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Terschelling Island (The Netherlands)

Fryslân province

Last modified: 2005-07-30 by jarig bakker
Keywords: terschelling |
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[Municipality flag of Terschelling] Shipmate Flagchart : http://www.shipmate.nl/flags.htm

See also:

Terschelling municipality

Terschelling belonged to Noordholland until WWII, when the Germans transferred the municipality to Fryslân. This was ratified by law in 1951. This is logical as the only connection to the mainland is the ferry to Harlingen in Fryslân. There are three villages: Westerschelling, Midsland and Hoorn. The island is c. 30 km long and nearly 4 km wide, with an area of 9616 hectares.
In April 1857 a flag of horizontal stripes of red, blue, yellow, green and white was reported to the Minister of the Interior. This flag is still in use, but I don't know if it is adopted officially by now. Although this flag was already shown on a flagchart of 1847, older flagcharts give a flag for Terschelling and Vlieland as one. These flags also have the colours of Vlieland (green and white) and red, white and blue stripes at both the top and bottom, so maybe the original flag was red over blue over yellow. I've read once that blue stands for the sky, red for the roofs of the houses, green for the vegetation, yellow for the beach and white for the foam heads of the waves in the North Sea, but I have no confirmation.
Mark Sensen, 25 April 1998

That's actually from on an old school rhyme here (I actually live on Terschelling)
The full rhyme goes like this:

"Rood zijn de daken
Geel zijn de helmen
Groen is het gras
Blauw is de lucht
Wit is het zand
Dit zijn de kleuren van Schellingerland"

translated to english it would be like this:

"Red are the rooftops
Yellow are the marrams
Green is the grass
Blue is the sky
White is the sand
These are the colors of Schellingerland"

Hendrik Koning, 17 Aug 2002

The island Terschelling is in Frisian called "Skylge", but on the island itself called "Schylge", In the past it was called "Ter Schelling" ("on the divide") and before that "Wuxalia". In our time the easy explanation for this "divide" is the border beween Holland and Fryslân, which lay directly east of the island for centuries, However, it may be that the original Schelling was actually one of the tidal channels.
As long as The Netherlands have been united, the island used to be the east-most of the Wadden islands belonging to Holland. But what we now call the island Terschelling has several times changed hands over the past millenium or more, even if up until 1287, the Sint Hubertusvloed, it was still connected to the Frisian main land. Its strategic position also made it a pr