, there is a good deal of confusion about this. In actual practice, the adjective "Dutch" is often (but somewhat inaccurately) used in the specific context of Holland.
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In Dutch, the Dutch word "''Hollands''" is the adjectival form for "Holland", but in English there is no commonly used adjective for "Holland". "''Hollands''" is ordinarily expressed in English in two ways:
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:* a [[possessive case|possessive]] construction (e.g. "Holland's economic power"); or
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:* an "of Holland" or "from Holland" construction (e.g. "the Maid of Holland"; "a girl from Holland").
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The following usages apply in certain limited situations but do not ordinarily serve as the English equivalent of the commonly used Dutch adjective "''Hollands''".
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:* Occasionally, the noun "Holland" is used in [[apposition]] (e.g. "the [[Holland Society]]").
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:* The adjective "Hollandic" is occasionally used by some historians and other academic writers as an adjective for Holland. Historians who use the word tend to reserve it to pre-Napoleonic Holland.
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:* Historically the English word "[[Dutch]]" had a different, broader meaning that could occasionally include "''Hollands''".
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:* The adjective "Hollandish" is a word in English but is currently no longer in use.
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== Geography ==
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[[Image:Provincie Noord-Holland.gif|thumb|right|North Holland]]
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[[Image:Provincie Zuid-Holland.gif|thumb|right|South Holland]] See the article on the "[[Geography of the Netherlands]]" for a more detailed description.
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Holland is situated in the west of the Netherlands. A maritime water-oriented region, Holland lies on the [[North Sea]] at the mouths of the Rhine and the [[Meuse]] ([[Maas]]). It has numerous rivers and lakes and an extensive inland canal and waterway system. To the south is [[Zeeland|Zealand]]. The region is bordered on the east by the [[IJsselmeer]] and four different provinces of the Netherlands.
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Holland is protected from the sea by a long line of coastal [[dunes]]. Most of the land area behind the dunes consists of [[polder]] landscape lying well below [[sea level]].  At present the lowest point in Holland is a polder near [[Rotterdam]], which is about seven meters below sea level. Continuous drainage is necessary to keep Holland from flooding. In earlier centuries [[windmill|windmills]] were used for this task. The landscape was (and in places still is) dotted with windmills, which have become a symbol of Holland.
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Holland is 7,494 square kilometres (land and water included), making it roughly 13% of the area of the Netherlands. Looking at land alone, it is 5,488 square kilometres in size. The combined population is 6.1 million.
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The main cities in Holland are Amsterdam, Rotterdam and The Hague. [[Amsterdam]] is formally the [[capital of the Netherlands]] and its most important city. The [[Port of Rotterdam]] is Europe's largest and most important harbour and port. [[The Hague]] is the [[seat of government]] of the Netherlands. These cities, combined with [[Utrecht (city)|Utrecht]] and other smaller municipalities, effectively form a single city - a conurbation called [[Randstad]].
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The Randstad area is one of the most densely populated regions of Europe, but still relatively free of urban sprawl. There are strict [[zoning laws]]. Population pressures are enormous, property values are high, and new housing is constantly under development on the edges of the built-up areas. Surprisingly, much of the province still has a rural character. The remaining agricultural land and natural areas are highly valued and protected. Most of the arable land is used for [[intensive agriculture]], including horticulture and [[greenhouse]] agri-businesses.
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== Regions within Holland ==
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For lists of the towns and municipalities in Holland, see the articles for [[North Holland]] and [[South Holland]].
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Holland is made up of various regions that, for historical or other reasons, have their own identities. Some of these regions are unofficial, ill-defined and sometimes overlapping. Others are official and are part of regional groupings artificially created for various administrative purposes.
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These regions are not the same as the municipalities. For example, the South Holland village of Warmond is officially part of the municipality of Teylingen, but it is also located in the "Dune and Bulb Region" (called "Duin- en Bollenstreek" or usually just "Bollenstreek"). This is significant because the identity of Warmond is closely tied to the Bollenstreek.
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List of some of these unofficial and official regions in Holland:
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* [[Alblasserwaard]]
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* [[Amstelland]] (the area around the [[Amstel]])
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* [[Delfland]] (the area around [[Delft]])
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* [[Drechtsteden]] ("The Drecht towns")
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* [[Duin- en Bollenstreek]] (“Dune and Bulb Region”)
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* [[Goeree-Overflakkee]]
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* [[Gooi]] (usually "Het Gooi")
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* [[Gouwestreek]] ("The [[Gouwe]] Area")
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* [[Groene Hart]] ("The Green Heart")
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* [[Haaglanden]] (the area around The Hague)
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* [[Hoeksche Waard]]
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* [[Holland Rijnland]]
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* [[IJmond]] ("The Mouth of the [[IJ (bay)|IJ]]")
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* [[IJsselmonde]] ("The Mouth of the [[Hollandse IJssel|IJssel]]")
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* [[Kagerplassen]] (The Kaag Lakes)
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* [[Kennemerland]]
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* [[Krimpenerwaard]]
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* [[Noorderkwartier]] ("The North Quarter")
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* [[Noordvleugel]] ("The North Wing")
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* [[Randstad]]
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* [[Rijnland]] ("Rhineland")
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* [[Rijnmond]] ("The Mouth of the [[Rhine]]")
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* [[Rijnstreek]] ("The [[Rhine]] Area")
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* [[Schieland]]
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* [[Texel]]
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* [[Vechtstreek]] ("The [[Vecht (Utrecht)|Vecht]] Area")
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* [[Voorne-Putten]]
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* [[Waterland]] (now effectively the municipality of Waterland)
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* [[West Friesland (region)|West-Friesland]] ([[West Friesland (region)|West Friesland)]]
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* [[Westland, Netherlands|Westland]] (the region, not the municipality itself)
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* [[Zaanstreek]] ("The [[Zaan]] Area")
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* [[Zuidvleugel]] ("The South Wing")
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== Language ==
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See the article on the [[Dutch language]] for a more detailed description.
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The language primarily spoken in Holland is [[Dutch language|Dutch]]. Hollanders often refer to the Dutch language as "''Hollands''".
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The standard Dutch that is spoken in the Netherlands is mostly based on the Dutch spoken in Holland; however, there are many local variations in dialect throughout the Netherlands.
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Despite the correspondence between standard Dutch and the Dutch spoken in Holland, there are local variations within Holland itself that differ from standard Dutch. The main cities each have their own traditional dialect. A small number of people, especially in the area north of Amsterdam, still speak what is considered to be an original, older dialect, called "[[Hollandic]]".  The areas where people still speak with the Hollandic dialect are Volendam and Marken and the area around there, [[West Friesland]] and the [[Zaanstreek]].
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== Territory and political structure ==
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[[Image:Flag North-Holland, Netherlands.svg|thumb|right|Flag of North Holland]]
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[[Image:Flag Zuid-Holland.svg|thumb|right|Flag of South Holland]]
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"Holland" is not in itself a province of the Netherlands. It is divided into two [[provinces of the Netherlands]] — [[North Holland]] (''Noord-Holland'') and [[South Holland]] (''Zuid-Holland''). These provinces were created in 1840 largely because it was unacceptable for Holland to remain such an overwhelmingly large and powerful province in comparison to the other provinces. A few regions that were historically part of Holland have been ceded to other provinces.
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* Some cessions occurred as a result of reforms during the French occupation (1795-1813).  
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* In 1818 [[Moerdijk|Willemstad]] and surroundings, the [[Biesbosch]] and the [[Land van Altena]] became part of the provice of [[North Brabant]].  
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* In 1942, after the [[Battle of the Netherlands]], the Germans transferred the islands of [[Vlieland]] and [[Terschelling]] to the province of [[Friesland]]. This was not changed back after [[World War II]].  
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* In 1950, the island of [[Urk]] went to the province of [[Overijssel]] and then in 1986 to the province of [[Flevoland]].
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* In 1970 [[Oudewater]] was transferred from South Holland to the [[Utrecht (province)|province of Utrecht]].
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* In 1989 [[Woerden]] was transferred from South Holland  to the [[Utrecht (province)|province of Utrecht]].
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* In 2000 [['s-Graveland]] and [[Kortenhoef]], both in the province of North-Holland, were merged with[[Loosdrecht]] in the [[Province of Utrecht]].
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* In 2002 [[Vianen]] was transferred from South Holland to the [[Utrecht (province)|province of Utrecht]].
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* The municipality of [[Eemnes]] has a co-operation with [[Laren]] and [[Blaricum]]. They are collectively referred to as the "BEL region".
  
