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Bargen, Netherlands

North Holland geography stubsPopulated places in North HollandTexel
De Waal Bargen Hoeve Bargen 2013 001
De Waal Bargen Hoeve Bargen 2013 001

Bargen is a hamlet in the northwest Netherlands, on the island and in the municipality of Texel, North Holland. It is located 4 km northeast of Den Burg.Bargen is not a statical entity, and the postal authorities have placed it under De Waal. It has no place name signs, and consists of a handful of houses.In a tax register of 1561, Bargen was mentioned as having almost very poor soil.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Bargen, Netherlands (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Bargen, Netherlands
Bargen, Texel

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Wikipedia: Bargen, NetherlandsContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 53.084166666667 ° E 4.8347222222222 °
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Address

Bargen 12A
1793 EM Texel
North Holland, Netherlands
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De Waal Bargen Hoeve Bargen 2013 001
De Waal Bargen Hoeve Bargen 2013 001
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Action of 24 October 1798
Action of 24 October 1798

The action of 24 October 1798 was a minor naval engagement of the French Revolutionary Wars, fought between a British Royal Navy frigate and two ships of the Batavian Navy. The Dutch ships were intercepted in the North Sea within hours of leaving port, 30 nautical miles (56 km) northwest of the Texel, by the British ship HMS Sirius. Both Dutch vessels were carrying large quantities of military supplies and French soldiers, reinforcements for the French and Irish forces participating in the Irish Rebellion of 1798. Although the rebellion had been defeated a month earlier, word of the British victory had not yet reached the European continent, and the Dutch force was intended to supplement a larger French squadron sent earlier in October. The French had already been defeated at the Battle of Tory Island and the Dutch suffered a similar outcome, both ships defeated in turn by the larger and better armed British vessel. Captain Richard King on Sirius discovered the Dutch ships early on 24 October, when they were separated by 2 nautical miles (3.7 km) and thus unable to mutually support one another. Targeting the smaller ship, Waakzaamheid, King was able to outrun her in an hour and force her to surrender without a fight. Turning his attention on the larger vessel, Furie, King rapidly overhauled her as well and opened a heavy fire, to which Furie was only able to ineffectively reply. Within half an hour she too had surrendered. Both ships were taken to Britain, repaired and commissioned in the Royal Navy. The defeat ended the last effort by the continental nations to land soldiers in Ireland, and signified the last action of the Irish Rebellion.