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DEN HELDER


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'' is a municipality and a city in the Netherlands, in the province of North Holland. Den Helder occupies the northernmost point of the North Holland peninsula. It is home to the country's main naval base. Ferries sail between Den Helder and the island of Texel to the north.
The major areas of 'Den Helder' are old Den Helder, Nieuw-Den Helder, and De Schooten. Nieuw-Den Helder was built in the 1950s, following World War II, when there was a great need for additional housing. De Schooten was constructed in the 1960s.
Huisduinen was the original village where city grew out of, Helder was a name for a second small hamlet. Due to its strategic location at the tip of the North Holland peninsula, multiple fortifications were built in the area. The area began to be called ''Helledore'' ("Gate to hell", later on Den Helsdeur), because of the "hellish" fortifications that prevented enemy ships from sailing into the Zuyderzee. The name Helder may also have come from ''Helle/Helde'', which means hill or hilly grounds, or from ''Helre,'' which means a sandy ridge.
Den Helder has played an important part in Dutch shipping. During the Dutch Golden Age, ships would assemble near Den Helder and sail from there to the oceans of the world. In the 1820s, the Noordhollandsch Kanaal shipping canal was dug from Amsterdam to Den Helder. The lighthouse ''Lange Jaap'' was built in 1877 and is the tallest cast-iron lighthouse in Europe, at 63.45 metres.

Contents
Naval base
Population centres
Local government
Notable people born in Den Helder
References
Naval base

Den Helder acted as a naval base as early as the 18th century. An Anglo-Russian invasion force landed at Den Helder in August 1799 and captured the Batavian navy there (see Battle of Castricum). French emperor Napoleon, visiting Den Helder in 1811, was impressed with the town's strategic location and ordered the construction of a fort (Kijkduin) and naval dockyards (Willemsoord). The docks were built in the years 1813-1827. In 1947 it officially became the Royal Netherlands Navy's main centre of operations. Den Helder continues to be the navy's main base today. The Koninklijk Instituut Marine (Royal Naval Academy) is also located in the city.
The old naval dockyards of Willemsoord, located in the north of the city, now house restaurants, a cinema, and other recreational facilities. The naval docks and administration have moved to a new location further east.
Satellite image
''Lange Jaap'' lighthouse



Population centres


The municipality of Den Helder consists of the following cities, towns, villages and/or districts: Den Helder, Huisduinen, Julianadorp, and the hamlets Friese Buurt and De Kooy.

Local government


The municipal council of Den Helder consists of 31 seats, which are divided as follows:

PvdA - 8 seats

VVD - 6 seats

CDA - 4 seats

★ Progressief Den Helder - 3 seats

★ Stadspartij Den Helder - 2 seats

ChristenUnie - 2 seats

D66 - 2 seats

SP -1 seat

GroenLinks - 1 seats

★ Lijst Prins - 1 seat

★ KiesKees - 1 seat

Notable people born in Den Helder



Edward W. Bok (1863), Dutch-American editor, Pulitzer Prize winner

Anton Pieck (1895), painter and graphic artist

Gré Brouwenstijn (1915), opera singer

Frans van Anraat (1942), businessman, sold raw materials for the production of chemical weapons to Saddam Hussein

Gerardus 't Hooft (1946), physician, 1999 Nobel Prize winner

Ed Nijpels (1950), former minister of Housing, Spatial Planning and the Environment (1986-1989) and former mayor of Breda

Swen Nater (1950), basketball player

Paul Rosenmöller (1956), politician and journalist, former leader of the Groenlinks party

Hans Smits (1956), water polo player

Martine Ohr (1964), field hockey striker

Rijkman Groenink (1949), banker, CEO of ABN-Amro

Edith Bosch (1980), judo world champion and Olympic silver medalist

References



★ Statistics are taken from the SDU Staatscourant

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