 
==History==
 
==History==
  
[[Image:Seven United Netherlands Janssonius 1658.jpg|thumb|right|300px|Historical map of the Netherlands (1658) showing the consequences of storm tides between the twelfth and sixteenth century]]
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Each of the provinces in the Netherlands has a history that deserves full attention on its own. However, to a certain extent at least, the history of Holland is the history of the Netherlands, and vice versa. See the article on "[[History of the Netherlands]]" for a more detailed history. The article here focuses on those points that are specific to Holland itself or that highlight the nature of the role played by Holland in the Netherlands as a whole.
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===Reclamation of the land===
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The land that is now Holland had never been stable. Historical maps of Holland bear little resemblance to the maps of today. Over the millennia the geography of the region had been dynamic. The western coastline shifted up to thirty kilometres to the east and storm surges regularly wreaked havoc with the coastline. The coastline was constantly changing. The [[Frisian Islands|Frisian Isles]], originally joined to the mainland, became detached islands in the north. At some point the sea broke a natural barrier and rushed in to fill in the area that used to be called the [[Zuiderzee]] (now the IJsselmeer). The main rivers, the [[Rhine]] and the [[Meuse River|Meuse (Maas)]], flooded regularly and changed course repeatedly and dramatically.
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The people of Holland found themselves living in an unstable, watery environment. Behind the row of coastal dunes a [[peat]] plateau had grown. Much of the area was marsh and bog. The inhabitants set about cultivating this land by draining it. By the tenth century this area was brought under cultivation. The drainage however resulted in extreme soil shrinkage, lowering the surface of the land by up to fifteen metres. [[Image:Benthuizen dijk polder.jpg|thumb|left|Benthuizen polder, seen from a dike]]
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This combination of factors threatened the inhabitants. There were [[Floods in the Netherlands|catastrophic floods]] that literally washed away entire regions and killed thousands. The early inhabitants understand that human intervention was needed to save the land. The counts and large monasteries took the lead in these efforts, building the first heavy emergency [[Dike (construction)|dikes]] to bolster critical points. Later special administrative bodies were formed, the ''[[waterschap]]pen'' ("water control boards"), which had the power to enforce their decisions on [[water management]]. As the centuries went by, they eventually constructed an extensive dike system that covered the coastline and the polders, thus protecting the land from further incursions by the sea.
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However, the Hollanders did not stop there. Starting around the 16th century, they took the offensive and began [[land reclamation]] projects, converting lakes and marshy areas into [[polders]]. This continued right into the 20th century.
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This ongoing struggle to master the water played an important role in the development of Holland as a maritime and economic power and in the development of the character of the people of Holland.
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===County of Holland===
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Until the 9th century, the inhabitants of the area that became Holland were Frisians. The area was part of [[Frisia]]. At the end of the [[9th century]], Holland became a separate [[county]] in the [[Holy Roman Empire]]. The first [[count of Holland]] known about with certainty was [[Dirk I, Count of Holland|Dirk I]], who ruled (also as count of Frisia) from [[896]] to [[931]]. He was succeeded by a [[Counts of Holland family tree|long line of counts]] in the House of Holland. When [[John I, Count of Holland|John I]], count of Holland, died childless in [[1299]], the county was inherited by [[John II, Count of Holland|John II of Avesnes]], count of Hainaut. By the time of [[William V, Count of Holland|Willian V]] (House of Wittelsbach; 1354-1388) the count of Holland was also the count of [[County of Hainaut|Hainaut]], [[Flanders]] and [[Zeeland|Zealand]]. [[Image:Holland & West Vriesland.JPG|right|600px|"De Staten van Hollandt ende West-Vrieslandt..." (1654)]] In this time a part of [[Frisia]], [[West Friesland (historical region)|West Friesland]], was conquered. (As a result, most provincial institutions, including the [[States of Holland|States of Holland and West Frisia]], would for centuries refer to "Holland and West Frisia" as a unit.) The [[Hook and Cod wars]] started around this time and ended when the countess of Holland, Jacoba or [[Jacqueline, Countess of Hainaut|Jacqueline]] was forced to give up Holland to the Burgundian Philip I in [[1432]].
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=== Holland's prominence in the United Provinces and Dutch Republic ===
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In 1432 Holland became part of the [[Burgundian Netherlands]] and since 1477 of the [[Habsburg]] [[Seventeen Provinces]]. In the 16th century the region became more densely [[urbanisation|urbanised]], with the majority of the population living in cities. Within the Burgundian Netherlands, Holland was the dominant province in the north; the political influence of Holland largely determined the extent of Burgundian dominion in that area. [[Image:COMITATUS HOLLANDIAE 1682.jpg|thumb|left|Comitatus Hollandiae (1682)]]
  
