If you want to experience strange customs and gain exotic impressions, you don’t necessarily have to travel far. Holidays in East Friesland do it too. Here you can even hear a foreign language: Plattdüütsk. “Dat is heel wat besünners” (“something very special”), it proudly says on ostfriesland.travel, where there is also a small language course. The greeting “Moin”, short for “Moin Dag” (“Good day”) can be heard everywhere at any time, it means something like “Hello”. And whoever is surprised shouts “Harrijassesne!” (“Thunder weather!”).
This expression is worth learning. Ostfriesland is an area that never ceases to amaze non-residents. There were even chiefs here once. One immediately thinks of Winnetou and Sitting Bull; East Frisian chiefs were called the rulers of East Friesland’s North Sea coast in the 14th and 15th centuries.
Their family names were sonorous and strange: Tom Brok, Cirksena or Manninga. They lived in an area called Krummhörn, which sounds foreign to southern German ears. But the locals go one better and say “the Krummhörn”. And when the travel guide then talks about a “Gulfhaus in front of a Warfdorf”, you only understand the station.
The tour guide helps with translations: A gulf house is a half-timbered building, a farmhouse with a stable attached to the rear – aft, as they say here. Since hardly any grain grew in the watery area, there was no need for animals, but hardly any space for the corn (the corn, i.e. the local schnapps, could be accommodated in the front building).
The cows stewing around in the Gulfhaus extension also heated the house. The gulf is the part of the house where hay and equipment were stored.
And what about the villages on the Warft – also called Warf, Werfte, Worth, Wurt, Wurth or Wierde? A terp, the tour guide explains, is an artificially raised hill, built to protect the houses when the North Sea water threatened to wash over the marshland during storm surges.
marshland? Another term that is not known in the south. These are the meadows between the terps, which are endangered by the flood, where the salt water often stands – unlike in the Swabian Jura, where everything always seeps into the limestone soil.
After all: Even as a southern German, you have heard of lighthouses and even seen one. For example, a yellow-red one in the comedy “Otto – The Extra Friesian”. And there it really is, the Pilsum lighthouse, in the film Otto Waalkes’ residence.
If you are out and about in the Krummhörn villages, you will find even more special features. For example the Campener lighthouse, at 65 meters the highest in Germany. In contrast, Freepsum is one of the lowest points in the country at minus 2.50 metres. In the Rundwarfendorf Rysum is Germany’s oldest playable organ, it dates from 1457.
Which brings us back to the strange place names: many here end in -um, alongside Rysum and Freepsum, for example Canum, Grimersum or Uttum. Damn it sounds like Roman place names, think of Turiacum (Zurich) or Londinium (London), but the guide explains: The syllable “um” means something like “home” in East Friesland.
This article was first published in November 2021.