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Friesland (Template:IPAc-en Template:Respell; {{#invoke:IPA|main}}; official Template:Langx {{#invoke:IPA|main}}), historically and traditionally known as Frisia (Template:IPAc-en), named after the Frisians, is a province of the Netherlands located in the country's northern part. It is situated west of Groningen, northwest of Drenthe and Overijssel, north of Flevoland, northeast of North Holland, and south of the Wadden Sea. As of January 2023, the province had a population of about 660,000,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> and a total area of Template:Cvt.

The province is divided into 18 municipalities. The capital and seat of the provincial government is the city of Leeuwarden (West Frisian: Ljouwert, Liwwaddes: Liwwadde), a city with 123,107<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> inhabitants. Other large municipalities in Friesland are Sneek (pop. 33,512), Heerenveen (pop. 50,257), and Smallingerland (includes town of Drachten, pop. 55,938). Since 2017, Arno Brok is the King's Commissioner in the province. A coalition of the Christian Democratic Appeal, the People's Party for Freedom and Democracy, the Labour Party, and the Frisian National Party forms the executive branch. The area of the province was once part of the ancient, larger region of Frisia, which gave the province its name. The land is mostly made up of grassland and it has numerous lakes. The official languages of Friesland are West Frisian and Dutch.

ToponymyEdit

In 1996, the Provincial Council of Friesland resolved that the official name of the province should follow the West Frisian spelling rather than the Dutch spelling, resulting in "Friesland" being replaced by "Fryslân".<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> In 2004, the Dutch government confirmed this resolution, putting in place a three-year scheme to oversee the name change and associated cultural programme.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

The province of Friesland is occasionally referred to as "Frisia" by, amongst others, Hanno Brand, head of the history and literature department at the Fryske Akademy since 2009.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> However, the English-language webpage of the Friesland Provincial Council refers to the province as "Fryslân".<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}Template:Dead link</ref>

HistoryEdit

PrehistoryEdit

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}}

File:Continental.coast.150AD.Germanic.peoples.jpg
Map of the North Sea coast, Template:Circa. (erroneously shows late 20th century land masses)

The Frisii were among the migrating Germanic tribes that, following the breakup of Celtic Europe in the 4th century BC, settled along the North Sea. They came to control the area from roughly present-day Bremen to Bruges, and conquered many of the smaller offshore islands. What little is known of the Frisii is provided by a few Roman accounts, most of them military. Pliny the Elder said their lands were forest-covered with tall trees growing up to the edge of the lakes.<ref>Template:Harvcolnb, Natural History, Bk XVI Ch 2: Wonders connected with trees in the northern regions.</ref> They lived by agriculture<ref>Template:Harvcolnb, The Annals, Bk XIII, Ch 54. Events of AD 54–58. This was confirmed by Tacitus when he said that in an incident where the Frisii had taken over land, they then settled into houses, sowed the fields, and cultivated the soil.</ref> and raising cattle.<ref>Template:Harvcolnb, The Annals, Bk IV, Ch 72–74. Events of AD 15–16. Tacitus specifically refers to the herds of the Frisii.</ref>

In his Germania, Tacitus described all the Germanic peoples of the region as having elected kings with limited powers and influential military leaders who led by example rather than by authority. The people lived in spread-out settlements.<ref>Template:Harvcolnb, The Germany, Ch V, VII, XVI.</ref> He specifically noted the weakness of Germanic political hierarchies in reference to the Frisii, when he mentioned the names of two kings of the 1st century Frisii and added that they were kings "as far as the Germans are under kings".<ref>Template:Harvcolnb, The Annals, Bk XIII, Ch 54. Events of AD 54–58.</ref>

In the 1st century BC, the Frisii halted a Roman advance and thus managed to maintain their independence.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Some or all of the Frisii may have joined into the Frankish and Saxon peoples in late Roman times, but they would retain a separate identity in Roman eyes until at least 296, when they were forcibly resettled as laeti<ref name="Grane 2007 109">Template:Citation</ref> (Roman-era serfs) and thereafter disappear from recorded history. Their tentative existence in the 4th century is confirmed by archaeological discovery of a type of earthenware unique to 4th-century Frisia, called terp Tritzum, showing that an unknown number of Frisii were resettled in Flanders and Kent,<ref name="Looijenga 1997 40">Template:Citation. Looijenga cites Gerrets' The Anglo-Frisian Relationship Seen from an Archaeological Point of View (1995) for this contention.</ref> likely as laeti under the aforementioned Roman coercion. The lands of the Frisii were largely abandoned by Template:Circa as a result of the conflicts of the Migration Period, climate deterioration, and the flooding caused by a rise in the sea level.

