Vaalserberg
Vaalserberg | |
---|---|
File:HighestPointOfTheNetherlands.jpg
The highest point in the Netherlands
|
|
Highest point | |
Elevation | Lua error in Module:Convert at line 1851: attempt to index local 'en_value' (a nil value). |
Coordinates | Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. |
Naming | |
Translation | Mount Vaals (English) |
Geography | |
Location | Limburg, Netherlands |
The Vaalserberg ("Mount of Vaals") is a hill with a height of 322.7 metres (1,059 ft) above NAP and the highest point in mainland Netherlands. The Vaalserberg is located in the province of Limburg, at the south-easternmost edge of the country in the municipality of Vaals, near the eponymous town, some three kilometres west of Aachen.
Before 10 October 2010, the Vaalserberg was the highest point in the Netherlands, until upon the dissolution of the Netherlands Antilles when Mount Scenery on Saba (the highest point in the Kingdom of the Netherlands) became part of the Netherlands.
Three-Country Point
The Vaalserberg is also the location of the tripoint between Germany, Belgium and the Netherlands and its summit is therefore referred to as Drielandenpunt ("Three-Country Point") in Dutch, or Dreiländereck ("Three-Country Corner") in German, or Trois Frontières ("Three Borders") in French.
Between 1830 and 1919, the summit was a quadripoint, also bordering Neutral Moresnet.
The current Belgian-German-border is not the same as the former eastern border of Moresnet with Prussia; it lies a little more to the east. Therefore, five different borders came together at this point, however never more than four at one time - except possibly for the period 1917-1920, when the border situation was unclear and disputed.
This border intersection has made the Vaalserberg a well-known tourist attraction in the Netherlands with a tower on the Belgian side (Dutch: Boudewijntoren; French: Tour Baudouin) offering a grand panorama of the surrounding landscape.
Four-borders road
The road leading up to this point on the Dutch side is called the "Viergrenzenweg" ("four-borders road"), probably because of the former neutral Moresnet, while the roads in Belgium "Route des Trois Bornes" and Germany "Dreiländerweg" only refer to three.[1]
Road cycling
The Vaalserberg is often used in the Amstel Gold Race and is climbed halfway through the race. The climb is named in the roadbook of the Gold Race as 'Drielandenpunt' and is followed by the Gemmenich climb.
See also
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Border triangle Vaalserberg. |
- Pages with broken file links
- Articles containing Dutch-language text
- Articles containing French-language text
- Commons category link is locally defined
- Use dmy dates from October 2010
- Highest points per country
- Border tripoints
- Belgium–Germany border crossings
- Belgium–Netherlands border crossings
- Germany–Netherlands border crossings
- Mountains and hills of the Ardennes (Belgium)
- Mountains and hills of the Eifel (Belgium)
- Mountains and hills of the Eifel (North Rhine-Westphalia)
- Mountains and hills of the Netherlands
- Mountains and hills of Liège (province)
- Mountains and hills of North Rhine-Westphalia
- Hills of South Limburg (Netherlands)
- German-speaking Community of Belgium
- Aachen
- Kelmis
- Vaals