Last modified: 2007-10-20 by ivan sache
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Municipal flag of As - Image by Jarig Bakker, 7 October 2001
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The municipality of As (7,579 inhabitants on 1 January 2007; 2,207 ha) is located in Kempen, east of Genk, on the watershed of the Demer (a tributary of the Scheldt) and the Maas. The municipality of As is made since 1971 of the former municipalities of As and Niel-bij-As.
The two villages of As and Niel-bij-As are located on the Bosbeek (aka
Oeter), a small river tributary of the Maas near Maaseik. The name of
As comes form the Prehistoric hydronym aska, originally used to name
the river and then the village as Assche, Asghe, Asch and eventually
As. Niel means "ahead" in Middle Dutch.
Flint artifacts from the late Age of Stone have been found in As, as
well as a cemetary dated 500 BC. The Romans built the Tongeren-Venlo
way via Munsterbilzen and As; however, they did not settle Kempen
because the sandy soil was not fertile. The Franks did, as proved by
the Merovingian cemetary found on the Schuttenberg, giving evidence for
a significant settlement in the VIth-VIIIth centuries. Kempen was
evangelized in the VIIIth century and a primitive church was built in
As, later replaced by today's St. Aldegond church. The church is
mentioned for the first time in in chronicle dated 13 December 1108, by
which Prince-Bishop of Liège Otbert transferred to the abbey of Rolduc his rights on Riemst, Genk, As and Gellik.
Niel is mentioned for the first time in a chart dated 4 June 1253, by
which Count Arnold of Loon was granted the villa of Dilsen, including Niel, from the castle of Stokkem. On 16 May 1299, Arnold of Loon
appointed Arnold of Gellik pastor of As. Niel became an independent
parish in 1721.
André Dumont (1847-1918), Professor of Geology at the Catholic
University of Leuven (homonym of another geologist from Liège,
1809-1857), founded in 1872 the Union des Ingénieurs de Louvain,
which he presided from 1876 to 1879. In 1877, he described in the
Union's bulletin the coal basin recently found in the Dutch Limburg. He
pointed out that Guillaume Lambert had suggested in 1873 that coal
could also be found in the Belgian Limburg. On 13 October 1898,
Dumont obtained the set up of the Société Anonyme de Recherche et
Exploitation, whose aim was to fund and organize drillings. In 1901, a
coal vein was found in As at a depth of 541 m. A Royal Decree created
in 1906 the Concession André Dumont sous Asche [As]. The first shafts
were built in 1912 but industrial exploitation of the coal mines
started only after the First World War.
The railway As-Genk was built in 1873 to link Maaseik and Hasselt. The
station of As was built in 1876-1878. The line was purchased by the
Belgian state in 1913 and linked to the coal mines of Eisden. From 1921
to 1926, As was the bridgehead of the coal trains, so that the station
was progressively increased and modernized, with the building of two
big signal boxes. The two lines to Waterschei and Eisden were known as
Kolenspoor (Coal's line). Traffic on these lines was eventually
suppressed in 1985. The As-Maaseik line was transformed in 1988 into a
pedestrian and cycle path. In 1989, the Waterschei-As-Eisden line was
transformed into a tourist railway; the As station was registered as an
historical monument in 1996 and purchased by the municipality in 1999.
The As station is one of the gates of the Upper Kempen National Park.
Sources:
Ivan Sache, 19 May 2007
The municipal flag of As is horizontally divided dark green-white-dark
green.
According to Gemeentewapens in België - Vlaanderen en Brussel, the flag and arms were adopted by the Municipal Council on 1 June 1987, confirmed by the Executive of
Flanders on 13 October 1987 and published in the Belgian official
gazette on 16 September 1988.
The colours of the flag are taken from
the arms, shown on the municipal website with the following official
description:
In zilver een geplante boom van sinopel, vergezeld links van een hert
van keel klimmend tegen de stam. Het schild geplaatst voor een
Sint-Amor houdende in de rechterhand een pelgrimsstaf en op de
linkerhand een kerk, het geheel van goud (Argent a tree planted vert flanked sinister by a fawn gules climbing the trunk. The shield supported by a St. Amor holding dexter a
pilgrim's staff and sinister a church all or.)
On the image of the coat of arms, the fawn (hert) is indeed a stag
with very developed antlers.
St. Amor / Amour of Aquitaine lived in the IXth century. He was an
hermit who lived in Maastricht and founded the Munsterbilzen convent in
Liège.
Pascal Vagnat & Ivan Sache, 19 May 2007