Urk

Urk
Urk
—  Municipality  —
The former island of Urk
Flag of Urk
Flag
Coat of arms of Urk
Coat of arms
Coordinates: 52°40′N 5°36′E / 52.667°N 5.6°E / 52.667; 5.6
Country Netherlands
Province Flevoland
Area(2006)
 – Total 109.90 km2 (42.4 sq mi)
 – Land 11.54 km2 (4.5 sq mi)
 – Water 98.37 km2 (38 sq mi)
Population (1 January 2007)
 – Total 17,589
 – Density 1,524/km2 (3,947.1/sq mi)
  Source: CBS, Statline.
Time zone CET (UTC+1)
 – Summer (DST) CEST (UTC+2)

Urk (About this sound pronunciation ) is a municipality and a town in the Flevoland province in the central Netherlands.

Urk is first mentioned in historical records dating to the 10th century, when it was still an island in the Almere, a lake that would become part of the Zuiderzee in the 13th century after a series of incursions by the North Sea. In 1939, a dike from the mainland to Urk ended the town's island status, just as the Afsluitdijk project was changing the salt water Zuiderzee surrounding Urk to the less saline IJsselmeer. Later in the 20th century, seabed areas surrounding Urk were reclaimed from the sea and became the Noordoostpolder.

The mainstay of the town's economy has always been fishing, and the products of the sea coming in through Urk's harbor continue to be exported widely, although today Urk's fishing boats must travel greater distances to gather them than was required in most historical periods. Religious life has also traditionally been very important to Urk's inhabitants, with active, conservative congregations of the Dutch Reformed denominations playing key roles in the life of the community.

Contents

Geography

Map of the municipality

Around the IJsselmeer is an arc of boulder clay high areas of land, which formed during the Ice Age glaciations of the Pleistocene epoch: Texel, Wieringen, Urk, de Voorst, and Gaasterland. To south of that arc, as a result of meltwater, a lake formed, which became known as Almere. North of the boulder clay highland of Urk, the Vecht river flowed into the Almere, while the river IJssel with tributaries flowed in to the south of Urk. As the climate became warmer during the Middle Ages, the sea level rose; and since the Ice Age ended the Netherlands and around have been slowly steadily sinking because of forebulge effect. During the 13th century (and especially after a large storm in 1282) the Zuiderzee formed, and the water round Urk suddenly became tidal sea. Because there was no sea defence, in the course of time large pieces of the island were eroded away. The southwest side of Urk, which rose perpendicularly out of the sea, was called het Hoge Klif ("the High Cliff"). Around 1700 the municipality of Amsterdam gave sea defences to Urk.

History / Lordship of Urk en Emmeloord

The oldest instance of the name "Urk" is a donation certificate of 966 from Holy Roman Emperor Otto I to the Sint Pantaleonsklooster monastery in Cologne. The text reads: "cuiisdam insulae medietatem in Almere, que Urch vocatur" (Latin: "of a certain island in the middle of Almere, which is called Urch").
Until 1475 the High and Low Lordship of Urk and Emmeloord (the most northern village of Schokland) was in the hands of the Van Kuinre family.
From 1475 to 1614, the Zoudenbalch family of Utrecht were Lords of Urk and Emmeloord.
From 1614 to 1660, Urk and Emmeloord were ruled by Jonkheer van der Werve. (from an important family of Antwerp.)
From 1660 to 1792 Urk and Emmeloord belonged to the municipality of Amsterdam, and ruled from 1660 to 1672/1678 by Andries de Graeff.
From 1792 to 1950 Urk belonged to the province of Noordholland.
From 1950 to 1986 Urk belonged to the province of Overijssel.
Since 1986, Urk has belonged to the province of Flevoland.

After WWII, Urk's town spread into the polder. Many Urkers who had to leave the town because of overcrowding before the polder reclamation was completed were able to return to Urk.

The Noordoostpolder in its early years had an alternative name "Urker Land," from which Urk's newspaper, Het Urkerland, gets its name.

Economy

The quay of Urk

The important economic pillar of the village is the fishery. After the IJsselmeer was formed, the Urkers fished on the North Sea. Due to rising prices of fish, at present Urk is a very prosperous village. In the past, many lives were lost in storms on the Zuiderzee and North Sea. There is a memorial to lost fisherman on Urk, popularly known as the "Urker vrouw": a statue of a woman looking out to sea, vainly awaiting the return of her husband and sons.

