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(Redirected from Meuse (river))
 


The Meuse (/mjuːz/ mewz, /mɜːz/, US also /mɜːrz, mʌz/ mu(r)z,[2][3][4] French: [møz] ; Walloon: Moûze [muːs]) or Maas (/mɑːs/ mahss,[2][4][5] Dutch: [maːs] ; Limburgish: Maos [mɔːs]orMaas [maːs]) is a major European river, rising in France and flowing through Belgium and the Netherlands before draining into the North Sea from the Rhine–Meuse–Scheldt delta. It has a total length of 925 km (575 miles).

Meuse
The Meuse at Dinant
Basin of the Meuse
Native name
  • Moûze (Walloon)
  • Maas (Dutch)
  • Maos (Limburgish)
  • Location
    Countries
  • Belgium
  • Netherlands
  • RegionWestern Europe
    Cities
  • Sedan (France)
  • Charleville-Mézières (France)
  • Namur (Belgium)
  • Liège (Belgium)
  • Maastricht (Netherlands)
  • Venlo (Netherlands)
  • Rotterdam (Netherlands)
  • Physical characteristics
    Source 
     • locationPouilly-en-Bassigny, Le Châtelet-sur-Meuse, Haute-Marne, Grand Est, France
     • coordinates47°59′12N 5°37′00E / 47.9867°N 5.6167°E / 47.9867; 5.6167
     • elevation409 m (1,342 ft)
    MouthNorth Sea

     • location

    Hollands Diep, North Brabant/South Holland, Netherlands

     • coordinates

    51°42′54N 4°40′04E / 51.715°N 4.6678°E / 51.715; 4.6678

     • elevation

    0 m (0 ft)
    Length925 km (575 mi)
    Basin size34,548 km2 (13,339 sq mi)
    Discharge 
     • average350 m3/s (12,000 cu ft/s)
    [1]

    History

    edit

    From 1301, the upper Meuse roughly marked the western border of the Holy Roman Empire with the Kingdom of France, after Count Henry III of Bar had to receive the western part of the County of Bar (Barrois mouvant) as a French fief from the hands of King Philip IV. In 1408, a Burgundian army led by John the Fearless went to the aid of John III against the citizens of Liège, who were in open revolt. After the battle, which saw the men from Liège defeated, John ordered the drowning in the Meuse of burghers and noblemen in Liège whose loyalties he suspected.[6]

    The border remained relatively stable until the annexation of the Three Bishoprics Metz, Toul and Verdun by King Henry II in 1552 and the occupation of the Duchy of Lorraine by the forces of King Louis XIII in 1633. Its lower Belgian (Walloon) portion, part of the sillon industriel, was the first fully industrialized area in continental Europe.[7]

     
    Auguste Paul Charles Anastasi, Bank of the Meuse at Zwindrecht (Holland), c. 1857, lithograph, Department of Image Collections, National Gallery of Art Library, Washington, DC

    The Afgedamde Maas was created in the late Middle Ages, when a major flood made a connection between the Maas and the Merwede at the town of Woudrichem. From that moment on, the current Afgedamde Maas was the main branch of the lower Meuse. The former main branch eventually silted up and is today called the Oude Maasje. In the late 19th century and early 20th century the connection between the Maas and Rhine was closed off and the Maas was given a new, artificial mouth – the Bergse Maas. The resulting separation of the rivers Rhine and Maas reduced the risk of flooding and was considered to be the greatest achievement in Dutch hydraulic engineering before the completion of the Zuiderzee Works and Delta Works.[8][9] The former main branch was, after the dam at its southern inlet was completed in 1904, renamed Afgedamde Maas and no longer receives water from the Maas.

    The Meuse and its crossings were a key objective of the Battle of France, the Battle of Sedan and also for the last major German WWII counter-offensive on the Western Front, the Battle of the Bulge in December 1944 and January 1945.

    The Meuse is represented in the documentary The River People released in 2012 by Xavier Istasse.[10]

    In July 2021, the Meuse basin was one of the many regions in Europe to experience catastrophic flooding during the 2021 European floods.[11]

    Etymology

    edit

    The name Meuse is derived from the French name of the river, derived from its Latin name, Mosa, which ultimately derives from the CelticorProto-Celtic name *Mosā. This probably derives from the same root as English "maze", referring to the river's twists and turns.[12]

    The Dutch name Maas descends from Middle Dutch Mase, which comes from the presumed but unattested Old Dutch form *Masa, from Proto-Germanic *Masō. Modern Dutch and German Maas and Limburgish Maos preserve this Germanic form. Despite the similarity, the Germanic name is not derived from the Celtic name, judging from the change from earlier o into a, which is characteristic of the Germanic languages.[clarification needed]

    Geography

    edit
     
    The Meuse seen from SPOT satellite. The village in the lower right of the photo is Bogny-sur-Meuse; the village in the upper left is Revin.

    The Meuse rises in Pouilly-en-Bassigny, commune of Le Châtelet-sur-Meuse on the Langres plateau in France from where it flows northwards past Sedan (the head of navigation) and Charleville-Mézières into Belgium.[13]

    AtNamur it is joined by the Sambre. Beyond Namur the Meuse winds eastwards, skirting the Ardennes, and passes Liège before turning north. The river then forms part of the Belgian-Dutch border, except that at Maastricht the border lies further to the west. In the Netherlands it continues northwards through Venlo closely along the border to Germany, then turns towards the west, where it runs parallel to the Waal and forms part of the extensive Rhine–Meuse–Scheldt delta, together with the Scheldt to its south and the Rhine to the north. The river has been divided near Heusden into the Afgedamde Maas on the right and the Bergse Maas on the left. The Bergse Maas continues under the name of Amer, which is part of De Biesbosch. The Afgedamde Maas joins the Waal, the main stem of the Rhine at Woudrichem, and then flows under the name of Boven MerwedetoHardinxveld-Giessendam, where it splits into Nieuwe Merwede and Beneden Merwede. Near Lage Zwaluwe, the Nieuwe Merwede joins the Amer, forming the Hollands Diep, which splits into Grevelingen and Haringvliet, before finally flowing into the North Sea.

    The Meuse is crossed by railway bridges between the following stations (on the left and right banks respectively):

    There are also numerous road bridges and around 32 ferry crossings.

    The Meuse is navigable over a substantial part of its total length: In the Netherlands and Belgium, the river is part of the major inland navigation infrastructure, connecting the Rotterdam-Amsterdam-Antwerp port areas to the industrial areas upstream: 's-Hertogenbosch, Venlo, Maastricht, Liège, Namur. Between Maastricht and Maasbracht, an unnavigable section of the Meuse is bypassed by the 36 km (22.4 mi) Juliana Canal. South of Namur, further upstream, the river can only carry more modest vessels, although a barge as long as 100 m (328 ft). can still reach the French border town of Givet.