Early Middle AgesEdit

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File:Frisia 716-la.svg
The Frisian realm in 716 AD. The Frisian Kingdom covered only the western part of the area.

The area lay empty for one or two centuries, when changing environmental and political conditions made the region habitable again. At that time, during the Migration Period, "new" Frisians (probably descended from a merging of Frisii, Angles, Saxons and Jutes) repopulated the coastal regions.<ref name="Bazelmans 2009 321–337">Template:Harvcolnb, The case of the Frisians.</ref><ref name="auto">Template:Cite thesis</ref>Template:Rp These Frisians consisted of tribes with loose bonds, centred on war bands but without great power. The earliest Frisian records name four social classes, the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (nobiles in Latin documents; adel in Dutch and German) and {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (vrijen in Dutch and Freien in German), who together made up the "Free Frisians" who might bring suit at court, and the laten or liten with the slaves, who were absorbed into the laten during the Early Middle Ages, as slavery was not so much formally abolished, as evaporated.Template:Efn The laten were tenants of lands they did not own and might be tied to it in the manner of serfs, but in later times might buy their freedom.<ref name="Homans1957" />Template:Rp

Under the rule of King Aldgisl, the Frisians came in conflict with the Frankish mayor of the palace Ebroin, over the old Roman border fortifications. Aldgisl could keep the Franks at a distance with his army. During the reign of Redbad, however, the tide turned in favour of the Franks; in 690, the Franks were victorious in the Battle of Dorestad.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> In 733, Charles Martel sent an army against the Frisians. The Frisian army was pushed back to Eastergoa. The next year the Battle of the Boarn took place. Charles ferried an army across the Almere with a fleet that enabled him to sail up to De Boarn. The Frisians were defeated in the ensuing battle,<ref name="auto"/>Template:Rp and their last king Poppo was killed.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The victors began plundering and burning heathen sanctuaries. Charles Martel returned with much loot, and broke the power of the Frisian kings for good. The Franks annexed the Frisian lands between the Vlie and the Lauwers. They conquered the area east of the Lauwers in 785, when Charlemagne defeated Widukind. The Carolingians laid Frisia under the rule of grewan, a title that has been loosely related to count in its early sense of "governor" rather than "feudal overlord".<ref name="Homans1957" />Template:Rp About 100,000 Dutch drowned in a flood in 1228.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Frisian freedomEdit

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File:Dapperheidgrotepier.jpg
Pier Gerlofs Donia in 1516 as depicted in a 19th-century painting by Johannes Hinderikus Egenberger

When, around 800, the Scandinavian Vikings first attacked Frisia, which was still under Carolingian rule, the Frisians were released from military service on foreign territory in order to be able to defend themselves against the heathen Vikings. With their victory in the Battle of Norditi in 884 they were able to drive the Vikings permanently out of East Frisia, although it remained under constant threat. Over the centuries, whilst feudal lords reigned in the rest of Europe, no aristocratic structures emerged in Frisia. This 'Frisian freedom' was represented abroad by redjeven who were elected from among the wealthier farmers or from elected representatives of the autonomous rural municipalities. Originally the redjeven were all judges, so-called Asega, who were appointed by the territorial lords.<ref>Heinrich Schmidt: Politische Geschichte Ostfrieslands. 1975, p. 22 ff.</ref>

