Vennbahn

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File:Vennbahn.png
Vennbahn Map showing current Belgian-German border. The pre-1958 border southeast of Roetgen differed.

The Script error: No such module "Lang". (Script error: No such module "IPA"., "Fen Railway") is a former railway line that was built partly across what was then German territory by the Prussian state railways. It is now entirely in Belgium, because the trackbed of the line, as well as the stations and other installations, were made provisional Belgian territory in 1919 (permanent in 1922) under an article of the Treaty of Versailles.

This had the effect of creating six small exclaves of Germany on the line's western side,[1] of which five remain. The treaty (not the location of the trackbed, per se) also created one small Belgian counter-enclave, a traffic island inside a three-way German road intersection near Template:Ill which lasted until 1949.

The route is now a cycle way.[2]

Route

File:Vennquerbahn bridge buetgenbach.jpg
Vennbahn viaduct near Script error: No such module "Lang"., Liège province, Belgium.

The line, which was standard gauge, ran for some Script error: No such module "convert". across the High Fens to the south of Aachen in a roughly southward direction from Aachen via Script error: No such module "Lang". (the site of the depot), Monschau and Script error: No such module "Lang". to Script error: No such module "Lang"., with a Script error: No such module "convert". eastward branch from Template:Ill to Script error: No such module "Lang". and Template:Ill. At Eupen it connected with the line to Herbesthal where it joined the Brussels-Cologne main line. At Template:Ill it connected with the Liège-Luxembourg line.

Its part, when and where under Belgian control, was known officially as Belgian Railway line 48.

History

File:The Vennbahnweg and the Vennbahn in Aachen, Germany (DSCF5876).jpg
The former track is now part of a bicycle network

The line was built to carry coal and iron. The section of the line from Aachen to Monschau was opened on 30 June 1885. The section from Script error: No such module "Lang". to Eupen was opened on 3 August 1887. The link to Walheim was opened on 21 December 1889.[3]

After the First World War due to the Treaty of Versailles, the German Reich had to cede districts of Eupen and Script error: No such module "Lang". to Belgium on 10 January 1920. As a consequence of the new border demarcation, the route of the line now changed several times between the German Reich territory and Belgium. Belgium demanded that the Script error: No such module "Lang". be placed under Belgian administration, as it was of particular economic importance for the towns of Script error: No such module "Lang". and Eupen, and succeeded. On 27 March 1920, a border demarcation commission, which included representatives from France, the United Kingdom, Italy and Japan, determined that the Belgian state should be the owner of the railway line and its stations. At the time this generated six German exclaves, five of which still exist today.[4]

On 18 May 1940 Adolf Hitler ordered that the area be re-annexed by the German Reich, and the Script error: No such module "Lang". was returned to service as a wholly German line on 2 June 1940. However, after the defeat of Germany in 1945, the pre-war situation was re-instated.[5]

After the Second World War, the railway's industrial use declined steadily, so that the line was finally completely shut down and partially dismantled by 1989.[6]

Operation

File:Kriegslok 50 3666 at Raeren, 1 September 2001.jpg
Kriegslok 50 3666 on Script error: No such module "Lang". at Script error: No such module "Lang"., 1 September 2001

In latter years, until the end of 2001, the Script error: No such module "Lang". line operated tourist services, some of which were steam-hauled. These were withdrawn for want of funds to maintain the line. Part of the track between Template:Ill and Template:Ill is now used by railbikes.[7]

It was reported in 2008 that, with the Script error: No such module "Lang". no longer operational, Belgium might have to return the land the line runs along to Germany, which would result in the reunification of the exclaves with German territory.[8][9] However, the foreign ministries of Germany and Belgium have since confirmed that the trackbed, even though disused, will stay as Belgian territory and that the German exclaves will therefore remain.[10]

By 4 December 2007, the dismantling of the now disused line had started;[11] by September 2008, the track had been completely removed between Script error: No such module "Lang". and Sourbrodt.

