Brielse Meer

Lake in South Holland province, the Netherlands
51°54′20″N 4°11′23″E / 51.90556°N 4.18972°E / 51.90556; 4.18972Basin countriesNetherlandsSettlementsDen Briel

The Brielse Meer ("Lake Den Briel") is a long, narrow lake between the Dutch estuary islands of Voorne and Rozenburg in the province of South Holland.

The lake takes its name from Den Briel, a town on its shore. It was formerly a branch of the Meuse known as Brielse Maas (Den Briel Meuse), which ran from the Botlek strait near Rotterdam into the North Sea. The first stretch, between Botlek and the former confluence with the Het Scheur branch, was alternatively known as (the last stretch of) Nieuwe Maas.

When the Brielse Maas silted up in the late nineteenth century, the Nieuwe Waterweg ship canal was constructed (1872) and Het Scheur was separated from the Brielse Maas by a dam. As a precursor to the Delta Works sea barrier constructions, the Brielse Maas was closed off at both ends in 1950, becoming the Brielse Meer.

Maasmond in 1769
The same region today, the Brielse Meer in dark blue
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Rhine
Rijn
Rhin
Meuse
MaasScheldt
Schelde
Escaut
Current distributaries
Western Scheldt
Former distributaries
Oosterschelde
Eendracht
Current estuaries
Western Scheldt
Former estuaries
Oosterschelde
Krammer
Grevelingen
Associated canals
Scheldt–Rhine Canal
Canal through Zuid-Beveland
Canal through Walcheren
Other rivers
(directly draining
into the delta)
Islands and
PeninsulasTownsOther topics


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