After significant territories were lost to Holland in the Friso-Hollandic Wars, Frisia saw an economic downturn in the mid-14th century. Accompanied by a decline in monasteries and other communal institutions, social discord led to the emergence of untitled nobles called haadlingen ("headmen"), wealthy landowners possessing large tracts of land and fortified homes<ref>Medieval Germany: An Encyclopedia, John M. Deep, Pub. 2001, Germany.</ref> who took over the role of the judiciary as well as offering protection to their local inhabitants. Internal struggles between regional leaders resulted in bloody conflicts and the alignment of regions along two opposing parties: the Fetkeapers and Skieringers. On 21 March 1498,<ref>Markus Meumann, Jörg Rogge (Hg.). Die besetzte "res publica". Zum Verhältnis von ziviler Obrigkeit und militärischer Herrschaft in besetzten Gebieten vom Spätmittelalter bis zum 18. Jahrhundert, Pg. 137. Papers from a conference held 20–21 Sep 2001, at the Martin-Luther-Universität Halle-Wittenberg. By Markus Meumann, Jörg Rogge. Published 2006 LIT Verlag Berlin -Hamburg-Münster.</ref> a small group of Skieringers from Westergo secretly met with Albert III, Duke of Saxony, the Governor of the Habsburg Netherlands, in Medemblik requesting his help.<ref>The New Encyclopædia Britannica, Published by Encyclopædia Britannica Inc., 1993, p. 214.</ref> Albrecht, who had gained a reputation as a formidable military commander, accepted and soon conquered all Friesland. Emperor Maximilian of Habsburg appointed Albrecht hereditary potestate and gubernator of Friesland in 1499.<ref>The Dutch Republic in the Seventeenth Century: The Golden Age by Maarten Prak, Pub 2005</ref>

In 1515, an army of haadlingen and peasants, with the help of mercenaries known as the Arumer Zwarte Hoop, started a fight for freedom from oppression by the Habsburg authorities.<ref name="Wûnseradiel">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> One of the leaders was Pier Gerlofs Donia, whose farm had been burned down and whose kinfolk had been killed by a marauding Landsknecht regiment. Since the regiment had been employed by the Habsburg authorities to suppress the civil war of the Fetkeapers and Skieringers, Donia put the blame on the authorities. After this he gathered angry peasants and some petty noblemen from Frisia and Gelderland and formed the Arumer Zwarte Hoop.The rebels received financial support from Charles II, Duke of Guelders, who claimed the Duchy of Guelders in opposition to the House of Habsburg. Charles also employed mercenaries under command of his military commander Maarten van Rossum in their support. However, when the tides turned against the rebels after the Donia's death in 1520, Charles withdrew his support, without which the rebels could no longer afford to pay their mercenary army.<ref name="Kalma-pg50">Template:Cite book</ref> The revolt was put to an end in 1523 and Frisia was incorporated into the Habsburg Netherlands, bringing an end to the Frisian freedom.<ref name="Wûnseradiel"/>

Modern timesEdit

File:Gemme van Burmania voor Philips II.jpg
The Frisian representative refusing to kneel before Philip II at his coronation

Charles V, the Holy Roman Emperor, became the first lord of the Lordship of Frisia. He appointed Georg Schenck van Toutenburg, who had crushed the peasants' revolt, as Stadtholder to rule over the province in his stead. When Charles abdicated in 1556, Frisia was inherited by Philip II of Spain along with the rest of the Netherlands. In 1566, Frisia joined the Dutch Revolt against Spanish rule.

In 1577, George de Lalaing, Count of Rennenberg was appointed Stadtholder of Frisia and other provinces. A moderate, trusted by both sides, he tried to reconcile the rebels with the Crown. But in 1580, Rennenburg declared for Spain. The States of Frisia raised troops and took his strongholds of Leeuwarden, Harlingen and Stavoren. Rennenburg was deposed and Frisia became the fifth Lordship to join the rebels' Union of Utrecht. From 1580 onward, all stadtholders were members of the House of Orange-Nassau. With the Peace of Münster in 1648, Frisia became a full member of the independent Dutch Republic, a federation of provincies. In economic and therefore also political importance, Friesland was next in rank to the provinces of Holland and Zeeland.

