The original Schie was a swampy creek in the area of
Schiebroek that flowed into the former
Merwede at the current town of
Overschie. The city of Delft formed along this stream and gave it the name Delf, meaning "dig", indicating that this stream was at least partially dug out. The first excavations may have taken place back in Roman times, when the nearby
Corbulo Canal also was dug. In 1150, the Schielands High Seawall was built along the Merwede. When the outlying floodplains were made into
polders afterwards, the Schie was extended southward and a dam was built at the new mouth. The settlement that formed there was named
Schiedam, and became an important city since it levied toll on the ships that sailed on the Schie to Delft and beyond. In 1280, the Poldervaart was built to drain the eastern
amts of Delfland. This canal had a direct connection to the Merwede outside Schiedam. Political rivalry among the various landlords and the cities of Schiedam, Delft, and Rotterdam led to the construction of a new canal between Overschie and Rotterdam in 1343, thereby splitting the Schie at Overschie in the Rotterdamse Schie and the original Schiedamse Schie. Schiedam's control over shipping on the Schie was now lost. In 1389, the city of Delft received permission from
Duke Albert I, Count of Holland, to dig its own canal to the Merwede. The existing section from Delft to Overschie was widened, and became known as the Delftse Schie. From there a new canal was dug to the Merwede. At its mouth, Delft built its own new harbour:
Delfshaven. This section was named the Delfshavense Schie. Since 1893, the Delftse Schie, together with the
Vliet, became part of the
Rhine-Schie Canal that extends to
Leiden.
20th century In 1903, a dike broke near Kandelaar, nearly draining the entire Schie into the low-lying surrounding fields. In 1933, the Coolhaven (Cool harbor) was completed that provided a new and better connection between the Delfshavense Schie and the
Nieuwe Maas, reducing the shipping on the other Schie canals. After the
bombardment of Rotterdam at the beginning of World War II, the rubble of the ruined city was used to backfill the Rotterdamse Schie. Only a small section at Overschie remains of the Rotterdamse Schie. In 1989, the Delftse Schie between Delft and Rotterdam was transferred from municipal to provincial jurisdiction. ==Current situation==