Lelystad - the capital of the province of Flevoland
Lelystad is a municipality and a city in the centre of the Netherlands, and it is the capital of the province of Flevoland.
The city, built on reclaimed land, was founded in 1967 and was named after Cornelis Lely, who engineered the Afsluitdijk, making the reclaiming possible. Lelystad is approximately 5 meters (16 feet) below sealevel.
Lelystad is built on the seabottom of the former Zuiderzee. About 6500 years ago this wetland was above high tide level and inhabited; the Netherlands has steadily subsided since. Nearby Lelystad at Swifterbant the oldest human skeletons in Western Europe were discovered. Due to rising water levels and storms the peatlands were washed away, and the Lacus Flevo (Roman times) grew to be the Almere (middle ages) and became the Zuiderzee, whose name means "Southern Sea". The Zuiderzee was the main transport-route from Amsterdam to the North Sea and the Hanse-cities. Thanks to the many shipwrecks in Flevoland, Lelystad now houses the National Centre for Maritime History, with a museum and the shipyard that has built the Batavia.
After World War II the Zuiderzee Works continued by making the polder of Eastern Flevoland. In 1950 work commenced on several construction-islands in the middle of the IJsselmeer. Lelystad-Haven was the largest island, and its wooden barracks housed a community of dike-builders. In 1955 they reached the mainland, which made it possible to drive to Lelystad by car.
One of the three pumping stations which drained the polder in June 1957 was the diesel powered Wortman in Lelystad-Haven. Until 1967 the only inhabitants of Lelystad were technical engineers and workmen and superintendents, living on the former construction-island.