In 1798, three years after the Batavian Revolution, the provincial lordship of Frisia was abolished and its territory was divided between the Eems and Oude IJssel departments. This was short-lived, however, as Frisia was revived as a department in 1802. When the Netherlands were annexed by the First French Empire in 1810, the department was in French renamed Frise. After Napoleon was defeated in 1813 and a new constitution was introduced in 1814, Friesland became a province of the Sovereign Principality of the United Netherlands, then of the unitary Kingdom of the Netherlands a year later.

GeographyEdit

File:Larus argentatus Fries wad.jpg
View of the northern coast of Friesland

Friesland is situated at Template:Coord in the northwest of the Netherlands, west of the province of Groningen, northwest of Drenthe and Overijssel, north of Flevoland, northeast of the IJsselmeer and North Holland, and south of the North Sea. It is the largest province of the Netherlands if one includes areas of water; in terms of land area only, it is the third-largest province.

Most of Friesland is on the mainland, but it also includes a number of West Frisian Islands, including Vlieland, Terschelling, Ameland and Schiermonnikoog, which are connected to the mainland by ferry. The province's highest point is a dune at Template:Convert above sea level, on the island of Vlieland.

There are four national parks of the Netherlands located in Friesland: Schiermonnikoog, De Alde Feanen, Lauwersmeer (partially in Groningen), and Drents-Friese Wold (also partially situated in Drenthe).

Urban areasEdit

The ten urban areas in Friesland with the largest population are:<ref>CBS Statline 2018.</ref>

Dutch name Frisian name Population
Leeuwarden Ljouwert 92,235
Drachten Drachten 45,080
Sneek Snits 33,960
Heerenveen Template:Sortname 30,567
Harlingen Harns 14,660
Joure Template:Sortname 13,070
Wolvega Wolvegea 12,830
Franeker Frjentsjer 12,810
Dokkum Dokkum 12,575
Lemmer Template:Sortname 10,315

MunicipalitiesEdit

The province is divided into 18 municipalities, each with local government (municipal council, mayor and aldermen).

Municipality Population<ref name="munpops">Template:Dutch municipality population</ref> Total area<ref name="munareas">Template:Dutch municipality total area</ref> Population density<ref name="munpops"/><ref name="munareas"/> COROP
km2 sq mi /km2 /sq mi
Achtkarspelen Template:Dutch municipality population Template:Convert Template:Convert North Friesland
Ameland Template:Dutch municipality population Template:Convert Template:Convert North Friesland
Dantumadiel Template:Dutch municipality population Template:Convert Template:Convert North Friesland
De Fryske Marren Template:Dutch municipality population Template:Convert Template:Convert South West Friesland
Harlingen Template:Dutch municipality population Template:Convert Template:Convert North Friesland
Heerenveen Template:Dutch municipality population Template:Convert Template:Convert South East Friesland
Leeuwarden Template:Dutch municipality population Template:Convert Template:Convert North Friesland
Noardeast-Fryslân Template:Dutch municipality population Template:Convert Template:Convert North Friesland
Ooststellingwerf Template:Dutch municipality population Template:Convert Template:Convert South East Friesland
Opsterland Template:Dutch municipality population Template:Convert Template:Convert South East Friesland
Schiermonnikoog Template:Dutch municipality population Template:Convert Template:Convert North Friesland
Smallingerland Template:Dutch municipality population Template:Convert Template:Convert South East Friesland
Súdwest-Fryslân Template:Dutch municipality population Template:Convert Template:Convert South West Friesland
Terschelling Template:Dutch municipality population Template:Convert Template:Convert North Friesland
Tytsjerksteradiel Template:Dutch municipality population Template:Convert Template:Convert North Friesland
Vlieland Template:Dutch municipality population Template:Convert Template:Convert North Friesland
Waadhoeke Template:Dutch municipality population Template:Convert Template:Convert North Friesland
Weststellingwerf Template:Dutch municipality population Template:Convert Template:Convert South East Friesland

ClimateEdit

The province of Friesland, like the rest of the Netherlands, has an oceanic climate (Köppen: Cfb). Template:Weather box

DemographyEdit

In 2023, Friesland had a population of 659,551 and a population density of Template:Cvt.

