Last modified: 2008-06-21 by ivan sache
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Municipal flag of Ixelles / Elsene - Image by Ivan Sache, 3 July 2001
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The municipality of Elsene / Ixelles (Dutch / French; 78,088 inhabitants on 1 July 2007; 634 ha) is one of the 19 bilingual municipalities forming the region of Brussels-Capitale. It is located in the south-east of Brussels and cut into two parts by the Louisia Street, which belongs to the municipality of Brussels. Elsene is therefore one of the threee Belgian municipalities made of more than one part, the two other being Mesen and, of course, Baarle-Hertog.
Ixelles was in the past split by the Maelbeek (lit., "the Mill's Brook); one part of the hamlet depended on the Magistrate of Brussels whereas the other part depended on a local lord, who became a Viscount in the XIIIth century. In 1300, Duke Jean II of Brabant founded on the foot of the Zwaerenberg (lit., "the Steep Mountain") the Sainte-Croix hospital, which aimed at housing and feeding the wood bearers coming from the forest of Soignes. The hamlet had four fish ponds watered by the Maelbeek, which were used as a food source by the neighbouring abbey of La Cambre (see below) and the villages of Etterbeek, Saint-Josse-Ten-Noode and Schaerbeek. In 1554, the Abbess of La Cambre obtained the building of the Vleurgat road to transport the trees cut in the woods surrounding the abbey. The building of the castles of Ermitage, Ten Bosch and Ixelles contributed to the increase of the hamlet. In 1795, the municipality of Ixelles was constituted by the former domains of Lower-, Upper-Ixelles and Boondael. Mayor Hippolyte Legrand prevented the destruction of the abbey of La Cambre, used as an hospital during the French period, and developed the village into a small town. The population of Ixelles grew from 677 in 1818 to 58,615 in 1900. In 1871, Léopold II founded the King's Garden, part of the Royal Donation, managed now by the Region of Brussels-Capitale.
In 1200, Lady Gisèle, a Benedictine nun from Brussels, wanted to adopt
the Cistercian rule. The canons of the chapter of St. Gudule prevented
her to do so and she required the help from the monks of Villers. Duke of Lotharingia Henri I eventually allowed her to found a Cistercian
abbey in the forest of Soignes, near the source of the Maelbeek. The
abbey was consecrated by Jean de Béthune, Bishop of Cambrai. The abbey
might have been named after the Room of Nazareth where the Blessed
Virgin lived (in Latin, camera beatae mariae - camera gave
chambre in French and chamber in English). The wood of La Cambre,
surrounding the abbey, was a public place; in 1862, the municipality of
Brussels commissioned the landscape designer Édouard Keiling to revamp
it.
Until the middle of the XVIIIth century, the usual language in the
abbey was Flemish; the abbey indeed had several estates in some 60
villages, mostly in Flanders. The abbey of La Cambre was the residence
of two saints, Boniface and Alice of Schaerbeek. Born in 1182
as the son of a goldsmith, Boniface was appointed Canon of St. Gudule, Professor
of Theology in Paris and Bishop of Lausanne in 1231. He had to resign
and settled at La Cambre for 18 years until his death in 1260. St.
Boniface is invoked against typhus and fever. The saint's remains were
exhumated in 1600; two nuns who had drunk the water used to clean
Boniface's bones were miraculously healed. Placed in a shrine, the
relics were stolen in the XVIIth century and hidden in a pub in
Brussels until brought back to La Cambre.
Alice of Schaerbeek entered the abbey of La Cambre aged 7. She sufferred from leprosis and
blindness and lived in an isolated cell, where she was visited by the
Christ. After her death in 1250, her relics healed several lepers.
In 1478, the abbey was plundered during the war between Louis XI and
Maximilian of Austrian. A few years later, the Abbot of Grimbergen
attempted to reform La Cambre, where most nuns were illiterate, to
which they resisted until 1512. After the beheading of the Count of
Egmont in Brussels in 1567, her widow Sabine and their 11 children
found refuge at the abbey. In 1585, the Spaniards burned down the
church where Calvinists were said to hide.
Archduchess Isabelle funded
the rebuilding of the church, for which the most beautiful trees of the
forest of Soignes were cut. Isabelle and Archduke Albert stayed at the
abbey on the eve of their "Joyous Entrance" in Brussels in 1599. In the
XVIth century, several nuns came from noble families and most buildings
of the abbey were rebuilt in the Louis XIV and Louis XV style. The last
three abbesses built from 1718 to the French Revolution classical
buildings still there. The nuns of La Cambre were excellent teachers,
famous all over Europe, which explained why Joseph II maintained the
abbey while he suppressed several "unuseful" religious foundations. The
nuns were expelled after the French Revolution but most of the
buildings were kept; they house today the National Geographic
Institute, the National School of Visual Arts and the administration of
parish of Ixelles.
Ixelles is famous for the borough of Matongé, named after the trading borough of Kinshasa (Democratic Republic of Congo, ex-Zaïre, ex-Congo Kinshasa, ex-Belgian Congo), and the center of the Congolese community in Brussels. Matongé started around the Maisaf, a housing estate for the African students. Ixelles is the seat of two campuses (Solbosch and La Plaine) of the Université Libre de Brussels (ULB - Free University of Brussels, founded in 1834 by Pierre-Théodore Verhaegen) and of the campus of the Vrije Universiteit Brussel (VUB - Free University of Brussels). Although its campus is also located in La Plaine, the VUB, founded in October 1969 and recognized by Law in 1970, is not related to the ULB.