===County  of Holland===
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In the Dutch Rebellion against the Habsburgs during the [[Eighty Years' War]], the naval forces of the rebels, the [[Watergeuzen]], established their first permanent base in 1572 in the town of [[Den Briel|Brill]]. In this way, Holland, now a sovereign state in a larger Dutch confederation, became the centre of the rebellion. It became the the cultural, political and economic centre of the United Provinces in the 17th century [[Dutch Golden Age]], the wealthiest nation in the world. After the [[Oath of Abjuration|the King of Spain]] was deposed as the count of Holland, the executive and legislative power rested with the States of Holland, which was led by a political figure who held the office of [[Grand Pensionary]].  
Holland arose as a county of the [[Holy Roman Empire]] in the 9th century. The [[Count of Holland|Counts of Holland]] were also counts of [[County of Hainaut|Hainaut]], [[Flanders]] and [[Zeeland|Zealand]] for several periods in the 13th-15th century. In this time a part of [[Frisia]], [[West Friesland (historical region)|West Friesland]], was conquered and as a result most provincial institutions would for centuries bear the epithet "of Holland and West Frisia," such as the [[States of Holland|States of Holland and West Frisia]]. Partly because of the cultural antithesis between the regions, Holland was divided along the [[IJ (bay)|IJ]] between a Southern Quarter ''(Zuiderkwartier)'' and a Northern Quarter ''(Noorderkwartier)''. In 1432 Holland became part of the [[Burgundian Netherlands]] and since 1477 of the [[Habsburg]] [[Seventeen Provinces]]. In the 16th century the region became densely [[urbanisation|urbanised]], with the majority of the population living in cities. Within the Burgundian Netherlands, it was the dominant province in the north; the political influence of Holland largely determined the extent of Burgundian dominion in that area.
 
  
In the Dutch Rebellion against the Habsburgs during the [[Eighty Years' War]], the naval forces of the rebels, the [[Watergeuzen]], established their first permanent base in 1572 in the Hollandic city of [[Den Briel|Brill]]. This way Holland, now a sovereign state as part of a larger Dutch confederation, became the center of the rebellion and as a result the cultural, political and economic center of the United Provinces, in the 17th century, the [[Dutch Golden Age]], the wealthiest nation in the world. The largest cities of the [[Dutch Republic]] were located within the province of Holland such as [[Amsterdam]], [[Rotterdam]], [[Leiden]], [[Alkmaar]], [[The Hague]], [[Delft]] and [[Haarlem]]. From the great ports of Holland, Hollandic [[merchants]] sailed to and from destinations all over [[Europe]], and merchants from all over Europe gathered to trade in the warehouses of Amsterdam and other trading cities of Holland. Many Europeans heard of the United Provinces first as "Holland" rather than "Republic of the Seven United Provinces of the Netherlands." This usage continues to this day. Externally a strong image of Holland was created, which image was then projected on the Republic as a whole; internally a slow process of Hollandic cultural expansion took place, leading to a more uniform culture for the whole of the Republic, that adopted the urban dialects of Holland as its [[standard language]].
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The largest cities in the [[Dutch Republic]] were in the province of Holland such as [[Amsterdam]], [[Rotterdam]], [[Leiden]], [[Alkmaar]], [[The Hague]], [[Delft]] and [[Haarlem]]. From the great ports of Holland, Hollandic [[merchants]] sailed to and from destinations all over [[Europe]], and merchants from all over Europe gathered to trade in the warehouses of Amsterdam and other trading cities of Holland.  
  