The years 1880–1900 show slower population growth due to an agricultural recession during which some 20,000 Frisians emigrated to the United States.<ref>Template:In lang Emigration to the United States Template:Webarchive.</ref>

Historical population of Friesland<ref>Template:In lang Overzicht aantal inwoners Provincie Friesland 1714–2000, Tresoar.</ref><ref name=bevolking>Template:In lang Bevolking; geslacht, leeftijd, burgerlijke staat en regio, 1 januari Template:Webarchive, Statistics Netherlands, 2014.</ref>
Year Population
1714 129,243
1748 135,195
1796 161,513
1811 175,366
1830 204,909
1840 227,859
1850 243,191
1860 269,701
1870 300,863
1880 329,877
1890 335,558
1900 340,263
Year Population
1910 363,625
1920 385,362
1930 402,051
1940 424,462
1950 465,267
1960 478,206
1970 521,820
1982 592,314
1990 599,151
1999 621,222
2010 646,305
2020 649,944

File:Bevolkingsontwikkeling Friesland.jpg

Template:Clear left

AnthropometryEdit

Since the late Middle Ages, Friesland has been renowned for the exceptional height of its inhabitants.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Even early Renaissance poet Dante Alighieri refers to the height of Frisians in his Divine Comedy when, in the canticle about Hell, he talks about the magnitude of an infernal demon by stating that "not even three tall Frieslanders, were they set one upon the other, would have matched his height".<ref>Alighieri, Dante. Divine Comedy, "Inferno", Canto 31, line 64, in The Portable Dante, ed. Paolo Milano, trans. Laurence Binyon, Penguin, 1975 Template:ISBN</ref>

ReligionEdit

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In 2015, 28.5% of the population belonged to the Protestant Church in the Netherlands, while 6.6% were Roman Catholic, 1.1% were Muslim and 6.5% belonged to other churches or faiths. Over half of the population (57.2%) identified as non-religious.

EconomyEdit

Friesland is mainly an agricultural province. The black and white Frisian cattle, black and white Stabyhoun and the black Frisian horse originated here. Tourism is another important source of income: the principal tourist destinations include the lakes in the southwest of the province and the islands in the Wadden Sea to the north. There are 195 windmills in the province of Friesland, out of a total of about 1200 in the entire country.

The Gross domestic product (GDP) of the region was 19.8 billion € in 2018, accounting for 2.6% of the Netherlands economic output. GDP per capita adjusted for purchasing power was €26,700 or 89% of the EU27 average in the same year.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

CultureEdit

LanguagesEdit

File:WIKITONGUES- Sjoukje speaking West Frisian.webm
A West Frisian speaker, recorded in the Netherlands.

Friesland is one of the twelve provinces of the Netherlands to have its national language that is recognized as such, West Frisian. Before the 18th century, varieties of Frisian were also spoken in the provinces of North Holland and Groningen, and together with the Frisian speakers in East Friesland and North Friesland a continuous linguistic area existed between Amsterdam and the present day Danish-German border.

The mutual intelligibility in reading between Dutch and Frisian is limited. A cloze test in 2005 revealed native Dutch speakers understood 31.9% of a West Frisian newspaper, 66.4% of an Afrikaans newspaper and 97.1% of a Dutch newspaper.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> In 2007, West Frisian is the native language of 54.3% of the inhabitants of the province of Friesland, followed by Dutch with 34.7%, and speakers of other regional languages, most of these restricted to Friesland, with 9.7%, and in the end other foreign languages with 1.4%. Frisian speakers are traditionally underrepresented in urban areas, and predominant in the countryside.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

West Frisian is also spoken in a small adjacent part of the province of Groningen. Up to the 18th century Frisian was spoken in the, at that time Prussian and Hanoverian, lordships of East Friesland). Since then the East Frisian population switched to East Frisian (Ostfriesisch), a Low German dialect. Only in some, formerly remoted, East Frisian villages (Saterland) a variety of historically East Frisian (Seeltersk) is still in use but by an older generation. A collection of dialects named North Frisian, is or was spoken in North Friesland, alongside the North Sea coast and on the islands of Schleswig-Holstein. The named Frisian languages are historically related to Old English, which points towards the fact that Angles and Saxons, eventually accompanied by Frisians, came from these areas.