    From Givet, the river is canalized over a distance of 272 kilometres (169 mi). The canalized Meuse used to be called the『Canal de l'Est — Branche Nord』but was recently rebaptized into "Canal de la Meuse". The waterway can be used by the smallest barges that are still in use commercially almost 40 m (131 ft) long and just over 5 metres (16 ft) wide. Just upstream of the town of Commercy, the Canal de la Meuse connects with the Marne–Rhine Canal by means of a short diversion canal.[14]

    The Cretaceous sea reptile Mosasaur is named after the river Meuse. The first fossils of it were discovered outside Maastricht in 1780.

    A view of the Meuse in the French Ardennes at Laifour

    Basin area

    edit
     
    The Meuse and the Rochers de Freÿr, in front of the Castle of Freÿr south of Dinant
     
    The Meuse at Namur, capital of Belgium's Wallonia
     
    The Meuse at Liège, third river port of Europe
     
    The Meuse (Maas) at Maastricht
     
    Meuse near Gennep
     
    Meuse near Grave
     
    Meuse near Appeltern

    An international agreement was signed in 2002 in Ghent, Belgium, about the management of the river amongst France, Germany, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, and Belgium. Also participating in the agreement were the Belgian regional governments of Flanders, Wallonia, and Brussels (which is not in the basin of the Meuse but pumps running water into the Meuse).

    Most of the basin area (approximately 36,000 km2) is in Wallonia (12,000 km2), followed by France (9,000 km2), the Netherlands (8,000 km2), Germany (2,000 km2), Flanders (2,000 km2) and Luxembourg (a few km2).

    An International Commission on the Meuse has the responsibility of the implementation of the treaty.

    The costs of this Commission are met by all these countries, in proportion of their own territory in the basin of the Meuse: Netherlands 30%, Wallonia 30%, France 15%, Germany 14.5%, Flanders 5%, Brussels 4.5%, Kingdom of Belgium 0.5%, and Luxembourg 0.5%.

    The map of the basin area of Meuse was joined to the text of the treaty.[15]

    As for culture, as a major communication route the River Meuse is the origin of Mosan art, principally (Wallonia and France).

    The first landscape painted in the Renaissance was the landscape of Meuse by Joachim Patinir.[16] He was likely the uncle of Henri Blès, who is sometimes defined as a Mosan landscape painter active during the second third of the 16th century (i.e. second generation of landscape painters).[17]

    Tributaries

    edit

    The main tributaries of the Meuse are listed below in downstream-upstream order, with the town where the tributary meets the river:

    Distributaries

    edit
     
    The lower part of the Rhine-Meuse Delta

    The mean annual discharge rate of the Meuse has been relatively stable over the last few thousand years. One recent study estimates that average flow has increased by about 10% since 2000 BC.[18] The hydrological distribution of the Meuse changed during the later Middle Ages, when a major flood forced it to shift its main course northwards towards the river Merwede. From then on several stretches of the original Merwede were renamed "Maas" (i.e. Meuse) and served as the primary outflow of that river. Those branches are currently known as the Nieuwe Maas and Oude Maas.

    However during another series of severe floods the Meuse found an additional path towards the sea, resulting in the creation of the Biesbosch wetlands and Hollands Diep estuaries. Thereafter the Meuse split near Heusden into two main distributaries, one flowing north to join the Merwede and one flowing direct to the sea. The branch of the Meuse leading direct to the sea eventually silted up (and now forms the Oude Maasje stream), but in 1904 the canalised Bergse Maas was dug to take over the functions of the silted-up branch. At the same time the branch leading to the Merwede was dammed at Heusden (and has since been known as the Afgedamde Maas) so that little water from the Meuse entered the old Maas courses or the Rhine distributaries. The resulting separation of the rivers Rhine and Meuse is considered to be the greatest achievement in Dutch hydraulic engineering before the completion of the Zuiderzee Works and Delta Works.[8][19] In 1970 the Haringvlietdam has been finished. Since then the reunited Rhine and Meuse waters have reached the North Sea either at this site or, during times of lower discharges of the Rhine, at Hook of Holland.[20]

    A 2008 study[21] notes that the difference between summer and winter flow volumes has increased significantly in the last 100–200 years. It points out that the frequency of serious floods (i.e. flows > 1000% of normal) has increased markedly. They predict that winter flooding of the Meuse may become a recurring problem in the coming decades.

    Départements, provinces and towns

    edit

    The Meuse flows through the following departments of France, provinces of Belgium, provinces of the Netherlands and towns:

    Detailed route

    edit

    Main cities and tributaries will be in bold.

    Region Municipality on the left bank Municipality on the right bank Route
           

    France

    Grand Est Region

    Haute-Marne Department

    Le Châtelet-sur-Meuse Le Châtelet-sur-Meuse Source near Pouilly-en-Bassigny

      Le Châtelet-sur-Meuse

      Premier pont de la Meuse

    Dammartin-sur-Meuse Dammartin-sur-Meuse   Malroy

      Pont de Malroy

      Pont du Pâtis des Vannees

      Ruisseau de Pré Chatenay

    Val-de-Meuse Val-de-Meuse   Meuse

      Pont de Meuse (D429 Val-de-Meuse - Dombrot-le-Sec)

      Ruisseau d'Avrecourt

      Railway bridge Culmont-Chalindrey - Toul line

      Ru d'Ouette

      Ru des Fossés

      Ruisseau de Bocheret

      Provenchères-sur-Meuse

      Pont de Val-de-Meuse (D189)

      Ruisseau des Aimeguenons

      Pont de l'A31 (A31 Nancy - Dijon)

      Ruisseau de Joncourt

      Pont de D132

      Ruisseau de l'Étange

      Ruisseau du Grand Étange

    Lavilleneuve Val-de-Meuse   Ruisseau de Rangecourt

      Pont de Lavilleneuve (D132)

      Le Viau

    Val-de-Meuse   Lénizeul

      Pont de D228

    Bassoncourt Bassoncourt   Ruisseau du Soilleron

      Pont de Bassin Court sur la Meuse (D33)

    Breuvannes-en-Bassigny Breuvannes-en-Bassigny   Ruisseau des Noues

      Meuvy

      Pont de Meuvy (D220)

    Clefmont Clefmont /
    Audeloncourt Audeloncourt   Ruisseau du Grand Pré
    Levécourt Levécourt   Ruisseau de la Hourie

      Levécourt

      Pont de Levécourt (D131)

    Huilliécourt Doncourt-sur-Meuse /
    Hâcourt Hâcourt   Pont de Hâcourt
    Bourg-Sainte-Marie   Hâcourt