In this period the province became predominantly [[Calvinist]] but with a large [[Catholic]] minority.
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Many Europeans thought of the United Provinces first as "Holland" rather than as the "Republic of the Seven United Provinces of the Netherlands". A strong impression of "Holland" was planted in the minds of other Europeans, which then was projected back onto the Republic as a whole. Within the provinces themselves, a gradual slow process of cultural expansion took place, leading to a "Hollandification" of the other provinces and a more uniform culture for the whole of the Republic. The dialect of urban Holland became the [[standard language]].
  
===After 1795===
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===Kingdom of Holland===
[[Image:netherlands map large.png|thumb|300px|North Holland and South Holland lie along the western coast of the Netherlands.]]
 
The formation of the [[Batavian Republic]], inspired by the [[French revolution]], led to a more centralized government; Holland from a sovereign state became a province of a [[unitary state]]. The independence of Holland was further reduced by an administrative reform in 1798, in which its territory was divided over several departments: ''Amstel'', ''Delf'', ''Texel'', and (part of) ''Schelde en Maas''.
 
  
From 1806-1810 [[Napoleon I of France|Napoleon]] styled his vassal state, governed by his brother [[Louis Bonaparte|Louis Napoleon]], which included much of the modern Netherlands, as the [[Kingdom of Holland]]. The name reflects how natural at the time it had become to equal Holland with the Northern Netherlands as a whole<ref>Nijs, Thimo de, and Eelco Beukers. ''Geschiedenis van Holland.'' Volume 2 (Hilversum: Verloren. 2002. ISBN 9065507000), P.468</ref>.
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The formation of the [[Batavian Republic]], inspired by the [[French revolution]], led to a more centralised government. Holland became a province of a [[unitary state]]. Its independence was further reduced by an administrative reform in 1798, in which its territory was divided into several departments called ''Amstel'',
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''Delf'', ''Texel'', and part of ''Schelde en Maas''.
  
After annexation by the [[French Empire]] (1810-1813), Holland was divided over the ''[[département in France|département]]s'' [[Zuyderzée]] and [[Bouches-de-la-Meuse]]. After 1813, Holland was restored as a province of the [[United Kingdom of the Netherlands]]. It was divided into the present provinces [[North Holland]] and [[South Holland]] in 1840, after the [[Belgian Revolution]] of 1830.
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From 1806 to 1810 [[Napoleon I of France|Napoleon]] styled his vassal state, governed by his brother [[Louis Bonaparte|Louis Napoleon]] and shortly by the son of Louis, [[Napoleon Louis Bonaparte]], as the "[[Kingdom of Holland]]". This kingdom encompassed much of what would become the modern Netherlands. The name reflects how natural at the time it had become to equate Holland with the Netherlands as a whole.<ref>Willem Frijhoff, "Hollands hegemonie" in Thimo de Nijs and Eelco Beukers (eds.), 2002, ''Geschiedenis van Holland'', Volume 2, p. 468</ref>
  
From 1850 a strong process of [[nation building|nation formation]] took place, the Netherlands being culturally unified and economically integrated by a [[modernisation]] process with the Hollandic cities as its center<ref>Nijs, Thimo de, and Eelco Beukers. ''Geschiedenis van Holland.'' Volume 3 (Hilversum: Verloren. 2002. ISBN 9065507000), P. 548</ref>. This has led to a reaction by the peripheral regions, who saw their identity threatened: [[regionalism]] trying to maintain the local culture against Hollandic expansion. The other provinces thus have a strong, and often negative<ref>Nijs, Thimo de, and Eelco Beukers. ''Geschiedenis van Holland.'' Volume 3 (Hilversum: Verloren. 2002. ISBN 9065507000), P. 688</ref>, image of the Hollander, to whom certain qualities are ascribed within a [[mental geography]]<ref>Nijs, Thimo de, and Eelco Beukers. ''Geschiedenis van Holland.'' Volume 3 (Hilversum: Verloren. 2002. ISBN 9065507000), P. 556</ref>; the Hollanders themselves however have a weak self-image<ref>Nijs, Thimo de, and Eelco Beukers. ''Geschiedenis van Holland.'' Volume 3 (Hilversum: Verloren. 2002. ISBN 9065507000), P. 556</ref> as they take Hollandic cultural dominance for granted: to them the concepts of Holland and the Netherlands coincide and consequently they see themselves as simply Dutch<ref>Nijs, Thimo de, and Eelco Beukers. ''Geschiedenis van Holland.'' Volume 3 (Hilversum: Verloren. 2002. ISBN 9065507000), P. 700</ref>, a phenomenon known as [[hollandocentrism]]<ref>Nijs, Thimo de, and Eelco Beukers. ''Geschiedenis van Holland.'' Volume 3 (Hilversum: Verloren. 2002. ISBN 9065507000), P. 647</ref>. The image of Holland—an artificial amalgam of tulips, windmills, [[Clog (shoe)|clogs]], [[Edam (cheese)|Edam cheese]] and the traditional costume of [[Volendam]] fishermen—is actively exploited for ''Holland Promotion'' abroad.
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During the period the Low Countries were annexed by the [[French Empire]] and actually incorporated into France (from 1810 to 1813), Holland was divided into the ''[[département in France|département]]s'' [[Zuyderzée]] and [[Bouches-de-la-Meuse]].
  