Several famous people have their name associated with Ixelles. The
talented singer Barbara (Monique Serf, 1930-1997) married in Ixelles in
1953, sang in several local theaters and left the town in 1954. The
writer Charles De Coster (1827-1879) wrote his famous novels "The
Flemish legends" and "The legend and the heroic, merry and glorious
adventures of Ulespeigel and Lamme Goedzak in the country of Flanders
and elsewhere", lived and was buried in Ixelles. The movie director
Jacques Feyder (Jacques Frédérix, 1887-1948), one of the founders of
the poetic realism school, was born in Ixelles. The writer Michel de
Ghelderode (Adhémar Martens, 1898-1962), author of soem 40 books,
including Sire Halewyn and La Balade du Grand Macabre, was born in
Ixelles, too. So was the cartoonist Greg (1931-1999), the inventor of
Achille Talon.
The charming American actress Audrey Hepburn (Audrey
Ruston, 1919-1993), who played in Roman Holiday, Sabrina Fair,
Charade, My Fair Lady, Two for the Road..., was born in Ixelles
and lived there until 1935. The naturalist writer Camille Lemonnier
(1844-1913), author of some 70 books, was born and died in Ixelles,
where he was often visited by his friends Emile Verhaeren and Georges
Eekhoudt. The best-seller machine Amélie Nothomb (1967) lives in
Ixelles; in her novel Hygiène de l'Assassin (The Murderer's Hygiene, a character lives in Ixelles and suffers from the Elsenveiverplatz syndrom (more or less "the
syndrom of the Ixelles ponds"). The architect Auguste Perret
(1874-1954), a great promoter of reinforced concrete and rebuilder of
the town of Le Havre after the Second World War, was born in Ixelles.
So was the singer Pierre Rapsat (1948-2002), who represented Belgium at
the Eurovision song contest in 1976 (Judy & Cie.).
The anarchist geographer Elisée Reclus (1830-1905), author of "The Man and the
Earth", lived in Ixelles from 1894 to his death; as he had requested
it, he was buried in the common grave. The sculptor Auguste Rodin lived
in Ixelles from 1871 to 1877; enjoying his stay, he made there the
sculpture "The Idyll at Ixelles". The movie director Jacob Van Dormael,
author of "Toto the Hero" and "The Eigth Day" was born in Ixelles in
1957. Several other famous people stayed for a while in Ixelles,
including exiles such as Lenin (1914) and Karl Marx (1846-1848).
However, the most famous inhabitant of Ixelles was the Spanish opera
singer María-Felicité García (1808-1836), aka la Malibran, after the
name of her first husband, Charles Malibran, whom she married in 1825
in the USA to escape her father's tutorship. Back to Paris, she met the
Belgian violonist and composer Charles-Auguste de Bériot
(1802-1870). Their son Charles-Wilfrid de Bériot (1833-1914) became a
famous pianist and had Maurice Ravel among his students. The singer's
first marriage was eventually cancelled and she remarried in 1836 with
Bériot, who had built a private mansion in Ixelles, today used as the town
hall. The same year, la Malibran, pregnant, fell down from her horse
but still performed on stage; exhausted, she died in Manchester and was
buried in a big mausoleum in the cemetary of Laeken, the other famous
cemetary of Brussels.
The cemetary of Ixelles was the last site of the adventures of
General Georges Boulanger (1837-1891), who once threatened the French
Republic. After having heroically served in Kabylia, Italy and
Cochinchina, Boulanger contributed to the defense of Paris during the
1870 war and to the repression of the Commune; in 1882, he was appinted
Director of the Infantry and promoted very popular reforms. Appointed
General in 1884, he was appointed Minister of War in 1886 and his
popularity increased. Boulanger set up a series of provocative
measures against Germany and was nicknamed Général Revanche
(General Revenge). In 1887, the government fell and Boulanger was no longer
part of the new government, which allowed him to found the Boulangist
movement. in 1888, the general left the army and was triumphally
elected at the Chamber. Funded by the Duchess of Uzès, the Boulangist
party increased and presented candidates in all French districts. On 27
July 1889, Boulanger was elected in Paris and his frenetic supporters
asked him to apply his program Dissolution, Revision, Constituante.
However, Boulanger refused to march against the Elysée and disappointed
his supporters, who had expected a coup and abandoned him. His parliamentary
immunity was suppressed and he was sentenced to jail, but the
government helped him to flee to Belgium, just to get rid of him. He
was not welcome either in Brussels, where his mistress, Madame
Bonnemains died on 15 July 1891; on 30 September 1891, Boulanger
committed suicide on her tomb in the cemetary of Ixelles. Clémenceau,
who had contributed to the military rise of Boulanger, said: Il est
mort comme il a vécu, en sous-lieutenant (He died like he lived,
as a sous-lieutenant).
Source: Municipal website
Ivan Sache, 21 June 2007
The flag of Ixelles is vertically divided green-white.
The colour of the flags are taken from the municipal arms. According to Armoiries communales en Belgique. Communes wallonnes, bruxelloises et
germanophones, the arms of Ixelles, "Argent an alder proper" were adopted by the Municipal Council on 4 May 1886 and confirmed by Royal Decree on 17 February 1888. The municipal website explains that the arms are canting, recalling that
the name of Elsene comes from els (pl., elzen), in Dutch, "the
alder". The tree is represented in a stylized manner and covers the whole
field of the shield.
The cover of Vexillacta [vxl] #12
(June 2001) shows a painting by Pierre Thévenet (1870-1937),
entitled Bruxelles - Porte de Namur - 21 juillet 1932. The
21st of July is the National Day in Belgium. Four flags are hoisted on the main building
represented on the painting:
- the flag of Belgian Congo;
- the national flag of Belgium ("Belgian square", with the official proportion, 13:15);
- the old municipal flag of Brussels, red with a green border;
- the municipal flag of Ixelles.
Ivan Sache, 21 June 2007