      Ruisseau de Piot

    Brainville-sur-Meuse   Pont de Bourg-Sainte-Marie (D119)
    Bourmont-entre-Meuse-et-Mouzon Bourmont-entre-Meuse-et-Mouzon   Bourmont
    Saint-Thiébault   Saint-Thiébault

      Pont de Saint-Thiébault (D16)

      Ruisseau d'Illoud

    Bourmont-entre-Meuse-et-Mouzon   Pont de Gonaincourt (D119)

      Gonaincourt

      Le Mordé

      Pont de Bourmont sur la Meuse (D148)

      Goncourt

    Harréville-les-Chanteurs Harréville-les-Chanteurs   Railway bridges Culmont-Chalindrey - Toul line (2x)

      Harréville-les-Chanteurs

      Pont de Harréville-les-Chanteurs (D202)

           

    France

    Grand Est Region

    Vosges Department

    Bazoilles-sur-Meuse Bazoilles-sur-Meuse   Railway bridges Culmont-Chalindrey - Toul line (2x)

      Pont de Bazoilles-sur-Meuse (D74 Langres - Neufchâteau)

      Bazoilles-sur-Meuse

    Neufchâteau Neufchâteau   Railway bridge Culmont-Chalindrey - Toul line

      Neufchâteau

      Pont de Neufchâteau (D674 Chaumont - Neufchâteau)

      Mouzon

      Railway bridge at Neufchâteau railway station

      Pont All. Charles Péguy

    Frebécourt Frebécourt   Pont de Frebécourt

      Frebécourt

      La Saônelle

    Coussey Coussey   Coussey

      Pont de Coussey (D3)

    Domrémy-la-Pucelle Domrémy-la-Pucelle   Pont de Domrémy-la-Pucelle (D164 Neufchâteau - Greux)

      Domrémy-la-Pucelle

    Greux Maxey-sur-Meuse   Vair
    Maxey-sur-Meuse   Maxey-sur-Meuse

      Pont de D19

            France

    Grand Est Region

    Meuse Department

    Brixey-aux-Chanoines Brixey-aux-Chanoines   Pont de Brixey-aux-Chanoines
    Sauvigny Sauvigny   Ruisseau de Ruppes

      Sauvigny

      Pont de Sauvigny

    Montbras /
    Sauvigny   Pont de Traveron

      Traveron

    Pagny-la-Blanche-Côte Pagny-la-Blanche-Côte   Rivière de Chêtre

      Pont de Pagny-la-Blanche-Côte (D32)

      Rivière de Chêtre

    Montbras Champougny /
    Taillancourt   La Haute Meuse
    Champougny   Champougny

      Pont de Champougny

    Maxey-sur-Vaise Maxey-sur-Vaise /
    Burey-en-Vaux Sepvigny /
    Sepvigny   Pont de Sepvigny (D145)
    Neuville-lès-Vaucouleurs Neuville-lès-Vaucouleurs /
    Vaucouleurs Chalaines   Chalaines

      Pont de Chalaines (D960 Toul - Bure)

      La Haute Meuse

    Ugny-sur-Meuse Rigny-la-Salle   Le Goulot de Meuse

      Ugny-sur-Meuse

    Saint-Germain-sur-Meuse   Pont de Ugny-sur-Meuse (D36)

      Saint-Germain-sur-Meuse

      Pont de Saint-Germain-sur-Meuse (D144A)

    Ugny-sur-Meuse Ourches-sur-Meuse   Ourches-sur-Meuse

      Pont de D144

    Pagny-sur-Meuse Pagny-sur-Meuse   Pont de Pagny-sur-Meuse (N4 Paris - Strasbourg)

      Pagny-sur-Meuse

      Pont de D36

    Troussey Troussey   Troussey

      Pont de D36C

      Marne–Rhine Canal

      Pont de Troussey (D36)

    Void-Vacon Sorcy-Saint-Martin   Ruisseau de Frasne

      Le Vidus

    Sorcy-Saint-Martin   Pont de Sorcy-Saint-Martin (D10)

      Sorcy-Saint-Martin

      Pont de D144

    Sorcy-Saint-Martin Euville   Railway bridge Paris-Est–Strasbourg-Ville line

      Issey

      Pont d'Euville (D144)

      Canal de l'Est

    Commercy Commercy   Canal de l'Est

      Pont de D36

      Ruisseau de la Noue

    Vignot Vignot   Ruisseau d'Aulnois

      Pont de Vignot (D958 Commercy - Pont-à-Mousson)

      Vignot

    Commercy Commercy   Pont de Rte de Boncourt (D8A)

      Canal de l'Est

    Lérouville Commercy   Canal de l'Est
    Boncourt-sur-Meuse Boncourt-sur-Meuse   Railway bridge Lérouville - Metz line

      Pont de Boncourt-sur-Meuse

    Pont-sur-Meuse Pont-sur-Meuse   Pont-sur-Meuse

      Pont de Pont-sur-Meuse (D12)

      Ruisseau de Chonville

    Vadonville /
    Mécrin Mécrin   Pont de Mécrin (D12A)

      Mécrin

    Sampigny Han-sur-Meuse   Rivière de Mont
    Han-sur-Meuse   Brasseitte

      Pont du Moulin Blussot (D183)

      Ally-sur-Meuse

      Han-sur-Meuse

    Saint-Mihiel   Pont de Han-sur-Meuse (D7A)
    Kœur-la-Petite Bislée   Pont de D964 (Commercy - Verdun)

      Canal de l'Est

    Kœur-la-Grande   Pont de Bislée (D171)

      Bislée

    Chauvoncourt   Canal de l'Est
    Chauvoncourt   Menonville
    Saint-Mihiel Saint-Mihiel   Canal de l'Est

      Saint-Mihiel

      Pont de Saint-Mihiel (D901 Saint-Mihiel - Rumont)

    Les Paroches Maizey   Le Rehaut

      Canal de l'Est

    Maizey   Maizy
    Dompcevrin   Pont de Maizy (D101)

      Dompcevrin

      Le Hamboquin

    Bannoncourt Rouvrois-sur-Meuse /
    Bannoncourt   La Petite Meuse

      Pont de Bannoncourt (D109)

      Bannoncourt

      Railway bridge LGV Est high speed line (Paris - Strasbourg)

      Ruisseau de Rompierre

    Lacroix-sur-Meuse   La Prêle
    Woimbey /
    Troyon Troyon   Pont de Troyon

      Troyon

    Bouquemont /
    Tilly-sur-Meuse /
    Tilly-sur-Meuse   Pont de Tilly-sur-Meuse

      Tilly-sur-Meuse

    Ambly-sur-Meuse   Ruisseau de Récourt
    Villers-sur-Meuse Villers-sur-Meuse   Villers-sur-Meuse