Today, together with [[Utrecht (city)|Utrecht]], the main Hollandic cities: [[Amsterdam]] (the [[capital of the Netherlands]]), [[Rotterdam]] ([[Port of Rotterdam|Europe's largest harbour]]) and [[The Hague]] (the [[seat of government]]) form what is called [[Randstad|Randstad Holland]], one of the most densely populated regions of Europe. Effective state intervention in urban development has however limited the growth into an enormous [[urban sprawl]]: most of the province is still surprisingly rural, though featuring highly [[intensive agriculture]], such as the famous [[tulip]] fields and many [[greenhouse]] areas. This implies that the [[population density]] in the cities themselves is even higher. A small minority of the Hollandic population still speaks the original [[Hollandic]] dialects.
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===Provinces like any other===
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After 1813, Holland was restored as a province of the [[United Kingdom of the Netherlands]].
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Holland was divided into the present provinces [[North Holland]] and [[South Holland]] in 1840, after the [[Belgian Revolution]] of 1830. This reflected an historical division of Holland along the [[IJ (bay)|IJ]] into a Southern Quarter (''Zuiderkwartier'') and a Northern Quarter (''Noorderkwartier'').
 +
 
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From 1850 a strong process of [[nation building|nation formation]] took place, the Netherlands being culturally unified and economically integrated by a [[modernisation]] process, with the cities of Holland at its centre.<ref>Hans Knippenberg and Ben de Pater, "Brandpunt van macht en modernisering" in Thimo de Nijs and Eelco Beukers (eds.), 2003, ''Geschiedenis van Holland'', Volume 3, p. 548</ref>
 +
 
 +
== The image of Holland at home and abroad ==
 +
 
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The predominance of Holland in the Netherlands has resulted in [[regionalism (politics)|regionalism]] on the part of the other provinces. This is a reaction to the perceived threat that Holland poses to the identities and local cultures of the other provinces. The other provinces have a strong, and often negative,<ref>Rob van Ginkel, "Hollandse Tonelen" in Thimo de Nijs and Eelco Beukers (eds.), ''Geschiedenis van Holland'', Volume 3, p. 688</ref> image of Holland and the Hollanders, to whom certain qualities are ascribed.<ref>Hans Knippenberg and Ben de Pater, "Brandpunt van macht en modernisering" in Thimo de Nijs and Eelco Beukers (eds.), 2003, ''Geschiedenis van Holland'', Volume 3, p. 556</ref>
 +
 
 +
Hollanders themselves, however, have a weak self-image.<ref>Hans Knippenberg and Ben de Pater, "Brandpunt van macht en modernisering" in Thimo de Nijs and Eelco Beukers (eds.), 2003, ''Geschiedenis van Holland'', Volume 3, p. 556</ref> They take Holland's cultural dominance for granted. To them, the concepts of "Holland" and the "Netherlands" coincide. Consequently they see themselves not primarily as "Hollanders", but simply as "Dutch" (''Nederlanders'').<ref>Thimo de Nijs, "Hollandse identiteit in perspectief" in Thimo de Nijs and Eelco Beukers (eds.), 2003, ''Geschiedenis van Holland'', Volume 3, p. 700</ref> This phenomenon is called "hollandocentrism".<ref>Rob van Ginkel, "Hollandse Tonelen" in Thimo de Nijs and Eelco Beukers (eds.), 2003, ''Geschiedenis van Holland'', Volume 3, p. 647</ref>
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Holland tends to be associated with a particular image. The stereotypical image of Holland is an artificial amalgam of [[tulip]]s, [[windmill]]s, [[Clog (shoe)|clogs]], [[cheese]] and traditional dress (''[[klederdracht]]''). Like all stereotypes, this is far from the truth and reality of life in Holland. This can at least in part be explained by the active exploitation of these stereotypes in promotions of Holland and the Netherlands. In fact only in a few of the more traditional villages, such as Volendam and locations in the [[Zaan]] area, are the different costumes and wooden shoes still worn by some inhabitants.
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
 
<references/>
 
<references/>
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== External Links ==
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{{commons-inline|Category:Holland|Holland}}
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* [http://maps.google.com/maps?hl=en&ie=UTF8&ll=52.432572,3.295898&spn=1.755003,4.158325&z=8 Map of Holland (the provinces of North Holland and South Holland) on Google Maps]
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[[Category:Geography]]
 
[[Category:Geography]]
[[Category:Politics_and_social_sciences]]
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[[Category:Europe]]
  
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Revision as of 05:51, 10 May 2008


North and South Holland shown together within the Netherlands.

Holland is a region in the western part of the Netherlands. A maritime and economic power in the 17th century, Holland today consists of the Dutch provinces of North Holland and South Holland.

The name "Holland"

Coat of arms of Holland

The name "Holland" first appeared in the sources in 866 for the region around Haarlem and was by 1064 being used for the name of the entire county. By this time the inhabitants of Holland were referring to themselves as "Hollanders".[1] "Holland" is derived from the Middle Dutch term holtland ("wooded land"). This spelling variation remained in use until around the 14th century, at which time the name stabilised as "Holland" (alternative spellings at the time: "Hollant" or "Hollandt"). Popular, but incorrect, etymology holds that "Holland" is derived from hol land ("hollow land") and was inspired by the low-lying geography of Holland.

