vertical_align_top

Zaltbommel

Municipality in Gelderland, Netherlands
favorite
menu

Zaltbommel, also known, historically and colloquially, as Bommel, is a municipality and a city in the Netherlands.

History

edit

The city of Zaltbommel

edit

The town of Zaltbommel was first mentioned as "Bomela" in the year 850. Zaltbommel received city rights in 1231 and these were renewed in 1316. In 1599 during the Eighty Years War, Zaltbommel was besieged by Spanish forces but was relieved by an Anglo-Dutch force led by Maurice of Orange. The bridge over the Waal at Zaltbommel (which has since been replaced) features in a celebrated twentieth-century Dutch sonnet, De moeder de vrouw, by Martinus Nijhoff.

Zaltbommel was expanded to its current size on 1 January 1999, by a merger of the municipalities of Brakel, Kerkwijk and Zaltbommel. The municipality is situated in the heart of the Netherlands, close to the A2 Motorway, the railway line from Utrecht to 's‑Hertogenbosch and the rivers Waal and Maas.

Topography

edit

Dutch Topographic map of Zaltbommel (municipality), Sept. 2014

Population centres

edit

The municipality, consists of 13 population centres and had a population of 29,447 in 2021.

Notable residents

edit

The arts

edit
edit
  • Zaltbommel (in the upper right-hand corner of the image) is situated on the banks of the Waal. Major north–south highways and railways cross the river in the town, just east of the town centre.
  • 1649 map of Zaltbommel in Willem and Joan Blaeu's "Toonneel der Steden"
  • Tyel & Salt Boemel, 1649
edit

Categories

expand_more
0
edit
add
helper: web search
No categories found.

Member of

expand_more
6
edit
add
helper: web search
Show more expand_more

Tags

expand_more
0
edit
add
helper: web search
No tags found.

Communities

expand_more
2
edit
add
helper: web search

Activity

expand_more
0
Community menu
Zenopy · about
terms of use · copyright · privacy
loaded in 0.15 secs
arrow_drop_down
photo_library