Politics

Local

After 2010's local elections, the town council is made up of five political parties:

  • Christian Union: 4 seats (down 2 compared to previous elections)
  • SGP: 3 seats (down 2)
  • CDA: 4 seats (no change)
  • Unie Gemeentebelangen: 2 seats (no change)
  • Hart voor Urk: 4 seats (plus 4)

Unie Gemeentebelangen and Hart voor Urk are local parties. Hart voor Urk was founded by former SGP-counciller Jan Koffeman with a largely identical party policy as SGP's.

A majority coalition of ChristenUnie, SGP and Hart voor Urk are currently in power. The town council is lead by (non-elected) mayor Jaap Kroon (CDA).

None of these parties can be described as either left-wing (socialist) or liberal. National parties such as the VVD (conservative/liberal), D66 (liberal), GroenLinks (green party) and PvdA (labour) are not represented in Urk's town council and support for these parties in national and regional elections remains minimal. However, due to slowly growing support for the VVD, an Urk affiliate of the conservative/liberal party was founded in early 2011, with the intention of entering 2014's local elections. If elected, it would mark the first occasion that an outspoken non-religious party enters Urk's town council.

National

Urk is one of the most politically conservative areas in the Netherlands. As part of the so-called Dutch 'Bible belt', a vast majority of election votes go to the three Christian parties in the Netherlands, SGP, ChristenUnie and CDA. Urk is also known for its high turnout at each election, which is usually considerably higher than the national average (although general turnout percentages have dropped approx. 10% since 2002).

Voting patterns used to be relatively stable, with approximately 85-90% of the votes spread out evenly over SGP, ChristenUnie and CDA (each between 25-35%). CDA in Urk usually got more votes in national elections than in local elections, while ChristenUnie's support is sometimes twice locally compared to what it receives from Urk voters in national elections (this is sometimes attributed to the apparent left-wing leanings of the ChristenUnie nationally, while ChristenUnie in Urk tends to be more conservative). SGP's support locally is not much different from its support in national elections.

However, in recent years a few changes in voting patterns occurred, such as a growing support for national protest parties such as the LPF or Geert Wilders'PVV Freedom Party. Also, voting patterns these days tend to show bigger swings, as shown in 2010's national elections in which CDA lost 11% and in 2011's regional elections, in which ChristenUnie lost 18%.

Support for established left wing parties (such as Labour PVDA or the socialist SP) remains minimal.

e • d Summary of the 9 June 2010 Dutch House of Representatives election results (Urk)
Parties Political Ideology Top candidate Votes Vote % +/- %
Reformed Political Party
(Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij, SGP)
Conservatism, Reformed Christian Kees van der Staaij 3635 39.1% +4.8%
Christian Democratic Appeal
(Christen-Democratisch Appèl, CDA)
Christian Democracy Jan Peter Balkenende 2412 26.0% -11.6%
ChristianUnion
(ChristenUnie, CU)
Social-Christianity /Orthodox Protestantism André Rouvoet 1757 18.9% -3.0%
Party for Freedom
(Partij voor de Vrijheid, PVV)
Right-wing populism/Anti-Islam/Fortuynism Geert Wilders 1013 10.9% +8.4%
People's Party for Freedom and Democracy
(Volkspartij voor Vrijheid en Democratie, VVD)
Conservative liberalism/Liberalism Mark Rutte 229 2.5% +1.3%
Socialist Party
(Socialistische Partij, SP)
Socialism Emile Roemer 72 0.8% -0.2%
Labour Party
(Partij van de Arbeid, PvdA)
Social Democracy Wouter Bos 57 0.6% -0.3%
Democrats 66
(Democraten 66, D66)
Social liberalism, Radicalism, Progressivism Alexander Pechtold 31 0.3% +0.2%
GreenLeft
(GroenLinks, GL)
Green Politics Femke Halsema 21 0.2% +0.1%
Party for the Animals
(Partij voor de Dieren, PvdD)
Animal rights/Animal welfare Marianne Thieme 8 0.1% -0.0%
Other 61 0.7% +0.5%
Total 9314
Turnout 9314 79.9% -8.7%
Source: "Verkiezingsuitslagen Tweede Kamer 1918 - heden". Kiesraad. http://www.verkiezingsuitslagen.nl/Na1918/Verkiezingsuitslagen.aspx?VerkiezingsTypeId=1. 

Dialect

One of the oldest and most distinctive dialects of Dutch is the language which is spoken in Urk. Nearly everybody in this village speaks this dialect and uses it in daily life. The dialect deviates considerably from contemporary standard Dutch, and has preserved many old characteristics which disappeared in standard Dutch a long time ago. The Urkish dialect also includes elements that are older than standard Dutch and were never a part of the standard language. For example, the old word for "father" in the Urkish dialect is taote. The dialect developed this way because until WWII, Urk was an island and could only be reached by boat. Radio was unknown, and the poor population didn't have much money for newspapers and books. Until the modern era, primary education for the children typically lasted only two years; afterwards, children had to help maintain the family and formal schooling ended.

