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Doniawerstal

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Doniawerstal

Doniawerstal (West Frisian: Doanjewerstal) was a municipality in southwest Friesland, south of Sneek. It existed from 1816 until its dissolution in 1984.

The municipality was established on 1 October 1816 from the older administrative district (grietenij) of Langweer. The capital of Doniawerstal was the harbour village of Langweer.

During the Second World War occupation of the Netherlands, Doniawerstal saw significant resistance activity. In 1943, resistance fighters conducted a raid on the town hall in Langweer to seize ration cards and money; the municipal secretary participated in the operation by locking himself and others in the town hall vault alongside the raiders.

On 1 January 1984, during a major provincial administrative reorganisation, the municipality was dissolved. The majority of its territory was merged with Haskerland and parts of other municipalities to form the new municipality of Skarsterlân. A smaller portion of land located west of the Koevordermeer was annexed by Wymbritseradiel. Today, the former territory of Doniawerstal falls within the modern municipalities of De Fryske Marren and Súdwest-Fryslân.

The landscape of Doniawerstal consisted predominantly of low-lying grasslands interspersed with a high density of lakes, characteristic of southwest Friesland. The municipality bordered or contained portions of several major water bodies, including the Sneekermeer, Tjeukemeer, and Koevordermeer, all part of the Frisian Lakes network.

Key settlements within the municipality included the capital Langweer, as well as Sint Nicolaasga, Scharsterbrug, Doniaga, Idskenhuizen, Teroele, Oldeouwer, Ouwsterhaule, and Ouwster-Nijega.

While Langweer served as the administrative seat of Doniawerstal, the village of Sint Nicolaasga was the largest population centre and the primary residential and commercial hub of the municipality. The region was traditionally bilingual; although Dutch was the official administrative language, West Frisian was widely spoken by the local population.

Religiously, the area was notable for containing a significant Catholic enclave, particularly concentrated around Sint Nicolaasga, situated within the otherwise predominantly Protestant Frisian countryside. Following the Protestant Reformation of 1580, Catholics in Sint Nicolaasga were forced to hold religious services in a hidden church until a new church was built in 1853, and the current Sint-Nicolaaskerk was completed in 1887.

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