Usage

The proper name of the area in both Dutch and English is "Holland". "Holland" is a part of the Netherlands. "Holland" is informally and quite incorrectly used in English and other languages, including sometimes the Dutch language itself, to mean the whole of the modern country of the Netherlands. (This example of pars pro toto or synecdoche is similar to the tendency to refer to Great Britain as "England".)

The people of Holland are referred to as "Hollanders" in both Dutch and English. Today this refers specifically to people from the current provinces of North Holland and South Holland. Strictly speaking, the term "Hollanders" does not refer to people from the other provinces in the Netherlands, but colloquially "Hollanders" is sometimes mistakenly used in this wider sense.

When referring to the Netherlands as a whole, the adjective is "Dutch". "Dutch" is not used as an adjective for "Holland" in a modern context because "Dutch" refers to all of the Netherlands, not just Holland. However, there is a good deal of confusion about this. In actual practice, the adjective "Dutch" is often (but somewhat inaccurately) used in the specific context of Holland.

In Dutch, the Dutch word "Hollands" is the adjectival form for "Holland", but in English there is no commonly used adjective for "Holland". "Hollands" is ordinarily expressed in English in two ways:

  • a possessive construction (e.g. "Holland's economic power"); or
  • an "of Holland" or "from Holland" construction (e.g. "the Maid of Holland"; "a girl from Holland").

The following usages apply in certain limited situations but do not ordinarily serve as the English equivalent of the commonly used Dutch adjective "Hollands".

  • Occasionally, the noun "Holland" is used in apposition (e.g. "the Holland Society").
  • The adjective "Hollandic" is occasionally used by some historians and other academic writers as an adjective for Holland. Historians who use the word tend to reserve it to pre-Napoleonic Holland.
  • Historically the English word "Dutch" had a different, broader meaning that could occasionally include "Hollands".
  • The adjective "Hollandish" is a word in English but is currently no longer in use.

Geography

North Holland
South Holland

See the article on the "Geography of the Netherlands" for a more detailed description.

Holland is situated in the west of the Netherlands. A maritime water-oriented region, Holland lies on the North Sea at the mouths of the Rhine and the Meuse (Maas). It has numerous rivers and lakes and an extensive inland canal and waterway system. To the south is Zealand. The region is bordered on the east by the IJsselmeer and four different provinces of the Netherlands.

Holland is protected from the sea by a long line of coastal dunes. Most of the land area behind the dunes consists of polder landscape lying well below sea level. At present the lowest point in Holland is a polder near Rotterdam, which is about seven meters below sea level. Continuous drainage is necessary to keep Holland from flooding. In earlier centuries windmills were used for this task. The landscape was (and in places still is) dotted with windmills, which have become a symbol of Holland.

Holland is 7,494 square kilometres (land and water included), making it roughly 13% of the area of the Netherlands. Looking at land alone, it is 5,488 square kilometres in size. The combined population is 6.1 million.

The main cities in Holland are Amsterdam, Rotterdam and The Hague. Amsterdam is formally the capital of the Netherlands and its most important city. The Port of Rotterdam is Europe's largest and most important harbour and port. The Hague is the seat of government of the Netherlands. These cities, combined with Utrecht and other smaller municipalities, effectively form a single city - a conurbation called Randstad.

The Randstad area is one of the most densely populated regions of Europe, but still relatively free of urban sprawl. There are strict zoning laws. Population pressures are enormous, property values are high, and new housing is constantly under development on the edges of the built-up areas. Surprisingly, much of the province still has a rural character. The remaining agricultural land and natural areas are highly valued and protected. Most of the arable land is used for intensive agriculture, including horticulture and greenhouse agri-businesses.

Regions within Holland

For lists of the towns and municipalities in Holland, see the articles for North Holland and South Holland.

Holland is made up of various regions that, for historical or other reasons, have their own identities. Some of these regions are unofficial, ill-defined and sometimes overlapping. Others are official and are part of regional groupings artificially created for various administrative purposes.

These regions are not the same as the municipalities. For example, the South Holland village of Warmond is officially part of the municipality of Teylingen, but it is also located in the "Dune and Bulb Region" (called "Duin- en Bollenstreek" or usually just "Bollenstreek"). This is significant because the identity of Warmond is closely tied to the Bollenstreek.

List of some of these unofficial and official regions in Holland:

  • Alblasserwaard
  • Amstelland (the area around the Amstel)
  • Delfland (the area around Delft)
  • Drechtsteden ("The Drecht towns")
  • Duin- en Bollenstreek (“Dune and Bulb Region”)
  • Goeree-Overflakkee
  • Gooi (usually "Het Gooi")
  • Gouwestreek ("The Gouwe Area")
  • Groene Hart ("The Green Heart")
  • Haaglanden (the area around The Hague)
  • Hoeksche Waard
  • Holland Rijnland
  • IJmond ("The Mouth of the IJ")
  • IJsselmonde ("The Mouth of the IJssel")
  • Kagerplassen (The Kaag Lakes)
  • Kennemerland
  • Krimpenerwaard
  • Noorderkwartier ("The North Quarter")
  • Noordvleugel ("The North Wing")
  • Randstad
  • Rijnland ("Rhineland")
  • Rijnmond ("The Mouth of the Rhine")
  • Rijnstreek ("The Rhine Area")
  • Schieland
  • Texel
  • Vechtstreek ("The Vecht Area")
  • Voorne-Putten
  • Waterland (now effectively the municipality of Waterland)
  • West-Friesland (West Friesland)
  • Westland (the region, not the municipality itself)
  • Zaanstreek ("The Zaan Area")
  • Zuidvleugel ("The South Wing")

Language

See the article on the Dutch language for a more detailed description.