      Pont de Villers-sur-Meuse (D21)

    Les Monthairons Les Monthairons   Pont de Rue du Lavoir

      Les Monthairons

      Le Petit Monthairon

    Dieue-sur-Meuse Dieue-sur-Meuse   Le Clair Fossé

      Ruisseau de la Dieue

      La Petite Meuse

      Pont de Dieue-sur-Meuse (D159)

      Dieue-sur-Meuse

      Ruisseau de Billonneau

      Ruisseau de la Dieue

    Dugny-sur-Meuse Haudainville   Pont de l'Autoroute A4 (Paris - Strasbourg)

      Ruisseau du Franc Ban

    Belleray Belleray   Pont de Belleray (D301)

      Belleray

      Canal de l'Est

    Verdun Verdun   Saint Vanne

      Pont de D330

      Pont de Rued'Anthouard

      Verdun

      Saint Vanne

      Pont Fernand Legay

      Canal du Puty

      Pont Chaussée

      Pont de D603 (Verdun - Metz)

    Belleville-sur-Meuse Thierville-sur-Meuse   Railway bridge St-Hilaire-au-Temple-Hagondange line (Verdun-Metz)

      Canal de l'Est

      La Scance

      Pont de D302B

    Charny-sur-Meuse Bras-sur-Meuse   Charny-sur-Meuse

      Pont de Bras-sur-Meuse (D115)

    Vacherauville Vacherauville   Vacherauville
    Marre Champneuville   Ruisseau de la Claire
    Chattancourt /
    Champneuville   Pont de Champneuville (D214)
    Cumières-le-Mort-Homme /
    Regnéville-sur-Meuse Samogneux   Regnéville-sur-Meuse

      Pont de Samogneux

      Samogneux

    Forges-sur-Meuse Brabant-sur-Meuse   Ruisseau de Forges
    Consenvoye Consenvoye   Pont de Consenvoye

      Consenvoye

    Dannevoux Sivry-sur-Meuse   Canal de l'Est

      Ruisseau de Guénoville

      Le Butel

      Pont de Dannevoux

      Ruisseau de Brouzel

    Vilosnes-Haraumont Vilosnes-Haraumont   Canal de l'Est

      Canal de l'Est

      Vilosnes-Haraumont

      Pont de Vilosnes-Haraumont (D123B)

    Brieulles-sur-Meuse Brieulles-sur-Meuse   Ruisseau de Domfontaine

      Brieulles-sur-Meuse

      Le Wassieu

    Cléry-le-Petit Liny-devant-Dun   Le Doua

      La Tranchée

    Dun-sur-Meuse   Canal de l'Est
    Doulcon   Dun-sur-Meuse

      Pont de Dun-sur-Meuse (D998)

      Doulcon

      L'Andon

    Sassey-sur-Meuse Milly-sur-Bradon   Ruisseau de Bradon

      Canal de l'Est

    Sassey-sur-Meuse   Sassey-sur-Meuse

      Pont de Sassey-sur-Meuse (D30)

      Ruisseau des Gaules

    Mont-devant-Sassey   Ruisseau de Mont

      Ruisseau de Longvaux

    Saulmory-Villefranche Mouzay   Ruisseau de Froide Fontaine

      Le Grand Mohat

      Le Petit Mohat

    Wiseppe /
    Stenay   Canal de l'Est
    Stenay   Pont de Stenay (D947 Stenay - Montmédy)

      Stenay

      Canal de l'Est

      La Wiseppe

      Ruisseau de Cervizy

    Martincourt-sur-Meuse Martincourt-sur-Meuse   Pont de Martincourt-sur-Meuse

      Martincourt-sur-Meuse

    Luzy-Saint-Martin Inor   Ruisseau de Cesse

      Pont de Luz

      Inor

      Canal de l'Est

    Pouilly-sur-Meuse   Ruisseau du Fond de Noue
    Pouilly-sur-Meuse   Pont de Pouilly-sur-Meuse

      Pouilly-sur-Meuse

           / 

    France

    Grand Est Region

    Ardennes Department / Meuse Department

    Létanne   Pouilly-sur-Meuse     La Wame

      Létanne

           

    France

    Grand Est Region

    Ardennes Department

    Létanne Mouzon   Le Bras de Vincy

      Canal de l'Est

      Canal de l'Est

    Mouzon   Mouzon

      Pont de D19

    Autrecourt-et-Pourron   Yoncq

      Autrecourt

      Ruisseau de Brouhan

    Villers-devant-Mouzon   Villers-devant-Mouzon

      Ruisseau de la Vignette

      Ruisseau des Trois Fontaines

      Coupure de Remilly

    Remilly-Aillicourt Douzy /
    Remilly-Aillicourt   Petit Remilly

      Pont de Remilly-Aillicourt (D4)

      Remilly

    Bazeilles   Chiers

      Aillicourt

      Pont de Bazeilles (D129)

      Coupure de Remilly

    Noyers-Pont-Maugis   Ruisseau de Thélonne

      Railway bridge Mohon-Thionville line (Sedan - Thionville)

      Pont-Maugis

    Balan   Ruisseau de Batelotte
    Wadelincourt   Wadelincourt
    Sedan   Pont de Sedan (N43 Sedan - Charleville-Mézières)
    Sedan   Pont de l'Avenue Philippoteaux (D8043A)

      Canal de l'Est   Pont du Boulevard Fabert

      Sedan

      Pont de Meuse

      Passerelle Saint-Vincent de Paul

      Canal de l'Est

      Pont-Neuf de Sedan

    Glaire Floing   Ruz de Glaire

      Floing

      Glaire

      Tour à Glaire (Glaire)

      Ruisseau de Floing

      Igles (Glaire)

    Saint-Menges   Ruisseau du Bas Caillou

      Saint-Menges

    Donchery   Ruisseau de la Falizette

      Villette (Glaire)

      Pont de Glaire (A34 Sedan - Charleville-Mézières)

      Railway bridge Mohon-Thionville line (Charleville-Mézières - Sedan)

    Sedan   Frénois (Sedan)
    Donchery   Pont de Donchery (D24)

      Donchery

    Villers-sur-Bar   Vrigne
    Vrigne-Meuse   Vrigne-Meuse

      Bar

    Dom-le-Mesnil   Canal des Ardennes
    Nouvion-sur-Meuse   Nouvion-sur-Meuse

      Pont de Nouvion-sur-Meuse (D33)

