Valuas (folklore)
Bructer Valuas is the name of a legendary chief of the Bructeri, exclusively known from a Venlo folklore tale. The name might be a corruption of Goliath.
Background story
According to the legend, the city of Venlo were to be founded in the year 96 A.D. by this chief. After being defeated by the neighbouring tribe of the Chamavi in the Teutoburg Forest, Valuas and his trustees fled in southwest direction to a fertile region near the river Meuse, as noted by Publius Cornelius Tacitus. There the remaining Bructeri built a settlement he then called Venloë, which, according to the legend, means height in the swamp.After their death, in honor of the chief and his wife Guntrud large wooden statues were made, which were placed on a nearby hill. Their followers, the people of Venlo, let a fire burn for a long time inside these statues. To this use the hill owes its present name ‘’Lichtenberg’’.
Castle
According to Lambert Keuller, a local historician, Valuas founded a castle in 96 A.D., which he called Vrijburg.The castle were to be built at the present square called ‘’Oude Markt’’, on the southeast corner. This area also would have been the main location of the settlement in that time. Later, in the early Middle Ages, the castle disappeared. Although the exact moment of disappearance has not been noted, Keuller means that this happened in the 9th century, when the Vikings raided the northwest of Europe.