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Dorp Wognum
The Town of Wognum


The coat of arms of Wognum

A version of this page appears in the Dutch language at
De Genealogie van de van Woggelum Familie
Johannes Cornelis van Woggelum

http://home.wanadoo.nl/jcvwog/

Archeological discoveries show that the history of Wognum began about 1700 B. C. The first Bronze Age settlers made their homes between the Oude Gouw and the Kleine Zomerdijk. There may have been a settlement between A. C. de Graafweg and the Westeinderweg at the top of the Tramweg. A rise in sea level and the water table severely flooded the region, and habitation probably ceased sometime between 700 and 650 B. C.


The town of Woglum is located in the Municipality of Wognum in the West-Friesland region of North Holland in the Netherlands.

Then, for about 1000 years, the entire area of West-Friesland, including Wognum, was permanently flooded and became marshland. Almost all of the province of North Holland, where West-Friesland is located, is currently below sea level.The organic soil in the fens (Anglo Saxon: fen, fenn, marsh, mud, dirt) collected to a depth of two to three meters. During this period the Kromme Leek was one of the most important natural drainage streams.

Around 850 A. D., Friesian people crossed the Zuider Zee to settle the Wognum area. About 1000 A. D. there was a small formal community bearing the family name Wog or Wok. The place name Wognum probably derives from this family name, with the addition of the suffix heim or hem, and ultimately um. The oldest recorded evidence for Wognum is Wokgunge, discovered in the archives of the Abbot of Echternach, in Luxembourg. Documents in the archives suggest that when Christianity was introduced around 1000 A. D., a small chapel was built by the Wognum community. Thus it is that Wognum is probably the oldest inhabited area of the westerly region of West-Friesland, and consequently Wognum is the oldest village with the longest formally established church history.


The town of Wognum
as shown on a modern postcard.


A house in Wognum
shown on a modern postcard.

The basis of the land division in West-Friesland was laid down in this period. Our forefathers must have done a fair bit of sploshing about in those fens, particularly at the time of the general draining away of the waters. The drainage of the fens led to their gradual disappearance.

Today there are only a few small areas within Wognum where fens such as Lekermeer survive. Our forefathers made desperate efforts to render the land suitable for farming through means of natural composting and the dredging of the land in the marshes. As a result there are still potholes throughout the countryside, as in the fields to the north of A. C. de Graafweg. These potholes were known as daliegaten, literaly dropholes.

Drainage caused more and more of the fens to disappear, resulting in the general lowering of the level of the land necessary to build dikes and windmills. Dikes such as Grote Zomerdijk, Kleine Zomerdijk and Oude Gouw were constructed. And Wognum came to appear more or less as we see of it today.


A portion of a 1583 navigation chart by Lucas Jansz Aurigarius shows Woggelum northwest of Hoorn. North is at the left.


Wognum on a portion of Janssonius’ 1658 map of the Netherlands.

Old names for Wognum

Woggunghen (1063)
Wognem (1083, 1120)
Woggenom (1513)
Wognem (1544)
Woggenum (1544)
Wognum (1658) Janssonius, map of the Netherlands
Woggenum (1680) Jan Jansz Dou, polder map
Woggelum (1583) Lucas Jansz Aurigarius, navigation chart

Undated:
Woggenem
Woggenhem
Woggingen
Woginghem
Wogginghem

Johannes Pannekeet

Authorities in this field generally agree that the first part of the place name Wognum must be seen in connection with the Friesian man's name Wogen. Johannes (Jan) Pannekeet, an expert in Dutch and Friesian place names, writes that Wog(g)inghem is probably a combination of the family name Wog(g)ing, meaning Wogen and his offspring, and hem, meaning abode or residential area. Thus the meaning of the place name Wognum is The place of residence of Wogen and his offspring.

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1. Almost all the text is from Peter Wognum of the United Kingdom, who collected it with the help of a friendly clerk at the town hall of Wognum, North Holland in the Netherlands, in 1977.

2. Peter Wognum translated most of the text used in this article from various Dutch sources in 1997, and it is reproduced here with his permission.

3. The coat of arms of the town of Wognum was found at the web site International Civic Arms at
http://www.bng.nl/ngw/indexgb.htm.

4. A navigation chart by Lucas Jansz Aurigarius (also called Lucas Jansz Waghenaer), dated 1583, is from an atlas named The Enchuyser Zeecaertboeck, with editions in 1598, 1601, and 1605.This map clearly showing the town of Woggelum was provided by webmaster Jan C. Van Woggelum
jcvwog@wanadoo.nl, who owns the website De Genealogie van de Van Woggelum Familie at http://home.wanadoo.nl/jcvwog. The portion of the map shown was enhanced by the author.

5. Janssonius' Map of the Netherlands, 1658 came from the web site Historic Maps of the Netherlands at
http://odur.let.rug.nl/~welling/maps/maps.html. A very small portion of the original map is shown here. The image was enhanced to the extent possible by the author.

6. Pannekeet, Jan. Westfries woordenboek. Wormerveer : Stichting Uitgeverij Noord-Holland, 1984. 420 p. 21 cm. ISBN: 9071123014. Note: An analysis of Dutch and Frisian words and place names.

7. Kaart van het Hoogheemraadschap van de Uitwaterende Sluizen van Kennemerland en West-Friesland door Jan Jansz Dou, eenbladskaart uit ca. 1680. Bibliotheek van de Universiteit van Amsterdam. The university has a web site at
http://www.uba.uva.nl/nl/collecties/kaarten/nederland.17de.eeuw.html.