In Stellingwerf, in south-east Friesland, a dialect of Low Saxon is spoken,<ref>Template:Glottolog</ref> as is in the northeast in Kollumerpomp.

In the former municipality of het Bildt the Hollandic dialect of Bildts is spoken. It contains a lot of Frisian influence. In most of the cities of Leeuwarden, Town Frisian is spoken. As with Bildts, these variants are Hollandic dialects with Frisian influence.

The language policy in Friesland is preservation. West Frisian is a mandatory subject in Friesland in primary and secondary schools of the Frisian speaking districts. Bilingual (Dutch–Frisian) and trilingual (Dutch–English–Frisian) schools in the province of Friesland use West Frisian as a language of instruction in some lessons, besides Dutch in most other lessons and alongside them English. Literacy in Frisian however, is not often a core aim and that makes the number of Frisians speakers able to write in Frisian only 12%.<ref>(Hilton, 2013)</ref>

The provincial government takes various initiatives to preserve the West Frisian language. All parents in Friesland receive, at their children's birth, information about language and multilingualism (e.g. 'taaltaske'Template:Clarify). To support the use of Frisian in public and at public events, the province also invests in the development of speech pathology materials and strives to create information technology devices for the West Frisian language. The Frisian government subsidizes the Afûk organization, which offers language courses and actively promotes Frisian in all sectors of society as well as the corporate domain which as a rule is dominated by Dutch and English.<ref>(Afûk 2011)</ref> The province also promotes a wide range of art and entertainment in Frisian.<ref>Hilton, N. H., & Gooskens, C. (2013). Language policies and attitudes towards Frisian in the Netherlands. Phonetics in Europe: Perceptions and production, 139-157.</ref>

SportsEdit

The province is famous for its speed skaters, with mass participation in cross-country ice skating when weather conditions permit. When winters are cold enough to allow the freshwater canals to freeze hard, the province holds its traditional Elfstedentocht (Eleven cities tour), a Template:Convert ice skating tour. A traditional sport is Frisian handball. Another Frisian practice is fierljeppen, a sport with some similarities to pole vaulting. A jump consists of an intense sprint to the pole (polsstok), jumping and grabbing it, then climbing to the top while trying to control the pole's forward and lateral movements over a body of water and finishing with a graceful landing on a sand bed opposite to the starting point. Because of all the diverse skills required in fierljeppen, fierljeppers are considered to be very complete athletes with superbly developed strength and coordination. In the warmer months, many Frisians practice wadlopen, the traditional art of wading across designated sections of the Wadden Sea at low tide. Friesland has lots of waterways and lakes there for Sailcontests with a Skutsje or frisian Tjalk is done during the summer on various lakes.

There are currently two professional football clubs playing in Friesland: SC Cambuur from Leeuwarden (home stadium Cambuur Stadion) active in de keuken kampioen divisie(2nd div.) and SC Heerenveen (home stadium Abe Lenstra Stadion) active in de Eredivisie(1st div.).

PoliticsEdit

The King's Commissioner of Friesland is Arno Brok.<ref>"De heer Arno Brok Template:Webarchive" (in Dutch), Province of Friesland. Retrieved 7 March 2017.</ref> The Provincial Council of Friesland has 43 seats. The Provincial Executive was a coalition of the Christian Democratic Appeal, the People's Party for Freedom and Democracy, the Labour Party and the Frisian National Party (FNP), until 2023 when new provincial elections saw a different composition in the provincial council.

