Statue of Valuas and Guntrud in Venlo — a legendary founding couple not from ancient history, but from an 18th-century reinvention that turned procession giants into symbols of the city’s identity.
Walk through Venlo and you may come across a striking pair: a proud warrior and a composed woman, often presented as the city’s founding couple. Their names are Valuas and Guntrud. They look as if they belong to the distant world of tribal Europe and Roman frontiers. But their story tells us less about ancient history—and more about how communities shape their own past.
A Founding on the River
According to the legend, Valuas was a leader of the Germanic Bructeri. Defeated somewhere east of the Rhine, he fled with his followers around 96 AD, moving west until they reached the river Maas. At a bend in the river, they decided to settle.
Guntrud, presented as his wife, stands beside him in the story as they choose this place—a moment that turns retreat into a beginning. In this version, Venlo is not the result of gradual growth, but of a single, decisive act.
It is a story that fits neatly into the larger narrative of early Europe, at the shifting edge of the Roman world.
A Legend from the 1700s
But the story itself is much younger than it claims. It was only written down in the mid-18th century (around 1754).
That timing matters. Across the Low Countries, religious processions once featured large figures—giants representing biblical characters. In Venlo, one of these was the giant Goliath and his companion.
As attitudes changed under the influence of the Counter-Reformation, such figures became controversial and were sometimes restricted. Communities had to adapt if they wanted their traditions to survive.
In Venlo, those figures were gradually reinterpreted. Goliath was transformed into Valuas, a heroic founder. His companion became Guntrud—though her name was introduced only later, reportedly through a local initiative or contest. What had once been part of a religious spectacle became a story about origins.
From Giants to Citizens
Over time, the transformation deepened. The figures moved from processions into storytelling, and from storytelling into the physical landscape of the city. Today, statues of Valuas and Guntrud stand in Venlo, and their names echo in local traditions.
What began as an adaptation became identity.
This is what makes the story so interesting. It shows how traditions are not simply handed down unchanged. They are reshaped—sometimes deliberately—to fit new circumstances. In doing so, they gain a different kind of authenticity: not historical, but cultural.
A City That Chose Its Past
Valuas and Guntrud may not be historical figures, but they are not meaningless inventions either. They are the result of a conscious choice: to preserve a tradition by giving it a new form.
In that sense, the story of Venlo is not about a tribal leader fleeing across Europe. It is about a community, centuries later, deciding what it wanted to remember—and how.
And that may be the more enduring kind of history.
