Last modified: 2019-09-07 by ivan sache
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Municipal flag of Hannut - Images by Arnaud Leroy, 12 May 2005
Left, flag in use
Right, flag proposal, not in use
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Human settlements already existed in Hannut in the Neolithic. In the
Roman times, the village was crossed by a diverticulum (secondary
road), later called voie de Liège or chemin de Liège. The town
belonged to the Principality of Liège and was located near the borders
with the Duchy of Brabant and the County of Namur; because of its
strategical location, Hannut was often besieged, seized, plundered and
burnt down.
In the beginning of the 13th century, Duke Henri de Brabant granted
the title of town and a coat of arms to the settlement that had
developed around a castle, known at least since the 12th century and
later suppressed. The only remains of the ancient town of Hannut are
some street names and the 14th-century nave of the Gothic church. The
nave houses a big (3.40 m) statue of St. Christopher, carved from a
single tree trunk. St. Christopher was in the past invoked against
black plague and is today the patron saint of road users, with a
pilgrimage in Hannut on the first Sunday of August.
After the French Revolution, Hannut lost its title of town and was
incorporated into the department of Ourthe.
The battle of Hannut took place on 12-13 May 1940; it was the first battle involving tanks (Somua35 and Hotchkiss39 against Panzer) in the Second World War.
The Grand Prix of Hannut, a cyclist race, was run from 1967 to 2000; it seems to have been a strict Belgian affair, with two Dutch and a New Zealander outliers. Among the famous winners of the race are Freddy
Maertens (1983), Eddy Planckaert (1986), Jelle Nijdam (1986) and Leif
Hoste (2000, mostly famous because of the Flemish flag that stopped him
in Paris-Roubaix in 2004).
Abolens (written Abolenz in 1250) was probably named after a German lord Aboldus, whose name was combined with the toponym Lens. Neolithic remains and a Roman tomb were found there. Abolens is mostly an agricultural village located near the source of river Geer, a tributary of the Meuse. Abolens was merged with Poucet until the French Revolution, then incorporated to Lens-Saint-Rémy on 1 April 1822; the municipality was separated on 9 August 1881 and was incorporated into Hannut on 17 July 1970.
Avernas-le-Bauduin (written Evrenais in 1083, Evernais in 1207,
Evrenas le Bauduin in 1359, Evernais le Baldewin in 1403, Evernay le
Baudewyn in 1409, Evernay le Bauduin in 1456, Evernais le Baudewin in
1460, and eventually Avernas le Bauduin in 1480) most probably
belonged once to a lord named Bauduin. The etymology of Avernas, as
reported by Roger Vilken, is more obscure. Carnoy supports a Celtic
origin as Ab-ar-onna, onna meaning "a river", here the Averne or
Everne, later renamed Henri-Fontaine; the inhabitants of Avernas are
indeed called abaronnais. Piton prefers a Gallo-Roman hypothesis,
refering to a winter camp (Castra Hiberna) of the Roman army. Other
authors relate Avernas to the Gaul tribe of Eburons, settled between
the Meuse and the Rhine and submitted by Julius Caesar.
The village of Avernas is grouped around the monumental parish church,
with a single nave (14th century), a thick square tower (12th
century) surmounted by an octogonal bell-tower with four pinnacles.
Avernas was mostly an agricultural village; the Henri-Fontaine brook
powered several watermills in the past.
The 8-m high Roman tomb of Avernas is located uphill (147 m a.s.l.) in
the west of the village. It was used in the past as a triangulation
point.
Avin-en-Hesbaye is separated from its hamlet Atrive by the brook
Mohéry, whose water is harnessed by the Société Wallonne de Distribution
d'Eau. The water of Avin was used in the past to produced a lemonade
(Soda) sold in specific bottles capped with a marble. The Streel
fountains still produces that famous water.
There were in the past several noble families, a castle, breweries and
sawmills in Avin.
Bertrée was settled in the Gallo-Roman and Frankish times. It developed
around a priory founded in 1124 by Wauthier de Trognée, downgraded to a
cure in 1560.
The church of Bertrée has a chapel dedicated to the Three Holy Sisters
Bertille, Eutropie and Geneviève, invoked against liver diseases,
especially during a pilgrimage taking place on Whit Monday. The Three
Holy Sisters have another chapel located near the brook Henri-Fontaine.