    Flize   Ruisseau des Trois Fontaines

      Flize

      Ruisseau de Boutancourt

    Chalandry-Elaire   Elaire (Chalandry-Elaire)
    Les Ayvelles Lumes   Lumes
    Lumes   Railway bridge Mohon-Thionville line (Charleville-Mézières - Sedan)
    Villers-Semeuse   Pont de Lumes (A34 Sedan - Charleville-Mézières)

      Ruisseau de la Truie

      Dérivation de Romery

    Saint-Laurent   Dérivation de Romery
    Charleville-Mézières   Le Theux (Charleville-Mézières)
    Charleville-Mézières   Vence

      Railway bridge Soissons - Givet line (Charleville-Mézières - Reims)

      Mohon (Charleville-Mézières)

      Canal de l'Est

      Pont de la Victoire (D8043A)

      Mézières (Charleville-Mézières)

      Pont de Pierre

      Saint-Julien (Charleville-Mézières)

    Prix-lès-Mézières   Pont de Manchester (N43 Charleville-Mézières - Sedan)

      Ruisseau du Marbay

      Manchester (Charleville-Mézières)

      Prix-lès-Mézières

      Ruisseau des Rejets

      Ruisseau de Praëlle

    Warcq   Warcq

      Pont de Warcq (D16)

      Sormonne

    Charleville-Mézières   Pont de N43 (Charleville-Mézières - Sedan)

      Passerelle Bayard

      Pont d'Arches (D8043A)

      Canal de l'Est

      Railway bridge Soissons - Givet line (Charleville-Mézières - Reims)

      Railway bridge Soissons - Givet line (Charleville-Mézières - Givet)

      Canal de l'Est

      Charleville-Mézières

      Pont de Mocy (D58)

      Montcy-Saint-Pierre (Charleville-Mézières)

      Passerelle du Mont Olympe

    Montcy-Notre-Dame   Ruisseau de la Fontaine du Prince

      Ruisseau de Soiru

      Montcy-Notre-Dame

      Pont de Montcy-Notre-Dame (D58A)

      Canal de l'Est

    Aiglemont /
    Nouzonville /
    Nouzonville   Nouzonville

      La Goutelle

      Ruisseau du Pré Allard

      Pont de Nouzonville (D13)

    Joigny-sur-Meuse Joigny-sur-Meuse   Pont de Joigny-sur-Meuse (D1A)

      Joigny-sur-Meuse

    Bogny-sur-Meuse Bogny-sur-Meuse   Braux

      Pont Jean-Rogissart (D1)

      Levrézy

      Bogny-sur-Meuse

      Pont Rue Jourde (D1C)

      Château Regnault

    Monthermé   Railway bridge Soissons - Givet line (Charleville-Mézières - Givet)
    Monthermé   Semois

      Monthermé

      Pont de Monthermé (D989)

    Deville   Deville

      Ruisseau de Mairupt

    Laifour   Ruisseau de la Lambrèque
    Revin   Ruisseau de la Grande Commune

      Ruisseau de la Petite Commune

      Laifour

      Railway bridge Soissons - Givet line (Charleville-Mézières - Givet)

      Pont de Laifour (D1)

    Les Mazures /
    Anchamps   Railway bridge Soissons - Givet line (Charleville-Mézières - Givet)

      Anchamps   Pont d'Anchamps (D1B)

      Ru de la Pille

      Ruisseau des Meurtriers

    Revin   Orzy

      Pont d'Orzy

      Railway bridge Soissons - Givet line (Charleville-Mézières - Givet)

      Revin

      Pont de la Bouverie (D988 Charleville-Mézières - Givet)

      Sartnizon

    Rocroi   Pont de Saint-Nicolas

      Saint-Nicolas (Rocroi)

      Faux

      Ruisseau de Falières

    Revin   Pont de Fumay (D988 Charleville-Mézières - Givet)

      Ruisseau des Cochons

    Fumay   Ruisseau de Come
    Fumay   Ruisseau des Manises

      Railway bridge Soissons - Givet line (Charleville-Mézières - Givet)

      Ruisseau de la Folie

    Haybes   Fumay

      Pont de Fumay (D7)

      Ri d'Alyse

    Haybes   Pont de la Guerre (D7B)

      Haybes

      Ruisseau de Mohron

    Fépin   Ruisseau d'Hargnies

      Fépin

    Montigny-sur-Meuse Vireux-Wallerand   Risdoux

      Fond de la Mènerie

      Montigny-sur-Meuse

    Vireux-Molhain   Vireux-Molhain

      Vireux-Wallerand

      Pont de Vireux (D989)

    Hierges   Viroin
    Aubrives Aubrives   Aubrives
    Ham-sur-Meuse   Ham-sur-Meuse

      Pont de Ham (D46DB)

    Chooz   Chooz Nuclear Power Plant
    Chooz   Pont de Chemin de Mission

      Chooz

      Pont de Chooz

    Rancennes   Le Fond des Vaux

      Les Trois Fontaines (Chooz)

    Givet /
    Givet   Ruisseau de Rancennes

      Givet

      Pont des Américains (D949)

      Houille

       /   /   / 

    France / Belgium

    Grand Est Region / Wallonia Region

    Ardennes Department / Namur Province

    Givet   Hastière     Ruisseau de Mon Idée

      Heer (Hastière)

           

    Belgium

    Wallonia Region

    Namur Province

    Hastière Hastière   Heer-Agimont

      Pont de N909

      Hermeton-sur-Meuse

      Hermeton

      Ruisseau de Féron

      Hastière-Lavaux

      Hastière-par-delà

      Pont de Hastière-Lavaux (N915)

      Fond des Vaux

      Ruisseau de Bonsoy

      Ruisseau de la Roule

      Waulsort

      Ruisseau du Chestia

    Dinant   Freÿr (Hastière)

      Moniat (Hastière)

    Dinant   Anseremme

      Noyon Pré

      Railway bridge line 166 Libramont - Bertrix - Dinant

      Lesse

      Viaduc Charlemagne (N97 Ciney - Philippeville)

      Neffe

      Saint-Paul

      Dinant

      Pont Charles de Gaulle (N936)

      Leffe

      Ruisseau de Leffe

      Bouvignes-sur-Meuse

    Yvoir /
    Anhée   Houx (Yvoir)

      Railway bridge line 154 Dinant - Namur

      Anhée

      Molignée

      Pont d'Anhée (N92 Namur - Dinant)

      Yvoir

      BocqBocq

      Hun (Anhée)

      Rouillon (Anhée)

      Pont de Rouillon (N947a)

    Profondeville   Godinne (Yvoir)

      Rivière (Profondeville)

    Profondeville   Burnot

      Burnot

      Pont de Lustin (N947)