Recent linguistic classifications have assigned the Urk dialect to the "Urkers dialect family", of which it is the only member.[1]

The Urkish dialect has more vowel sounds than standard Dutch, and each vowel has short and long forms, potentially with different meanings. The pronunciation of vowels deviates from standard Dutch and is closer to English.

Because living conditions on Urk in historical times were very poor, young girls (typically about age 11 or 12) would frequently leave the island to become domestic servants, mostly in or around Amsterdam. They often served with Jewish families. After a few years, they would return to Urk to form families of their own. As a result of this practice, the Urkish dialect absorbed some loanwords from the Amsterdam dialect and also from Yiddish. For instance, the Yiddish "Shnur" for sister-in-law became the Urkish "Snoar" (identical meaning); the Hebrew "Kallah" ("כלה") for bride became the Urkish "Kalletjen" (girlfriend).

When Napoleon occupied the Netherlands, many French words were incorporated into both standard Dutch and Urkish. Just as for standard Dutch, French words often changed form when incorporated into Urkish. The Urkish dialect has always been primarily a spoken language, and there are not many old texts written in the dialect. Only in recent years have people begun to write prose and poetry in the Urkish dialect. There are Urkers who have translated Bible books into Urkish, such as the book of Psalms.

Currently, Urk is no longer an island, and exposure to the standard Dutch through the media is widespread. However, the distinctive Urkish dialect is still alive.

Folktales

Ommelebommelestien

A famous Urkish folktale is the story parents tell their children when they want to know where the babies come from. The tale involves a large exposed rock which can be seen in the IJsselmeer about 30 metres from the shore. This stone is known as the "Ommelebommelestien".

Urkers often tell their children that there are two kinds of people-- vreemden (strangers) and Urkers (people from Urk). Strangers are usually born from a cabbage, or a stork brings them to their new parents, but Urkers come from a large stone which lies about 30 meters from the shores of their former island. Nowadays, the stone is usually called "Ommelebommelestien" (Ommel-Bommel Stone), but in former times it was called "Ommelmoerstien": moer means "mother" in the Urkish dialect.

In the tale, a stork comes all the way from Egypt to put babies in the stone. When the baby is about to be born, the baby's father is said to have to go to Schokland to pick up the key that gives access to the stone. So when an Urkish man is asked if he has been to Schokland, he is actually being asked if he has children.

In the older days, when both Urk and Schokland were still islands in the Zuiderzee, the father had to take the obstetrician in his boat and row from Urk to Schokland to get the key, and then from Schokland to the Ommelebommelestien to get the baby. Nowadays he would be able to go to Schokland by car, but according to the legend he still has to row. The door to the stone is somewhere below sea level, so it is difficult to find.

Once the door was found, a small price had to be paid for the baby: traditionally one Dutch guilder for a girl but two for a boy.

The mother was said to be kept in bed with a nail through her right foot. There she would celebrate that she had just become a mother.

Urk and the arts

The prolific Dutch writer Albert Cornelis Baantjer was born here. Baantjer is mainly known for his large series of detective novels revolving around police inspector De Cock and his side-kick, sergeant Vledder.

The now mostly forgotten writer Jef Last lived on Urk for several years from 1932 onwards. He wrote several articles about Urk for a Dutch Magazine called 'De Groene Amsterdammer'. While living here, he fell in love with a fisherman. This love inspired him to write Zuiderzee. This novel deals with the love between two fishermen living on Urk and was one of the first, if not the first novel in Dutch literature to openly deal with homosexuality.

The Dutch writer, painter and resistance hero Willem Arondeus spend some time in Urk onward from 1920. While residing on Urk, during 1922, he wrote 'Afzijdige Strofen', a collection of twenty homo-erotic poems which were posthumously published in 2001.

Demographics (2007)

  • Birth Rate: 22.23 per 1000
  • Death Rate: 3.24 per 1000
  • NGR: +1.90% per year. [2]

Rail Links

Urk has no railway station but the nearest stations are Kampen and Lelystad.

See also

  • Urk Lighthouse

References

  1. ^ 'Measuring dialect pronunciation differences using Levenshtein distance' (chapter 9) door Heeringa, Wilbert Jan ([1])

External links

Coordinates: 52°40′N 5°36′E / 52.667°N 5.6°E / 52.667; 5.6


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