A Script error: No such module "convert". cycle-way along the route was opened in 2013.[2][12]

Enclaves and exclaves

File:Neue Exklaven durchVennbahntrasse.JPG
Exclaves created by the Vennbahn track, including Mützenich
Name[13][14] Area Exclave of Enclaved by Coordinates Notes
(km2) (acres)
Münsterbildchen Script error: No such module "convert". File:Flag of Germany.svg Germany (North Rhine-Westphalia state – Aachen district – Roetgen municipality) File:Flag of Belgium (civil).svg Belgium (Liège province – Script error: No such module "Lang". municipality) Script error: No such module "Coordinates". West of Script error: No such module "Lang". trackbed; northernmost German enclave, mainly home to industrial and warehouse businesses.
Template:Ill Script error: No such module "convert". File:Flag of Germany.svg Germany (North Rhine-Westphalia state – Aachen district – Roetgen and Simmerath municipalities) File:Flag of Belgium (civil).svg Belgium (Liège province) Script error: No such module "Coordinates". Western part of Template:Ill, southern part of Roetgen, and intervening forest (Forst Rötgen); west and south of Script error: No such module "Lang". trackbed. From 1922 to 1958, the center portion (between Grenzweg and a boundary with three turning points west of the Schleebach stream) was Belgian territory. Until 1949, the east–west road that connected the two outer (German) portions was also German territory; therefore, the German land formed one oddly shaped enclave (that also included the road to Konzen). In 1949, it was split into two enclaves when Germany ceded the roads to Belgium;[15] in 1958, Belgium returned the east–west road and also ceded the center section of the current enclave to Germany.
Rückschlag Script error: No such module "convert". File:Flag of Germany.svg Germany (North Rhine-Westphalia state – Aachen district – Monschau town) File:Flag of Belgium (civil).svg Belgium (Liège province – Eupen municipality) Script error: No such module "Coordinates". Part of the municipality of Monschau, west of the Script error: No such module "Lang". trackbed; the smallest German enclave (3.71 acres or 1.5 hectares), consisting of one inhabited house with a garden. The parcel has been owned by members of the same family since 1929. Rückschlag means "setback" in German.[16]
Mützenich Script error: No such module "convert". File:Flag of Germany.svg Germany (North Rhine-Westphalia state – Aachen district – Monschau town) File:Flag of Belgium (civil).svg Belgium (Liège province) Script error: No such module "Coordinates". West of Belgium's Script error: No such module "Lang". trackbed.
Template:Ill Script error: No such module "convert". File:Flag of Germany.svg Germany (North Rhine-Westphalia state – Aachen district – Monschau town) File:Flag of Belgium (civil).svg Belgium (Liège province) Script error: No such module "Coordinates". Part of the municipality of Monschau, west of the Script error: No such module "Lang". trackbed; the southernmost Script error: No such module "Lang". enclave after 1949 (when Belgium annexed the Template:Ill enclave).

Former Script error: No such module "Lang". enclaves:

  • Template:Ill, (1922–1949), surrounded by Belgian territory, was the sixth and southernmost of the Script error: No such module "Lang". enclaves created in 1922; it contained five households.[17] The railway suffered severe damage during World War II and was not rebuilt. It ceased being an enclave when Belgium annexed the entirety in 1949. Hemmeres was reintegrated into West Germany on 28 August 1958, by an agreement with Belgium.
  • Template:Ill was two enclaves from 1949 to 1958. Unlike its present configuration, the German enclave in 1922 was smaller in area because the central portion (between Grenzweg and a boundary with three turning points west of the Schleebach stream) was Belgian territory.[18] Because the road connecting the two outer German portions (Highways 258/399) was German territory until 1949, the German land formed one enclave. The intersecting north–south road from Fringshaus to Konzen (now Highway B258, which has no connection to the Belgian road network[19]) was also part of the oddly shaped enclave. In 1949 Belgium annexed these roads, thus separating the enclave into two enclaves for the next nine years. In 1958 Belgium ceded the center section of territory to West Germany, in addition to returning the adjacent east–west connecting road.[20] This created one larger enclave in its present form. Highway B258 is the only portion of land that, once having been a part of the Roetgener Wald enclave, is now not within the enclave.
  • Belgium had a counter-enclave located near Fringshaus (Script error: No such module "Coordinates".) from 6 November 1922 until 23 April 1949, while Germany owned the connecting roads that were part of the Roetgener Wald enclave. These roads met at a traffic island north of Fringshaus, with the Script error: No such module "convert". island itself being a part of Belgium. This counter-enclave was extinguished in 1949 when Belgium annexed the German roads that intersected at the traffic island. In 1958, when Belgium returned the east–west road to Germany, this traffic island also became part of the Roetgener Wald enclave.

References

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  1. German exclaves in Belgium (the exact number varies according to source)
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  7. Railbike des Hautes Fagnes Template:In lang
  8. Tagesschau.de: Belgien könnte Staatsgebiet an Deutschland verlieren Template:In lang
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  11. Wallorail.be Template:Webarchive Template:In lang
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  16. (8 October 2019). Auf die Socken machen: Umschlossen in der Nordeifel – Exklaven, EifelDrei.TV (video report in German, includes interview with a member of the Call family, who lives on the exclave, which his grandparents had originally purchased)
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External links

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