      Profondeville

      Tailfer

      Ruisseau de Tailfer

    Namur   Boreuville (Namur)
    Namur   Pont de Wépion

      Grand Ry

      Dave

      Ruisseau de Dave

      Wépion

      Marlagne

      La Plante

      Pont de Jambes

      Jambes

      Passerelle l'Enjambée

      Sambre

      Namur

      Pont des Ardennes (N90 Namur - Liège)

      Houyoux

      Railway bridge 'Pont de Luxembourg' line 154 Dinant - Namur

      Bouge

      Pont des Grands Malades (N905)

      Viaduc du Beez (E411 Namur - Arlon)

      Beez

      Lives-sur-Meuse

      Brumagne

      Gelbresse

      Marche-les-Dames

    Andenne Andenne   Samson

      Samson

      Pont de Namêche (N942)

      Namêche

      Sclayn

      Pont de N968

      Ruisseau de la Loysse

      Seilles

      Andenne

      Pont d'Andenne (N921)

      Andenelle

           

    Belgium

    Wallonia Region

    Liège Province

    Wanze Huy   Gisves (Huy)

      Java (Wanze)

      Ben (Huy)

      Bas-Oha (Wanze)

      Solière

      Pont Père Pire (N643)

      Wanze

      Mehaigne

    Huy   Anhin

      Railway bridge

      Pont Roi Baudouin (N64 Tienen - Huy)

      Huy

      Hoyoux

      Pont de l'Europe

    Amay   Tihange Nuclear Power Station

      Tihange (Huy)

      Pont d'Ampsin (N684)

      Ampsin (Amay)

      Neuville-sous-Huy (Huy)

    Amay   Pont d'Ombret (N696)

      Amay

      Ombret-Rawsa

    Engis   Ruisseau d'Oxhe

      Flône (Amay)

    Saint-Georges-sur-Meuse   Pont de Hermalle

      Hermalle-sous-Huy (Engis)

      Mallieue (Saint-Georges-sur-Meuse)

    Engis   Engis

      Pont d'Engis (N639)

    Flémalle Flémalle   Ramioul

      Ramet

      Chokier

      Ivoz

      Pont barrage d'Ivoz-Ramet (N677)

      Flémalle

    Seraing   Ruisseau de Ville en Cour

      Railway bridge line 125A (Liers - Liège - Flémalle-Haute)

      Val

    Seraing   Troque

      Jemeppe-sur-Meuse

      Seraing

      Pont de Seraing (A604 highway Liège Airport - Seraing)

    Saint-Nicolas   Tilleur (Saint-Nicolas)
    Liège   Ougrée (Seraing)

      Sclessin (Liège)

      Pont d'Ougrée (N63 Liège - Marche-en-Famenne)

      Railway bridge cargo line

    Liège   Kinkempois

      Pont de Liège (E25 highway Liège - Luxembourg City  )

      Railway bridge high speed line 3 (Liège - Aachen  )

      Angleur

      Canal de l'Ourthe

      Pont de Fragnée

      Ourthe

      Passerelle la Belle Liègeoise

      Pont du Roi Albert 1er (N30)

      Pont Kennedy

      Passerelle Saucy

      Liège

      Pont des Arches (N3 LiègeGermany  )

      Pont Maghin

      Pont Atlas

      Bressoux

      Jupille-sur-Meuse

      Albert Canal

      Pont - Barrage de Monsin

    Monsin Island

      Canal de Monsin

    Herstal   Herstal

      Wandre (Liège)

      Pont de Wandre (N667)

      Pont d'Autorute E40 (Liège - Aachen  )

    Oupeye Visé   Cheratte (Visé)

      Argenteau (Visé)

      Julienne

      Hermalle-sous-Argenteau (Oupeye)

      Pont de Hermalle-sous-Argenteau

      Richelle (Visé)

      Pont Trilogiport

    Visé   Visé

      Pont de Visé (N618)

      Canal de Haccourt - Visé

      Railway bridge 'Pont des Allemands'

      Pont et barrage de Lixhe (N602)

         /   / 

    Belgium

    Wallonia Region / Flanders Region

    Liège Province / Limburg Province

    Visé   Voeren     Lixhe (Visé)

      Berwinne

      Nivelle (Visé)

       /   /    Belgium / Netherlands

    Wallonia Region / Limburg Province

    Liège Province  

    Visé   Eijsden-Margraten     Voer

      Eijsden (Eijsden-Margraten)

      Lanaye (Visé)

      Bike ferry service Lanaye - Eijsden

      Canal de Lanaye

      Petit Lanaye (Visé)

         

    Netherlands

    Limburg Province

    Maastricht Maastricht   Maastricht

      John F. Kennedybrug N278 (Maastricht - Aachen  )

      JekerJeker

      Pedestrial bridge 'Hoge Brug'

      Pedestrial bridge 'Sint-Servaasbrug'

      Wilhelminabrug

      Railway bridge Maastricht

      Noorderbrug

      Zuid-Willemsvaart

      Juliana Canal

      Borgharen

       /   /    Belgium / Netherlands

    Flanders Region / Limburg Province

    Limburg  

    Lanaken   Maastricht     Smeermaas (Lanaken)

      Itteren (Maastricht)

      Neerharen (Lanaken)

    Maasmechelen   Meerssen     Geul

      Uikhoven (Maasmechelen)

      Bike ferry service Uikhoven - Geulle aan de Maas

      Geulle aan de Maas (Meerssen)

      Oude Broekgraaf

    Stein     Kotem

      Elsloo

      Scharbergbrug (E314   / A76   Genk   - Heerlen   - Aachen  )

      Stein

      Meers

      Maasmechelen

      Kirkbeek

      Maasband

      Leut (Maasmechelen)

     Ur

      Urmond (Stein)

      Berg aan de Maas (Stein)

      Car ferry service Meeswijk - Berg aan de Maas

    Dilsen-Stokkem   Sittard-Geleen     Obbicht (Sittard-Geleen)

      Boyen (Dilsen-Stokkem)

      Vrietselbeek

      Bike ferry service Rotem - Grevenbicht

      Grevenbicht (Sittard-Geleen)

      Kogbeek

      Kingbeek

    Echt-Susteren     Illikhoven (Sittard-Geleen)

      Visserweert (Sittard-Geleen)

    Maaseik     Heppeneert (Maaseik)

      Kokkelert (Sittard-Geleen)

      Zanderbeek

      Maaseik

      Pater Sangersbrug (N761   / N296   Maaseik   - Susteren  )

    Maasgouw     Ohé en Laak (Maasgouw)

      Bosbeek

      Aldeneik (Maaseik)

    Kinrooi     Ophoven (Kinrooi)

      Bike ferry service Ophoven - Ohé en Laak

      Albeek

      Stevensweert (Maasgouw)

         