The language primarily spoken in Holland is Dutch. Hollanders often refer to the Dutch language as "Hollands".

The standard Dutch that is spoken in the Netherlands is mostly based on the Dutch spoken in Holland; however, there are many local variations in dialect throughout the Netherlands.

Despite the correspondence between standard Dutch and the Dutch spoken in Holland, there are local variations within Holland itself that differ from standard Dutch. The main cities each have their own traditional dialect. A small number of people, especially in the area north of Amsterdam, still speak what is considered to be an original, older dialect, called "Hollandic". The areas where people still speak with the Hollandic dialect are Volendam and Marken and the area around there, West Friesland and the Zaanstreek.

Territory and political structure

Flag of South Holland

"Holland" is not in itself a province of the Netherlands. It is divided into two provinces of the Netherlands — North Holland (Noord-Holland) and South Holland (Zuid-Holland). These provinces were created in 1840 largely because it was unacceptable for Holland to remain such an overwhelmingly large and powerful province in comparison to the other provinces. A few regions that were historically part of Holland have been ceded to other provinces.

  • Some cessions occurred as a result of reforms during the French occupation (1795-1813).
  • In 1818 Willemstad and surroundings, the Biesbosch and the Land van Altena became part of the provice of North Brabant.
  • In 1942, after the Battle of the Netherlands, the Germans transferred the islands of Vlieland and Terschelling to the province of Friesland. This was not changed back after World War II.
  • In 1950, the island of Urk went to the province of Overijssel and then in 1986 to the province of Flevoland.
  • In 1970 Oudewater was transferred from South Holland to the province of Utrecht.
  • In 1989 Woerden was transferred from South Holland to the province of Utrecht.
  • In 2000 's-Graveland and Kortenhoef, both in the province of North-Holland, were merged withLoosdrecht in the Province of Utrecht.
  • In 2002 Vianen was transferred from South Holland to the province of Utrecht.
  • The municipality of Eemnes has a co-operation with Laren and Blaricum. They are collectively referred to as the "BEL region".

History

Each of the provinces in the Netherlands has a history that deserves full attention on its own. However, to a certain extent at least, the history of Holland is the history of the Netherlands, and vice versa. See the article on "History of the Netherlands" for a more detailed history. The article here focuses on those points that are specific to Holland itself or that highlight the nature of the role played by Holland in the Netherlands as a whole.

Reclamation of the land

The land that is now Holland had never been stable. Historical maps of Holland bear little resemblance to the maps of today. Over the millennia the geography of the region had been dynamic. The western coastline shifted up to thirty kilometres to the east and storm surges regularly wreaked havoc with the coastline. The coastline was constantly changing. The Frisian Isles, originally joined to the mainland, became detached islands in the north. At some point the sea broke a natural barrier and rushed in to fill in the area that used to be called the Zuiderzee (now the IJsselmeer). The main rivers, the Rhine and the Meuse (Maas), flooded regularly and changed course repeatedly and dramatically.

The people of Holland found themselves living in an unstable, watery environment. Behind the row of coastal dunes a peat plateau had grown. Much of the area was marsh and bog. The inhabitants set about cultivating this land by draining it. By the tenth century this area was brought under cultivation. The drainage however resulted in extreme soil shrinkage, lowering the surface of the land by up to fifteen metres.

Benthuizen polder, seen from a dike

This combination of factors threatened the inhabitants. There were catastrophic floods that literally washed away entire regions and killed thousands. The early inhabitants understand that human intervention was needed to save the land. The counts and large monasteries took the lead in these efforts, building the first heavy emergency dikes to bolster critical points. Later special administrative bodies were formed, the waterschappen ("water control boards"), which had the power to enforce their decisions on water management. As the centuries went by, they eventually constructed an extensive dike system that covered the coastline and the polders, thus protecting the land from further incursions by the sea.

However, the Hollanders did not stop there. Starting around the 16th century, they took the offensive and began land reclamation projects, converting lakes and marshy areas into polders. This continued right into the 20th century.

This ongoing struggle to master the water played an important role in the development of Holland as a maritime and economic power and in the development of the character of the people of Holland.

County of Holland

Until the 9th century, the inhabitants of the area that became Holland were Frisians. The area was part of Frisia. At the end of the 9th century, Holland became a separate county in the Holy Roman Empire. The first count of Holland known about with certainty was Dirk I, who ruled (also as count of Frisia) from 896 to 931. He was succeeded by a long line of counts in the House of Holland. When John I, count of Holland, died childless in 1299, the county was inherited by John II of Avesnes, count of Hainaut. By the time of Willian V (House of Wittelsbach; 1354-1388) the count of Holland was also the count of Hainaut, Flanders and Zealand.

In this time a part of Frisia, West Friesland, was conquered. (As a result, most provincial institutions, including the States of Holland and West Frisia, would for centuries refer to "Holland and West Frisia" as a unit.) The Hook and Cod wars started around this time and ended when the countess of Holland, Jacoba or Jacqueline was forced to give up Holland to the Burgundian Philip I in 1432.

Holland's prominence in the United Provinces and Dutch Republic

In 1432 Holland became part of the Burgundian Netherlands and since 1477 of the Habsburg Seventeen Provinces. In the 16th century the region became more densely urbanised, with the majority of the population living in cities. Within the Burgundian Netherlands, Holland was the dominant province in the north; the political influence of Holland largely determined the extent of Burgundian dominion in that area.

