The area of Aartswoud has been inhabited since the late Neolithic age, and a settlement there (whose remains are wide and long) is an important source for the
Beaker culture. Macrobotanical remains from the site are of
Einkorn wheat,
Emmer,
Common wheat,
Naked and Hulled barley, and
Flax. The name is a possible reference to the wooded area (
woud) owned by the Edaert family, whose name is Frisian. This later became
Aertswoud (1450) with variant spellings for the initial vowel sounds, and finally Aartswoud. An edict from 1404 mandates that the dike at Aartswoud should always be able to be breached in case of an emergency; this happened in 1573, during the
Siege of Alkmaar, when polders in the area of the Spanish encampment were flooded. The village was the location of some excitement in 1799 when, during the
Anglo-Russian invasion of Holland, Batavian commander
Herman Willem Daendels charged at a troop of British soldiers led by Lieutenant-Colonel Stewart, and captured twenty men and thirteen horses. According to a source from 1844, the area including Hoogwoud and Aartswoud was owned by Edward or Evert, a son of
William IV, Duke of Bavaria, who took the surname Hoogwoud for his family. In 1607 it was acquired by , of the
Egmond family. In the middle of the 18th century, it was owned by , and by 1844 by Mattheus Johannes Worbert,
count of Wassenaar.
Church and tower A church in Aartswoud is attested probably in 1395 under the name
Nederswout, and certainly for the years 1460–1550, according to the archives of the , the administrative center belonging to
St. Martin's Cathedral, Utrecht. The inscription "1515" was supposedly carved on one of the church's beams. Before its demolition the church was surveyed and sketched; the drawings are archived at the
Rijksdienst voor het Cultureel Erfgoed. The present-day Dutch Reformed church dates from 1884 and was designed by C. Deutekom and C. Leeuw. Its square brick tower, in three sections surmounted by a small stone dome, is medieval and dates from the first half of the 16th century. An inscribed stone above the entrance dates repair work to 1635. The church bell was cast by Henricus Nieman in the 1620s. The tower's neo-Gothic detail stems from 1895, when the structure was covered on the west and south sides in new brick and stone and the lowest section of the north side plastered over. The current
hall church replaces the late Gothic church, and has
eclectic details and cast-iron window frames. It has a
box pew dating from 1641, richly decorated with "beautiful examples of 17th-c wood carvings", which belonged to the Soete van Laecken family, according to a heraldic image. The church organ was built in 1885 by German organ builder
Richard Paul Ibach. The large
rectory was built in 1872. Local folklore holds that the church tower also functioned as a
lighthouse, since the coast at Aartswoud was dangerous, and that fires were also built to confuse ships in hopes of them foundering, so their cargo could be stolen. ==Physical and social geography==