Template:Election table |-style="background:#E9E9E9;" !colspan="2" align="left"|Party !Votes !Seats |- |style="color:inherit;background:Template:Party color"| |align="left"|Christian Democratic Appeal |49.704 |8 |- |style="color:inherit;background:Template:Party color"| |align="left"|Forum for Democracy |40.055 |6 |- |style="color:inherit;background:Template:Party color"| |align="left"|Labour Party |39.976 |6 |- |style="color:inherit;background:Template:Party color"| |align="left"|People's Party for Freedom and Democracy |28.073 |4 |- | |align="left"|Frisian National Party |23.662 |4 |- |style="color:inherit;background:Template:Party color"| |align="left"|GreenLeft |22.935 |3 |- |style="color:inherit;background:Template:Party color"| |align="left"|ChristianUnion |19.673 |3 |- |style="color:inherit;background:Template:Party color"| |align="left"|Party for Freedom |17.287 |3 |- |style="color:inherit;background:Template:Party color"| |align="left"|Socialist Party |15.426 |2 |- |style="color:inherit;background:Template:Party color"| |align="left"|Democrats 66 |12.284 |2 |- |style="color:inherit;background:Template:Party color"| |align="left"|Party for the Animals |9.618 |1 |- |style="color:inherit;background:Template:Party color"| |align="left"|50PLUS |7.595 |1 |- |-style="background:#E9E9E9;" !colspan="2" align="left"|Total ! 298.241 !align="center" | 43 |}

TransportEdit

The four motorways in the province are A6, A7 (E22), A31, and A32.<ref>Template:In lang Wegenoverzicht Template:Webarchive, Rijkswaterstaat. Retrieved on 27 April 2014.</ref>

The main railway station of Friesland is Leeuwarden, which connects the railways Arnhem–Leeuwarden, Harlingen–Nieuweschans, and Leeuwarden–Stavoren which are all (partially) located in the province.

Route Railway stations in Friesland
Arnhem–Leeuwarden OverijsselWolvegaHeerenveen IJsstadionHeerenveenAkkrumGrou-JirnsumLeeuwarden
Harlingen–Nieuweschans Harlingen HavenHarlingenFranekerDronrypDeinumLeeuwardenLeeuwarden CamminghaburenHurdegarypFeanwâldenDe WestereenBuitenpostGroningen
Leeuwarden–Stavoren LeeuwardenMantgumSneek NoordSneekIJlstWorkumHindeloopenKoudum-MolkwerumStavoren

Ameland Airport near Ballum<ref>Template:In lang Algemene informatie Template:Webarchive, Ameland Airport. Retrieved on 27 April 2014.</ref> and Drachten Airfield near Drachten<ref>Template:In lang Aanwijzingsbesluit Luchthaven Drachten Template:Webarchive, 2007. Retrieved on 27 April 2014.</ref> are the two small general aviation airports in the province. The Royal Netherlands Air Force uses Vlieland Heliport and the Leeuwarden Air Base.

See alsoEdit

  • Frisian Lakes – consists of 24 lakes in central and southwest Friesland

LiteratureEdit

  • Helma Erkelens, Taal fen it hert. Language of the Heart. About Frisian Language and Culture, province of Fryslân, Leeuwarden 2004
  • John Hines & Nelleke IJssennagger (eds.), Frisians and their North Sea Neighbours: From the Fifth Century to the Viking Age, Boydell & Brewer, Woodbridge/Rochester 2017
  • Goffe Jensma, 'Minorities and Kinships. The Case of Ethnolinguistic Nationalism in Friesland’, in: P. Broomans et al. (eds.), The Beloved Mothertongue. Ethnolinguistic Nationalism in Small Nations: Inventories and Reflections, Peeters, Louvain-Paris-Dudley 2008, p. 63-78
  • Horst Haider Munske (ed.), Handbuch des Friesischen / Handbook of Frisian Studies, Max Niemeyer, Tübingen 2001
  • Oebele Vries, 'Frisonica libertas: Frisian Freedom as an Instance of Medieval Liberty', in: Journal of Medieval History 41 (2015), nr. 2, p. 229-248

MediaEdit

Friesch Dagblad<ref>Template:In lang Missie Friesch Dagblad Template:Webarchive, Friesch Dagblad. Retrieved on 27 April 2014.</ref> and Leeuwarder Courant<ref>Template:In lang Over de LC Template:Webarchive, Leeuwarder Courant. Retrieved on 27 April 2014.</ref> are daily newspapers mainly written in Dutch. Omrop Fryslân is the public broadcaster with radio and TV programs mainly in Frisian.<ref>Template:In lang Oer de Omrop Template:Webarchive, Omrop Fryslân. Retrieved on 27 April 2014.</ref>

NotesEdit

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ReferencesEdit

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SourcesEdit

External linksEdit

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