Jump to content

Adinkerke: Difference between revisions

Coordinates: 51°04′N 2°36′E / 51.067°N 2.600°E / 51.067; 2.600
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 4: Line 4:
The 'kerke' suffix is common in west [[Flanders]] as an area surrounding a church (similar to [[kirk]] in [[Scotland]]). The closest [[France|French]] town is [[Dunkerque]]/[[Dunkirk]]. Which can be accessed via the E40 (A16) motorway, N39 (N1) [[Autoroutes of France|A road]], or N386 (D 60) minor road in addition to a canal. (The roads names in parentheses are employing the French nomenclature once crossing the border).
The 'kerke' suffix is common in west [[Flanders]] as an area surrounding a church (similar to [[kirk]] in [[Scotland]]). The closest [[France|French]] town is [[Dunkerque]]/[[Dunkirk]]. Which can be accessed via the E40 (A16) motorway, N39 (N1) [[Autoroutes of France|A road]], or N386 (D 60) minor road in addition to a canal. (The roads names in parentheses are employing the French nomenclature once crossing the border).


There are regular [[NMBS]] trains to [[Brussels]]. Access by train to [[Dunkirk]] is via [[Lille]] as the line is out of use. Dk' bus run a buses from the station to Dunkirk. *fr [[http://www.dkbus.com]]
There are regular [[NMBS]] trains to [[Brussels]]. Access by train to [[Dunkirk]] is via [[Gare de Lille]] which is in [[Lille]] also known as Rijsel in Dutch. as the line is out of use. Dk' bus run a buses from the station to Dunkirk. *fr [[http://www.dkbus.com]]


==History==
==History==

Revision as of 20:38, 9 November 2012

Adinkerke a small town in western Belgium close to the French border. It is a conurbation with the coastal town of De Panne which in turn is part of the west Belgian coastal conurbation. Adinkerke railway station is also the Western terminus of the Belgian coast tram line to De Panne; Nieuwpoort, Ostend and beyond. Near the city is Plopsaland (former Meli-Park).

The 'kerke' suffix is common in west Flanders as an area surrounding a church (similar to kirk in Scotland). The closest French town is Dunkerque/Dunkirk. Which can be accessed via the E40 (A16) motorway, N39 (N1) A road, or N386 (D 60) minor road in addition to a canal. (The roads names in parentheses are employing the French nomenclature once crossing the border).

There are regular NMBS trains to Brussels. Access by train to Dunkirk is via Gare de Lille which is in Lille also known as Rijsel in Dutch. as the line is out of use. Dk' bus run a buses from the station to Dunkirk. *fr [[1]]

History

In the first world war, from June to November 1917 the Commonwealth XV Corps held the front from the Belgian coast to St. Georges. The 24th and 39th Casualty Clearing Stations were posted at Oosthoek (between Adinkerke and Veurne) from July to November, and the 1st Canadian Casualty Clearing Station was at Adinkerke for a short time in June.

During the Second World War, the British Expeditionary Force was involved in the later stages of the defence of Belgium following the German invasion in May 1940, and suffered many casualties in covering the withdrawal to Dunkirk. Commonwealth forces did not return until September 1944, but in the intervening years, many airmen were shot down or crashed in raids on strategic objectives in Belgium, or while returning from missions over Germany.

Adinkerke Military Cemetery contains 168 Commonwealth burials of the First World War, and 55 from the Second World War. There are also 142 Czech and German war graves.

Tobacco

Belgium has lower taxes on tobacco than France or the UK; as Adinkerke is the closest Belgian town accessible to the French ferry ports, it attracts many French smokers and British booze cruisers every day to make the trip across the border to buy cheaper tobacco. Adinkerke has the unusual claim to fame of having the greatest number of tobacconists per capita of any area in Europe.[citation needed]

Many shops opened around the clock, which provided the advantage of offering other shops and fuel services that would not normally be found in a town of such a small size. While this may have proved beneficial to travellers, local people were inconvenienced by the constant traffic, so the local Mayor has recently[when?] ordered the tobacco stores to close during the night.

Due to the smuggling associated with reduced tobacco duty, it is not uncommon for the E40 to be closed at night at junction 1 and French and Belgian police question drivers and passengers of vehicles on the N34 road over the motorway.[citation needed] Many of the tobacco shops have closed now due to declining trade as a result of the imposition of quantitative limits on tobacco purchases being brought into France and Britain from Belgium, regular tobacco shoppers travelling to and from Britain have had their purchases seized by UK customs and been warned about future travel to purchase excise goods.

51°04′N 2°36′E / 51.067°N 2.600°E / 51.067; 2.600