Visquard
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Visquard | |
|---|---|
Street in Visquard | |
| Coordinates: 53°28′00″N 7°06′15″E / 53.46658°N 7.10405°E | |
| Country | Germany |
| State | Lower Saxony |
| District | Aurich |
| Municipality | Krummhörn |
| Area | |
| • Metro | 10.06 km2 (3.88 sq mi) |
| Elevation | 6 m (20 ft) |
| Population | |
| • Metro | 693 |
| Time zone | UTC+01:00 (CET) |
| • Summer (DST) | UTC+02:00 (CEST) |
| Postal codes | 26736 |
| Dialling codes | 04923 |
Visquard is a village in the region of East Frisia, in Lower Saxony, Germany. It is part of the municipality of Krummhörn. The village is located to the north of Pewsum and to the south of Greetsiel.
The village church dates from the 13th century. To the northwest of Visquard lay the Appingen Abbey, of which currently only a small hamlet remains.
Visquard belongs to the East Frisian municipality of Krummhörn and is located about 13 kilometers from the city of Emden. It is located on the edge of the former Bay of Sielmönken and is on district Kreisstraße 231, which branches off to the right from Landesstraße 4 between Jennelt and Pewsum. Developed farm roads lead to the villages of Manslagt and Pilsum and via the hamlet of Appingen to Greetsiel. The Greetsieler Tief, a watercourse open to canoe campers, also connects the village with the places mentioned and with Pewsum. The nearest train station is in Emden.
Visquard is a typical Rundwarften dorf ('round warft village') with a diameter of around 450 meters, where the church is located at the highest point and winding streets and paths lead all around.
Etymology
The spelling of the name Visquard has changed several times over the centuries. In the Vita Liudgeri, the biography of Münster Bishop Ludger from the first half of the 9th century, the name is Wyscwyrt. The East Frisian document book shows the spelling Fiscwert for 1380. In the two dike registers of the Greetsiel office from 1625, we read Fisquard and in the so-called Kopfschatzung ('head estimate') from 1719 we find the place name in the form in which it is still valid today.[1]
The name of the village consists of two parts, vis and quard. Arend Remmers derives vis – contrary to folk etymology – not from 'fish' (as represented in the village's coat of arms), but from Old Frisian wiske or Middle Low German wisch(e) ('meadow'). The second part of the name goes back to werth, werder, warden and originally stands for a "surface elevation in a wetland" and later also for an artificially created terp or wurt. Visquard therefore means "meadow warft".[1]

