Rømø

Rømø (German: Röm, North Frisian: Rem) is a Danish island in the Wadden Sea. Rømø is part of Tønder Municipality. The island has 650 inhabitants as of 1 January 2011[1] and covers an area of 129 km².

Rømø
Geography
LocationWadden Sea
Coordinates55°08′N 8°31′E
Area129 km2 (50 sq mi)
Administration
Denmark
RegionSouth Denmark Region
MunicipalityTønder Municipality
Largest settlementHavneby (pop. 302)
Demographics
Population650 (2011)
Pop. density5.3/km2 (13.7/sq mi)

Rømø is the southernmost of Denmark's Wadden Sea Islands. This distinction was previously held by the small uninhabited island of Jordsand, which sank in 1999.

History

Rømø is part of Southern Jutland, a historical region of Denmark. With the Second Schleswig War (1864), the region became part of Prussia (and later the German Empire) as part of the Province of Schleswig-Holstein. Rømø and the rest of Southern Jutland was reunited with Denmark in 1920, after the Schleswig plebiscites.

Between 1970 and 2006, Rømø was part of Skærbæk Municipality (da) in South Jutland County. Since 2007 it has been part of Tønder Municipality in the Region of Southern Denmark.

Rømø
Rømø Beach

Features

It is linked to the Danish mainland by a road running across a causeway, and the island lies about 3 km from the neighbouring German island Sylt, to which it is connected by ferry. It is home to a number of small communities such as Kongsmark, Østerby, Lakolk, and Sønderstrand.

St Clement's Church

Is the main church in the island. In the 19th century, the church allowed people to buy name plates for the church benches. Here the name of H.P.P. Møller, grandfather of the founder of the famous Danish Maersk shipping company, can still be seen on one of the front benches.

Kommandørgård Museum

The museum contains artefacts from the whaling industry including a whale skeleton. The house is from 1770 and the barn and stable are from 1744. From 1784 to 1874 part of the manor was a school. "Kommandør" (commander) is an older term for a captain of a Whaler.

Ferry to Sylt

The car ferry to the neighbouring (German) island of Sylt is operated by Syltferry.[2] It runs about every two hours and takes about 35 minutes.

The beach

You can drive your car legally onto the beach. On the southern beach you can go kitebuggying - using a small vehicle pulled at high speed pulled by a large, wind-blown kite. On the first weekend on September, one of the biggest kite festivals of Europe is held on Rømø. Rømø is a popular spot for tourists attracted by the nudist beaches.

Notable people

See also

Notes

  1. "Danmarks Statistik." Retrieved 11 June 2010.
  2. Sylt Ferry website retrieved Aug 2017
  3. Maersk.com website retrieved 2 October 2017
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