
The church of Zeebrugge
Zeebrugge (Dutch: Zeebrugge, French: Zeebruges, "Seabruges" in
literal translation) is a village on the coast of Belgium
and a
subdivision of Bruges
, for which
it is the modern port. Zeebrugge serves as both the international
Port of
Bruges-Zeebrugge
and a seafront resort with hotels, cafés and a
beach.
Location
Located on
the coast of the North
Sea
, the busiest sea in the world, its central location
on the Belgian coast, short distance to Great Britain
and close vicinity to densely populated
industrialized cities makes Zeebrugge a crossroads for traffic from
all directions. An expressway to Bruges connects Zeebrugge
to the European motorway system; one can also get to and from
Zeebrugge by train or
tram.
The marina is Belgium's most important fishing port and the
wholesale
fish market located there is
one of the largest in Europe.
Aside from
being a passenger port with ferries to the United Kingdom
, the harbour serves as the central port for
Europe's automotive industry and is important for the import,
handling and storage of energy products, agriculture products and
other general cargo.
History
The harbour was the site of the
Zeebrugge
Raid on
23 April 1918, when the British
Royal
Navy put the German inland naval base at Bruges out of action.
Admiral
Roger Keyes planned and led the
assault that stormed the German batteries and sank the ships in the
harbour to block the entrance to the base for the last seven months
of
World War I.
Later,
Zeebrugge's harbour was the scene of disaster when in 1987 the
MS Herald of
Free Enterprise
passenger ferry capsized killing 193
people.
Passenger ferry routes
See also
External links
References
- BBC News, 18 December 2008: Zeebrugge ferry to
restart in May