Cras-Avernas was called in the past Avernas-le-Petit (minoris in 1179, "the small"). It was later renamed Cras ("the big")-Avernas. The Wauthier's farm is a former estate belonging to the Teutonic Order; Fernand Wauthier had there a distillery, which he transformed into a sugar house in 1851, launching the cultivation of sugar beet in Hesbaye. The Bosquée farm, isolated from the village, belonged to the Val Notre-Dame priory in Antheit. On the facade is a stone dated 1764, decorated with the arms of Isabelle Aspremont Lynden, Abbess of Val Notre-Dame, with her motto in cruces spe mea (In the cross shall be my hope). The Bosquée enclave belonged to the municipality of Montenaken until 16 September 1963. The area between Cras-Avernas and Montenaken is called Campagne des Steppes. The Steppes' Battle took place there on 13 October 1213; the militia of Liège, led by Bishop Hugh de Pierrepont, defeated the troops of Duke of Brabant Henri I, aka the Pugnacious. The legend says that the people from Liège brought a statue of the Blessed Virgin from Montenaken on the battle field; as soon as the statue was shown, the sun light increased and the soldiers from Brabant had to lay down their arms. Anyway, this was the first time in the Middle Ages that a civilian troop defeated a feudal army, and the Duke of Brabant definitively ceased his campaigns against Liège. Until the French Revolution, the 13 October was the National Day in Liège.
Crehen was already settled in the Neolithic and Roman times; the village was crossed by the aforementioned Voie de Liège. The name of the village was written Crahain in 1184, meaning "jackdaws' house". The St. Gertrude's church has an interesting altar with an altarpiece decorated with the Apocalypse Lamb.
Grand-Hallet, already settled in the Roman times, is located along the brook Henri-Fontaine. The village was part of the County of Avernas in the 9th century and later purchased by the Duke of Brabant. In 1465, it was destroyed during wars with Liège. The Henri-Fontaine mill, aka Neuf Moulin, was built in the 13th century, destroyed in 1467 and rebuilt in 1649. It is still working and open to visit. The mill has a big collection of more than 30,000 tin boxes.
Lens-Saint-Rémy is located on a plateau near the source of the Geer.
The village was named in the past Lens-les-Béguines or Croix-à-Lens. It
was part of the Duchy of Brabant and of the Bailiwick of Hannut.
The Carmel (Carmelite convent) is a former Beguine convent founded in
1343; it was served by Augustinian nuns until 1797, replaced by Breton
Carmelite nuns until 1956.
A place near Lens-Saint-Rémy is called Gibet Bastin (Bastin's Gibbett)
or Buisson Bastin (Bastin's Bush) or Buisson de la Justice (in Walloon,
bouhon del justice, Justice's Bush). The name of the place recalls
that the famous rascal Bastin was hung there on 19 December 1630.
Merdorp seems to have been named according to its geographical location regarding Orp-le-Grand and Orp-le-Petit; Merdorp could be meridei orpum, "Orp in the South".
Moxhe might have been named after the river Mehaigne (Moxha). In his De Bello Gallico, Julius Caesar mentions the small tribe of Ploumoxii, living near the Moxha. Hewed flintstones found in Moxhe are shown in the Curtius Museum in Liège and in the castle of Jehay. In the Middle Ages, Moxhe was divided among the Duchy of Brabant, the Principality of Liège and the County of Namur.
Petit-Hallet, probably named after the Halley family, belonged to the St. Lambert's Church in Liège, that sold it to the abbey of Villers in 1582. The domain belonged to the Duke of Brabant, who sold it in 1645 to Albert d'Awans. Later owners were the Franc and Renesse families. In 1465, the village was destroyed during wars with Liège.
Poucet was sold in 1362 by the Duke of Brabant to the Count of Namur. It was purchased with Abolens in 1644 by John de Mombeek, Bailiff of Hannut. It is said that half of the population of the village is descended from John the Brewer (end of the 16th century).
Thisnes-en-Hesbaye is probably named after the Greek word Thisnes, "a
dune". The area of Thisnes was strongly disputed between Duke Henri I of
Brabant and the Count of Namur, who eventually won. The domain depended
directly on the Count, and later to the King of Spain, who ceded it as
a pawn to the Canonesses of Andenne. Thisnes was later owned by private families.
Woad was an important crop in Thisnes; there were eight woad mills in
the village in 1289. In 1813, there were four breweries and a sugar
house that employed more than 120 until the middle of the XIXth
century. The village is watered by the river Absoul, which takes its
source in the Fountain farm.
Trognée belonged to the County of Avernas in the 9th century and might have been ceded to the St. Lambert's church of Liège in the 12th century. Later, the domain was owned by private families. The lineage of the lords of Trognée ended with the De Wal family. Trognée was often invaded and plundered by troops. In the 19th century, Trognée had a grain mill and a sugar house that was closed in 1976. The L-shaped castle-farm of the village is typical of the Hesbaye.
Villers-le-Peuplier was limited by in the south by the Chaussée Brunehaut (Bavay-Cologne) aka Chaussée Verte and crossed by the Voie de Liège. The name of the village seems to indicate that a Roman estate (villa) existed there, but it has not been found yet. The village was burnt down several times and Marshall of Saxe set up its headquarters there in 1746.
