Last modified: 2007-10-20 by ivan sache
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Municipal flag of Alken - Image by Ivan Sache, 7 October 2001
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The municipality of Alken (in Limburgian, Alleke; 11,059 inhabitants on 1 July 2006; 2,814 ha) is located south of Hasselt.
Alken was mentioned for the first time in 1066 as Alleche. It was an enclave of the Principality of Liège inside the County of Loon, until the incorporation of the County into the Principality. Several prince-bishops of Liège had a residence in Alken.
The Alken-Maes group (N.V. Brouwerijen Alken-Maes Brasseries S.A.) is
the second brewing group in Belgium (after InBev Belgium), formed in
1988 by the merging of the Alken and Maes breweries and purchased in
2000 by the British Scottish & Newcastle group.
In 1880, the brick maker Egied Maes purchased the Sint-Michaël brewery
in Waarloos (Antwerp). Maes was succeeded in 1901 by his sons Theophiel and Ferdinand, who renamed the brewery Stoombrouwerij Mouterij
St-Michaël Gebroeders Maes / Brasserie - Malterie à vapeur St-Michaël -
Frères Maes (St-Michael Steam Brewery - Maltery Maes Brothers). They
produced their first pils in the early 1920s. In 1926, the third
generation of Maes modernized the production, which was tripled in
1928; in 1969, Maes was incorporated to the English Watneys brewery.
The Alken brewery was founded in 1880 by Arthur Boes. In 1928, the
brewery launched the then revolutionary Cristal pils. The Cristal was
awarded the World Quality Medal in London in 1989.
The Alken-Maes group has kept three production sites. In 2003, the
Waarloos brewery was closed but the social seat of the group stayed
there. Both the Maes and Cristal pils are no longer brewed in Alken. The De
Keersmaker brewery in Kobbegem (Asse) brews the Mort Subite gueuze and kriek. The brewery of Jumet (Charleroi) brews the Grimbergen and Ciney beers; its closure was announced in January 2007. In 2002, Alken-Maes bought the Louwaege brewery in Kortemark, which brews the Hapkin beer.
Alltogether, Alken-Maes employs 750 workers for a turnover of 200
millions euros and a production of 2 millions hl of beer. In 1998,
Alken-Maes was granted the title of "Patented Supplyer of the Court".
Source: Alken-Maes website
Ivan Sache, 16 May 2007
The municipal flag of Alken is horizontally divided red-white-yellow.
According to Gemeentewapens in België - Vlaanderen en Brussel, the flag was adopted by the Municipal Council on 30 January 1981, confirmed by Royal Decree on 24 February
1981 and published in the Belgian official gazette on 2 April 1981 and
again on 4 January 1995. The colours of the flag are most probably
taken from the arms.
The municipal website of Alken shows the flag and the arms, which are described as:
Van keel beladen met een natuurkleur aanziende borstbeeld van
St. Aldegondis dragend het ordekleed der Benediktinessen, in de
rechterhand houdende een boek en in de linker een albatiale kromstaf,
beide van goud, achter het hoofd een nimbus van hetzelfde; de Heilige
getopt met een nederdalende H. Geest (duif) (Gules a bust of St. Aldegond proper clothed like a Benedictine holding in dexter a book and in sinister an abbess staff, all gold, above her
head a nimb of the same; the saint surmonted with a descending Holy
Spirit [dove]).
St. Aldegond is the patron saint of Alken, celebrated on 30 January.
She was born around 630 in Coulsore, near Maubeuge (today in the north
of France, close to the border with Belgium) as the daughter of Count
of Hainaut Walbert IV and the Thuringian princess Bertille. His elder
sister was Waudru, the founder of the abbey of Mons. From 642 (the
legal age of marriage) to 660 (the legal age to take the coat if still
a virgin), she resisted all attempts to marry her. She escaped from the
family castle through the neighbouring forest, chased by her pretender.
A source gushed forth to refresh her and angels helped her to cross the
river Sambre. She founded there, in a place called Maldodium, a nuns'
monastery around 658, which is the origin of the town of Maubeuge.
Aldegond died in 684 and was buried in the family tomb in Coulsore. Her
relics were brought back to Maubeuge and placed in 1039 in a wooden
shrine, replaced in 1611 by a wealthy silver shrine. The bones were
calcined during a blaze in 1808; the saint's skull was damaged during
the bombing of the town in 1815. On 16 May 1940, the remaining relics
were carried away to the village of Caudry and escaped the destruction
of the town. The church of the village of Malzy owned a shoe lost by the saint when she crossed the river Oise, but it finally crumbled into dust.
St. Aldegond is invoked against the infantile diseases; she is the
patron saint of eleven parishes in France and several other in Belgium
and Canada.
Source: Malzy website, by Norbert Quin
Pascal Vagnat & Ivan Sache, 16 May 2007