File:COMITATUS HOLLANDIAE 1682.jpg
Comitatus Hollandiae (1682)

In the Dutch Rebellion against the Habsburgs during the Eighty Years' War, the naval forces of the rebels, the Watergeuzen, established their first permanent base in 1572 in the town of Brill. In this way, Holland, now a sovereign state in a larger Dutch confederation, became the centre of the rebellion. It became the the cultural, political and economic centre of the United Provinces in the 17th century Dutch Golden Age, the wealthiest nation in the world. After the the King of Spain was deposed as the count of Holland, the executive and legislative power rested with the States of Holland, which was led by a political figure who held the office of Grand Pensionary.

The largest cities in the Dutch Republic were in the province of Holland such as Amsterdam, Rotterdam, Leiden, Alkmaar, The Hague, Delft and Haarlem. From the great ports of Holland, Hollandic merchants sailed to and from destinations all over Europe, and merchants from all over Europe gathered to trade in the warehouses of Amsterdam and other trading cities of Holland.

Many Europeans thought of the United Provinces first as "Holland" rather than as the "Republic of the Seven United Provinces of the Netherlands". A strong impression of "Holland" was planted in the minds of other Europeans, which then was projected back onto the Republic as a whole. Within the provinces themselves, a gradual slow process of cultural expansion took place, leading to a "Hollandification" of the other provinces and a more uniform culture for the whole of the Republic. The dialect of urban Holland became the standard language.

Kingdom of Holland

The formation of the Batavian Republic, inspired by the French revolution, led to a more centralised government. Holland became a province of a unitary state. Its independence was further reduced by an administrative reform in 1798, in which its territory was divided into several departments called Amstel, Delf, Texel, and part of Schelde en Maas.

From 1806 to 1810 Napoleon styled his vassal state, governed by his brother Louis Napoleon and shortly by the son of Louis, Napoleon Louis Bonaparte, as the "Kingdom of Holland". This kingdom encompassed much of what would become the modern Netherlands. The name reflects how natural at the time it had become to equate Holland with the Netherlands as a whole.[2]

During the period the Low Countries were annexed by the French Empire and actually incorporated into France (from 1810 to 1813), Holland was divided into the départements Zuyderzée and Bouches-de-la-Meuse.

Provinces like any other

After 1813, Holland was restored as a province of the United Kingdom of the Netherlands.

Holland was divided into the present provinces North Holland and South Holland in 1840, after the Belgian Revolution of 1830. This reflected an historical division of Holland along the IJ into a Southern Quarter (Zuiderkwartier) and a Northern Quarter (Noorderkwartier).

From 1850 a strong process of nation formation took place, the Netherlands being culturally unified and economically integrated by a modernisation process, with the cities of Holland at its centre.[3]

The image of Holland at home and abroad

The predominance of Holland in the Netherlands has resulted in regionalism on the part of the other provinces. This is a reaction to the perceived threat that Holland poses to the identities and local cultures of the other provinces. The other provinces have a strong, and often negative,[4] image of Holland and the Hollanders, to whom certain qualities are ascribed.[5]

Hollanders themselves, however, have a weak self-image.[6] They take Holland's cultural dominance for granted. To them, the concepts of "Holland" and the "Netherlands" coincide. Consequently they see themselves not primarily as "Hollanders", but simply as "Dutch" (Nederlanders).[7] This phenomenon is called "hollandocentrism".[8]

Holland tends to be associated with a particular image. The stereotypical image of Holland is an artificial amalgam of tulips, windmills, clogs, cheese and traditional dress (klederdracht). Like all stereotypes, this is far from the truth and reality of life in Holland. This can at least in part be explained by the active exploitation of these stereotypes in promotions of Holland and the Netherlands. In fact only in a few of the more traditional villages, such as Volendam and locations in the Zaan area, are the different costumes and wooden shoes still worn by some inhabitants.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  1. Antheun Janse, "Een zichzelf verdeeld rijk" in Thimo de Nijs and Eelco Beukers (eds.), 2003, Geschiedenis van Holland, Volume 1, p. 73
  2. Willem Frijhoff, "Hollands hegemonie" in Thimo de Nijs and Eelco Beukers (eds.), 2002, Geschiedenis van Holland, Volume 2, p. 468
  3. Hans Knippenberg and Ben de Pater, "Brandpunt van macht en modernisering" in Thimo de Nijs and Eelco Beukers (eds.), 2003, Geschiedenis van Holland, Volume 3, p. 548
  4. Rob van Ginkel, "Hollandse Tonelen" in Thimo de Nijs and Eelco Beukers (eds.), Geschiedenis van Holland, Volume 3, p. 688
  5. Hans Knippenberg and Ben de Pater, "Brandpunt van macht en modernisering" in Thimo de Nijs and Eelco Beukers (eds.), 2003, Geschiedenis van Holland, Volume 3, p. 556
  6. Hans Knippenberg and Ben de Pater, "Brandpunt van macht en modernisering" in Thimo de Nijs and Eelco Beukers (eds.), 2003, Geschiedenis van Holland, Volume 3, p. 556
  7. Thimo de Nijs, "Hollandse identiteit in perspectief" in Thimo de Nijs and Eelco Beukers (eds.), 2003, Geschiedenis van Holland, Volume 3, p. 700
  8. Rob van Ginkel, "Hollandse Tonelen" in Thimo de Nijs and Eelco Beukers (eds.), 2003, Geschiedenis van Holland, Volume 3, p. 647

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