Koog
A koog (plural: köge) or groden is a type of polder found on the North Sea coast of Germany that is established by the construction of dykes enclosing the land which is then drained to form marshland. This type of land reclamation is also used along rivers. In general, a koog is protected by embankments known as dykes (Deiche).
Etymology
In its original German form of Kog the word meant "high land in front of the dyke". This has survived in the modern Dutch word kaag, having been borrowed as a result of dyke construction. By contrast, koog now means "land enclosed by dykes". From the Dithmarschen word koch (15th/16th centuries) it went into the Danish language as kog. In North Frisian it is kuch. The spelling koog was used by the poet, Michael Richey, in 1755 and, around 1700, what is now the port of Cuxhaven was still called Koogshaven.[1]
Polders
In the Netherlands and in the adjacent regions of East Frisia the word polder (Low German: Poller) is more commonly used for land enclosed by embankments and it may be related to Pfuhl ("murky pool" or "dirty puddle").[2] However, in English, the term polder has wider meanings. In the eastern part of East Frisia and in the Oldenburg Land, the word groden is still used.
Groden
The term groden (c.f. the English verb "to grow") is used especially in Lower Saxony and refers to new areas of land washed up by the sea. Sediments are deposited by the sea on mud flats when the tides change. After reaching a certain height, the land is dyked. Dyked land becomes innengroden. As a result of draining the fertile soil compacts and, over time, can sink until it is below sea level. The rising sea level in front of the dyke and the sinking of the old, now drained, sea areas behind the dyke leads to further dykes being built at an ever-higher level to enclose the newly dyked areas of marsh. In this way a so-called "polder staircase" is formed.[3]
The name groden is found for example in the borough of Wilhelmshaven in the villages of Altengroden, Neuengroden and Fedderwardergroden, the Heppenser, Voslapper and Rüstersieler Groden, and in the surrounding area are the Cäciliengroden, Petersgroden and Adelheidsgroden. All these areas, whether they emerged more recently (i.e. in the 20th century) or in older times, were formed as a result of dyke enclosure and Aufspülung, as is often the case with polders.
- → See also salt marsh
Drainage
Because a koog often lies below the level of the adjacent sea or river, it has to be continually drained. This is carried out with the aid of soakaways, sluices, pumping stations and water pumps.[4]
Today the pumps are powered by engines, in pre-industrial times and sometimes even into the period of intense industrialisation, they were driven by wind power (wind pumps). The groups of wind mills on the dykes of the Rhine delta - a symbol of the Netherlands - are old water pumps.
Riparian köge
As well land reclaimed from the sea, a koog may also refer to land reclaimed alongside rivers. These are usually wet areas that are now used for agriculture. This entails creating a completely new ecosystem from a river meadow or a carr. Often its name will recall its original situation, for example, the Oderbruch.
On the Rhine, Elbe and Oder rivers these areas are also used for flood protection. Once the flooding has subsided, water is pumped out again and the land can be used for farming until the next flood.
Until the 1950s, köge were mainly created to reclaim land for farming; since then coastal defence has been the main aim.
North German köge
On the western coast of Schleswig-Holstein and on the shores of the Lower Elbe over 230 koogs have been created over the centuries. The oldest ones are in the borough of Eiderstedt; they date to the 11th century.[4] After the Burchardi flood of 1634, an increasing number of "octroi" koogs were built.
Well known koogs include:
- County of Dithmarschen
- Christianskoog
- Delver Koog
- Dieksanderkoog (formerly Adolf Hitler Koog)
- Friedrichsgabekoog
- Friedrichskoog
- Hedwigenkoog
- Kaiser-Wilhelm-Koog
- Karolinenkoog
- Kronprinzenkoog
- Neufelderkoog
- Preiler Koog
- Speicherkoog in the Bay of Meldorf
- Wesselburenerkoog
- Westerkoog
- County of Nordfriesland
- Augustenkoog
- Beltringharder Koog
- Hauke-Haien-Koog (named after the lead character of the novella The Rider on the White Horse by Theodor Storm)
- Friedrich-Wilhelm-Lübke-Koog – in 1954 the last koog reclaimed for settlement in Schleswig-Holstein.
- Gotteskoog
- Tümlauer-Koog (formerly Hermann Göring Koog)
- Norderheverkoog (formerly Horst Wessel Koog)
- Bottschlotter Koog (Dagebüll)
- Kleiseerkoog (Galmsbüll)
- Herrenkoog
- Former island of Nordstrand
- Elisabeth-Sophien-Koog
- Alter Koog
- Osterkoog
- Trendermarschkoog
- Neukoog
- Morsumkoog
- Pohnshalligkoog
- Municipality of Reußenköge
- County of Pinneberg
- Hetlinger Neuerkoog
Literature
- Harry Kunz, Albert Panten: Die Köge Nordfrieslands. Mit Karte. Nordfriisk Instituut, Bräist/Bredstedt, 1997, ISBN 3-88007-251-5 (Nordfriisk Instituut 144).
External links
References
- ^ Friedrich Kluge: Etymologisches Wörterbuch. De Gruyter, Berlin 1975, Lemma Kog.
- ^ Friedrich Kluge: Etymologisches Wörterbuch. De Gruyter, Berlin 1975, Lemma Polder.
- ^ Klimapfad Sande, Seite 22 (pdf; 1.5 MB), retrieved 20 May 2013
- ^ a b Klaus-Joachim Lorenzen-Schmidt, Ortwin Pelc: Schleswig-Holstein Lexikon. Wachholtz, Neumunster, 2006, Lemma Koog.