RInkRoar
Weird World4 hours ago🕑 1 min read👁 0 views

The Belgian town with two names, two mayors, and one shared street

Baarle-Hertog and Baarle-Nassau sit in the same small area on the Dutch-Belgian border, except "sit in the same area" undersells it: the border between Belgium and the Netherlands actually runs through individual buildings, occasionally through a single house, occasionally through a single kitchen.

The borders trace back centuries to a patchwork of medieval land deals and treaties that nobody bothered to simplify once modern nation-states solidified around them, leaving over twenty separate Belgian enclaves scattered inside Dutch territory, and a few Dutch parcels inside those Belgian enclaves in turn.

Houses on the border mark their nationality with small crosses or flags on the front door showing which country the entrance falls under, since Belgian and Dutch business hours, tax rules, and even alcohol licensing historically differed enough that it genuinely mattered which side of the threshold a shop's door was legally on.

Residents describe it less as confusing and more as simply normal — you grow up knowing which parts of your own house are which country, the way anyone else knows which room is the kitchen. Two town halls, two mayors, two postal systems, one town that functions, somehow, as if this were the most ordinary arrangement in the world.

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Tom Whitfield4 hours ago

The border running through actual kitchens is such a specific detail. Did not expect geopolitics to be this granular.