Wansin seems to have been the place of a flintsone workshop, where most artefacts found in the neighbouring villages were produced. In the beginning of 20th century, mushrooms were cultivated in Wansin in caves dug in a cliff for the extraction of marl, used as a crop fertilizer. The houses of Wansin are scattered along the river Absoul, which has its source in Thisnes.
Ivan Sache, 12 May 2005
The flag of Hannut is vertically divided red-green with 18
yellow stars arranged in an ellipse in the middle of the flag.
According to Armoiries communales en Belgique. Communes wallonnes, bruxelloises et
germanophones [w2v03], the Heraldry and Vexillology Council of the French Community proposed a flag vertically divided green-red with, in the center, the silhouette of a yellow keep surrounded with 18 stars arranged in an hexagon. The municipality swapped the vertical stripes, dropped the keep and changed the hexagon into an ellipse.
Red and green are the traditional colors of Hannut. Twelve out of the 18 stars recall the European vocation of Hannut, whereas the remaining six ones recall the six municipalities merged with Hannut in 1976. This is the official interpretation, but the 18 stars might also stand for Hannut and the 17 villages forming the municipality.
According to the municipal website, the coat of arms of Hannut is "Gules a castle orled and creneled or masoned sable a keep of the same
charged with the arms of Brabant-Limbourg", that is, "Quarterly, 1. and
4. Sable a lion or armed and langued gules, 2. and 3. Argent a
lion gules armed langued and crowned or").
The arms of Thisnes were, according to Servais [svm55], "Argent a lion sable crowned argent".
The street plates in Hannut, as shown on the municipal website, are very busy with coats of arms and flags. They show the municipal arms in upper left corner, the arms of Wallonia in upper right corner, the provincial arms of Liège in the lower left corner, and in lower right corner a square European Union flag over a parallelogram-shaped Belgian flag.
Arnaud Leroy, Pascal Vagnat & Ivan Sache, 12 May 2005
Flag of the Free Republic of Blehen - Image by Ivan Sache, 11 July 2004
Blehen was called Blocheym (1169) and Blochem (14th century). The
Germanic root blok means in Middle Dutch "a trunk", "a beam", or "an entranched
camp". Remains of ancient ditches have been found in the marshes of
Blehen.
Remains of a Neolithic settlement have been found near Blehen, as well
as the remains of a Gallo-Roman villa and a tumulus. In the Merovingian
and Carolingian times, Blehen was probably a royal domain (fiscus)
including the neighbouring villages of Lens-Saint-Rémy, Abolens and
Lens-Saint-Servais. Blehen was part of the County of Avernas and was
later incorporated into the principality of Liège.
Blehen was a Liége enclave into Brabant and was plundered several times, for instance in 1645 by the garrison of Jodoigne. From 1672 to 1711, the troops of Louis XIV, of his allies and of his opponents altogether
looted the area.
In 1822, the Dutch administration merged Blehen with Lens-Saint-Rémy.
On 20 June 1896, the municipal status of Blehen was restored.
The Law voted on 17 July 1970 suppressed the municipality of Blehen,
which was incorporated into the new municipality of Hannut.
During the village festival, celebrated during the first week-end of
July, the inhabitants proclaimed by referendum the Free Republic of
Blehen (République Libre de Blehen).
The village festival lasts three days. The celebration starts with the
hoisting of the colors to the Republic Tree. Then, sports games take
place, involving the other villages of the municipality of Hannut.
Saturday evening is the time of the elections: a new President of the
Republic shall be elected every three year and the Buse shall be
elected every year. The inhabitant of the village who has received the
least number of votes is proclaimed Buse. His/her consolation prize
are free drinks during the rest of the festival.
Like any respectable village festival in Belgium, the Blehen festival ends with a
cyclist race. The runners have to be dressed up in fancy dress and the
inhabitants of the village have to encourage them with drinks offered ad
libitum. Very few competitors are able to complete the three laps of
the race.
In order to honor their former Town Hall, the citizens of Blehen have transformed it into a brewery, where the local beer Cuvée de Saint-Antoine shall be produced very soon. The old recipe of the beer was recently found by the members of the St. Anthony's brotherhood (website), whose main goals are the promotion of local pork products and brown beer. The brotherhood is the recreation of a brotherhood which existed in the 19th century, when there was a famous pilgrimage to St. Anthony and St. Peter in Blehen on 17 January. At the end of the great mass, there was a big auction of pig's heads on the square in front of the church.
The flag of the Free Republic of Blehen is horizontally divided red-yellow. It is based on the colors of the coat of arms of the ancient Blehen family, which are, by pure chance, also the colors of Liège and Wallonia.
More details on the Republic, the festival and the brotherhood can be read on the official website of the Republic.Ivan Sache, 11 July 2004