Vendsyssel-Thy
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Vendsyssel-Thy or Nørrejyske Ø (Danish for North Jutlandic Island) is the northernmost part of Denmark. Technically, it is the second largest island of Denmark (excluding Greenland), however for practical and traditional reasons it is considered a part of the Jutland Peninsula, from which it became physically separated during a flood in 1825. The area is separated from Jutland proper by the Limfjord. The constituent landscapes are:
- Vendsyssel, the largest part to east and north (in North Jutland County),
- Hanherrederne or Hanherred in the central part (mostly in North Jutland County, westernmost part in Viborg County),
- Thy to the west (in Viborg County, except for the southernmost part, called Thyholm, which is in Ringkjøbing County).
The term North Jutland usually includes Vendsyssel-Thy, Himmerland and the islands of Mors and Læsø. From 2007, these areas will constitute the North Jutland Region, being smallest of Denmark's five new regions by population.
Vendsyssel-Thy was once connected to Jutland proper by a 13 km long and less than 1 km wide isthmus, Agger Tange, which separated the North Sea from the Limfjord. It became an island on February 3, 1825 when the sea broke through the northern end of the isthmus, creating Agger Channel. Thyborøn Channel, located farther south of the original canal, was created through the center of the isthmus by another flood in 1862. Agger Channel began to fill up with sand and was eventually filled up in 1877, thus making the island a little bit larger.
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[edit] Names
Some historians and linguists hypothesise that the name Vendsyssel is derived from the Germanic tribe of the Vandals. Syssel is an ancient form of administrative region. Vendel (Old Danish Wændil) was also the ancient name of the Limfjord itself.
Thy is originally the same word as Old Norse Þjóð, meaning people, and is by some scholars thought to be the origin of another Germanic tribe, the Teutons.[1]
[edit] Key facts
- Area: 4,685 km²
- Population: 306,373 (January 1, 2003)
- Major towns:
- Vendsyssel: Hjørring, Frederikshavn, Skagen, Brønderslev, Sæby, Hirtshals, Løkken, Nørresundby (northern part of Aalborg, which is mainly south of the Limfjord)
- Hanherred: Fjerritslev, Brovst
- Thy: Thisted, Hanstholm, Hurup
[edit] Infrastructure
[edit] Bridges to mainland Jutland
From west to east:
- Oddesund (rail and road, from Thy to Struer and West Jutland)
- Vilsund (road, from Thy to the island of Mors and onwards to central Jutland)
- Aggersund (road, between Hanherred and Himmerland)
- Limfjord Railroad Bridge (in Aalborg, linking Vendsyssel to the Danish rail network)
- Limfjord Bridge (road, linking Nørresundby to central Aalborg)
- Limfjord Tunnel (motorway, east of Aalborg)
- A further bridge crossing the Limfjord west of Aalborg has been proposed.
[edit] Ferries
To Sweden:
- Frederikshavn-Gothenburg
To Norway:
- Hanstholm-Kristiansand
- Hanstholm-Egersund/Haugesund/Bergen
- Hirtshals-Kristiansand
- Hirtshals-Larvik
- Hirtshals-Stavanger
- Hirtshals-Bergen
- Hirtshals-Oslo
- Hirtshals-Langesund
- Frederikshavn-Oslo
To the Faroe Islands and Iceland:
- Hanstholm-Tórshavn-Seyðisfjörður (also calling at Lerwick, Shetland Islands, and Bergen, Norway)
To mainland Jutland:
- Agger-Thyborøn (crossing the western mouth of the Limfjord)
- Neessund (between Thy and the island of Mors)
- Feggesund (between Hanherred and the island of Mors)
- Hals-Egense (crossing the eastern mouth of the Limfjord)
To the island of Læsø:
[edit] Airports
- Aalborg Airport (international), flights to:
- Copenhagen
- Faroe Islands
- Oslo, Norway
- Bergen, Norway
- Ørlandet (Trondheim), Norway
- Helsinki, Finland
- London Gatwick, UK
- Málaga, Spain
- Thisted Airport, flights to:
- Sindal Airport