    Netherlands

    Limburg Province

    Maasgouw Maasgouw   Maasbracht

      Wessem

      Bike ferry service Thorn - Wessem

      Bike ferry service Maasbracht - Wessem

      Maasbrug bij Wessem (A2 Eindhoven - Maastricht)

      Juliana Canal

      Wessem-Nederweert Canal

      Linne-Buggenum Canal

    Roermond   Vlootbeek

      Linne (Maasgouw)

    Roermond   Merum

      Bike ferry service Ool - Oolderhuuske

      Ool

      Herten

      Roermond

      Rur

      Louis Raemaekersbrug (N280 Roermond - Weert)

      Maasnielderbeek

      Railway bridge Buggenum (Iron Rhine Weert - Roermond)

    Leudal   Linne-Buggenum Canal

      Buggenum (Leudal)

      Neerbeek

      Swalm

    Beesel   Bike ferry service Neer - Rijkel

      Rijkel (Beesel)

      Neer (Leudal)

    Peel en Maas   Beesel

      Kessel-Eik (Peel en Maas)

      Huilbeek   Kessel (Peel en Maas)

      Car ferry service Kessel - Beesel

      Tasbeek

      Reuver (Beesel)

      Scheikensbeek

    Venlo   Oijen (Peel en Maas)

      Belfeld (Venlo)

      Aalsbeek

      Steyl (Venlo)

      Car ferry service Baarlo - Steyl

    Venlo   Engerbeek

      Tegelen

      Springbeek

      Zuiderbrug (A73 Nijmegen - Venlo)

      Wijlderbeek

      Blerick

      Stadsbrug Venlo (N556)

      Railway bridge Venlo (Venlo–Eindhoven and Nijmegen–Venlo lines)

      Venlo

      Rijnbeek

      Stepkensbeek

      Noorderbrug (A67 Venlo - Duisburg  )

    Horst aan de Maas   Stopbeek

      Baarsdonk

      Everlose Beek

      Vorstermolenbeek

      Grubbenvorst (Horst aan de Maas)

      Velden (Venlo)

      Car ferry service Grubbenvorst - Velden

      Latbeek

      Hasselt (Venlo)

      Salderbeek

      Houthuizen (Horst aan de Maas)

      Molenbeek van Lotum

      Lomm (Venlo)

      Wielder (Horst aan de Maas)

      Tassbeek

      Lottum (Horst aan de Maas)

      Car ferry service Lottum - Lomm

      Pedestrian ferry service Lottum - Arcen

      Arcen (Venlo)

      Aarsbeek

      Broekhuizen (Horst aan de Maas)

      Car ferry service Broekhuizen - Arcen

      Molenbeek

      Broekhuizenvorst (Horst aan de Maas)

      Rode Beek

    Bergen   Geldernsch-Nierkanaal
    Venray   Wellerlooi (Bergen)

      Blitterswijck (Venray)

      Bike ferry service Blitterswijck - Wellerlooi

      Sohr

      Koninginnebrug N270 (Venray - Eindhoven)

      Well (Bergen)

      Wanssum (Venray)

      Grote Molenbeek

      Oostrumsche Beek

      Geijsteren (Venray)

         / 

    Netherlands

    Limburg Province / North Brabant province

    Land van Cuijk   Bergen     Maashees

      Ayensebeek

      Aijen (Bergen)

      Vierlingsbeek (Land van Cuijk)

      Car ferry service Vierlingsbeek - Bergen

      Bergen

      Molenbeek

      Heukelomsebeek

      Heukelom (Bergen)

      Eckeltse Beek

      Rekgraaf

      Afferden (Bergen)

      Car ferry service Sambeek - Afferden

      Sint-Jansbeek

      Sambeek (Land van Cuijk)

    Gennep     Boxmeer (Land van Cuijk)

      Maasbrug van Boxmeer (A77 Boxmeer - Cologne  )

      Heijen (Gennep)

      Gennep

      Maasbrug van Gennep (N264 Gennep - Veghel)

      Niers

      Oeffeltsche Raam

      Milsbeek (Gennep)

      Tielebeek

    Mook en Middelaar     Sint-Agatha (Land van Cuijk)

      Middelaar (Mook en Middelaar)

      Virdsche Graaf

      Cuijk (Land van Cuijk)

      Car ferry service Cuijk - Middelaar

      Mooks Kanaal

      Mook (Mook en Middelaar)

      Katwijk (Land van Cuijk)

      Railway bridge Mook (Nijmegen–Venlo line)

      Molenhoek (Mook en Middelaar)

         / 

    Netherlands

    Gelderland / North Brabant province

    Heumen     Maas–Waal Canal

      Heumen

      Maasbrug van Heumen (A73 Nijmegen - Venlo)

      Overasselt (Heumen)

      Tochtsloot

      Grave (Land van Cuijk)

      John S. Thompsonbrug (N324 Grave - Nijmegen)

      Nederasselt (Heumen)

      Raam

    Wijchen     Balgoij (Wijchen)
    Oss     Keent (Oss)

      Neerloon (Oss)

      Niftrik (Wijchen)

      Maasbrug van Ravenstein (A50 Nijmegen - Eindhoven)

      Ravenstein (Oss)

      Bike ferry service Ravenstein - Niftrik

      Railway bridge 'Edithbrug' (Tilburg-Nijmegen line)

      Neerlangel (Oss)

      Demen (Oss)

      Batenburg (Wijchen)

      Bike ferry service Demen - Batenburg

      Dieden (Oss)

    West Maas en Waal     Nieuwe Wetering

      Appeltern (West Maas en Waal)

      De Vliet

      Car ferry service Appeltern - Megen

      Megen (Oss)

      Car ferry service Maasbommel - Megen-West

      Maasbommel (West Maas en Waal)

      Burgemeester Delenkanaal

      Boveneind (Oss)

      Berghuizen (West Maas en Waal)

      Oijen (Oss)

      Car ferry service Oijen - Nieuwe Schans

      Greffeling (West Maas en Waal)

      Alphen (West Maas en Waal)

      Lithoijen (Oss)

      Lith (Oss)

      Moordhuizen (West Maas en Waal)

      Car ferry service Lith - Moordhuizen

    Maasdriel     Voorne (Maasdriel)

      Heerewaarden (Maasdriel)

      Bike ferry service Heerewaarden - Lithse Ham

      Maren-Kessel (Oss)

      Sint Andries canal

      Car ferry service Alem - Maren-Kessel

      't Wild (Oss)

      Kerkdriel (Maasdriel)

      Hertogswetering

      Hoefgraaf

    's-Hertogenbosch     Gewande ('s-Hertogenbosch)

      Hoenzadriel (Maasdriel)

      Máxima Canal

      Empel ('s-Hertogenbosch)

      Maasbrug van Empel (A2 's-Hertogenbosch - Utrecht)

      's-Hertogenbosch

      Railway bridge 'Hedelse spoorbrug' (Utrecht–Boxtel line)

      Prinses Irenebrigadebrug

      Hedel (Maasdriel)

      Oude Dieze

      Dieze

      Bokhoven ('s-Hertogenbosch)

      Ammerzoden (Maasdriel)

    Heusden     Well (Maasdriel)

      Zooislagen Buitendijkse Loop

    Zaltbommel     Car ferry service Bern - Herpt

      Bern (Zaltbommel)

      Heusden

      Heusden Canal

         

    Netherlands

    North Brabant province

    Heusden Altena   Maasbrug van Heusden (N267 Heusden - Giessen)

      Heesbeen (Heusden)

      Genderen (Altena)

      Doeveren (Heusden)

    Waalwijk   Afwateringskanaal 's-Hertogenbosch - Drongelen

      Drongelen (Altena)

      Waalwijk

      Car ferry service Drongelen - Waalwijk

      Car ferry service Dussen - Capelle

      Dussen (Altena)

    Geertruidenberg   Peerenboom (Altena)

      Keizersveerbrug (A27 Breda - Utrecht)

      Raamsdonksveer (Geertruidenberg)

      Geertruidenberg

      Nieuwe Merwede

    Mouth into the North Sea

    Mention in patriotic songs

    edit

    The Meuse (Maas) is mentioned in the first stanza of Germany's old national anthem, the Deutschlandlied. However, since its re-adoption as national anthem in 1952, only the third stanza of the Deutschlandlied has been sung as the German national anthem, the first and second stanzas being omitted. This was confirmed after German reunification in 1991 when only the third stanza was defined as the official anthem. The lyrics written in 1841 describe a then–disunited Germany with the river as its western boundary, where King William I of the Netherlands had joined the German Confederation with his Duchy of Limburg in 1839. Though the duchy's territory officially became an integral part of the Netherlands by the 1867 Treaty of London, the text passage remained unchanged when the Deutschlandlied was declared the national anthem of the Weimar Republic in 1922.

    The name of the rivers also forms part of the title of "Le Régiment de Sambre et Meuse", written after the French defeat in the Franco-Prussian War of 1870, and a popular patriotic song for the rest of the 19th century and into the 20th.

    See also

    edit

    References

    edit
    1. ^ Marcel de Wit, Robert Leander, Adri Buishand: Extreme discharges in the Meuse basin Archived 2014-01-06 at the Wayback Machine, p. 2
      (The frequently mentioned figure of 250 m3/s refers to the Borgharen gauge near the frontier between Belgium and the Netherlands representing two thirds of the basin.)
  • ^ a b "Meuse". The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language (5th ed.). HarperCollins. Retrieved April 4, 2019.
  • ^ "Meuse" (US) and "Meuse". Lexico UK English Dictionary. Oxford University Press. Archived from the original on 2020-02-09.
  • ^ a b "Meuse". Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary. Retrieved April 4, 2019.
  • ^ "Maas". Lexico US English Dictionary. Oxford University Press. Archived from the original on 2020-02-26.
  • ^ Loo, Bart van (2021). "Let Them All Die". The Burgundians: A Vanished Empire: A History of 1111 Years and One Day. London. ISBN 978-1-78954-343-8. OCLC 1264400332. Archived from the original on 2024-05-13. Retrieved 2022-09-16.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • ^ "Wallonie : une région en Europe" (in French). Ministère de la Région wallonne. Archived from the original on May 31, 2013. Retrieved September 29, 2007.
  • ^ a b Van der Aalst & De Jongh (2004). Honderd Jaar Bergse Maas (in Dutch). Pictures Publishing. ISBN 90-73187-50-8.
  • ^ Wols, Rien (2011). "De Uitvoering van de Maasmondingswerken". Brabants Historisch Informatie Centrum (in Dutch). Archived from the original on 2014-11-03. Retrieved 2014-10-26.
  • ^ "Presentation of The River People on Eurochannel". Archived from the original on 2014-10-29. Retrieved 2014-10-28.
  • ^ Barneveld, Hermjan; Hoitink, A. J. F.; Frings, R. M. (2022). "Massive morphological changes during the 2021 summer flood in the River Meuse" (PDF). hkv.nl. Archived (PDF) from the original on 21 December 2022. Retrieved 21 December 2022.
  • ^ Ferguson, Robert (1862). The River-Names of Europe. London: Williams & Norgate. p. 142. OCLC 1811056.
  • ^ (in French) Sandre. "Fiche cours d'eau - La Meuse (B---0000)".
  • ^ NoorderSoft Waterways database
  • ^ "Accord international sur la Meuse". Archived from the original on 2022-05-23. Retrieved 2010-01-30.
  • ^ French: Les rochers par lesquels l'art gothique suggère conventionnellement un site sauvage et désertique, sont présents. Comme d'aucuns l'ont remarqué, ces pics rocheux qui vont devenir chez Patinier, indissociables de l'évocation d'un paysage ressemblent à ceux qu'il a pu voir dans la région dinantaise (...) Mais il va de soi que les paysages représentés ne sont jamais dans leur ensemble la transposition de sites existants. L'espace tel que le conçoit Patinier est d'un autre ordre que celui qui s'offre au spectateur dans la réalité. in 'L'essor du paysage' in Jacques Stiennon, Jean-Patrick Duchesne, Yves Randaxhe, Cinq siècles de peinture en Wallonie, Les éditeurs d'art associés, Bruxelles, 1988, p. 67-72. The landscape of the Mosan valley is the inspiration of Patinier but the result of this inspiration was not a painting of this landscape.
  • ^ Fraiture, Pascale (2002). "Contribution of scientific methods to the understanding of the work of the 16th century painter, Henri Bles". Dendrochronologia. 20 (3): 285–299. doi:10.1078/1125-7865-00022.
  • ^ Ward PJ, H Renssen, JCJH Aerts, RT van Balen & J Vandenberghe (2008), "Strong increases in flood frequency and discharge of the River Meuse over the Late Holocene: impacts of long-term anthropogenic land use change and climate variability". Hydrol. Earth Syst. Sci. 12: 159-175. http://www.hydrol-earth-syst-sci.net/12/159/2008/hess-12-159-2008.pdf Archived 2020-02-17 at the Wayback Machine [Ward et al., 2008]
  • ^ Wols, Rien (2011). "De Uitvoering van de Maasmondingswerken". Brabants Historisch Informatie Centrum (in Dutch). Archived from the original on 2014-11-03. Retrieved 2014-10-26.
  • ^ Rijkswaterstaat: Water Management in the Netherlands, 2011
  • ^ Ward et al., 2008
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