Last modified: 2007-11-24 by ivan sache
Keywords: geraardsbergen | grammont | calvary (red) | cross (re) | eagle: double-headed (black) | lion (black) |
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Municipal flag of Geraardsbergen - Image by Arnaud Leroy, 19 September 2006
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The municipality of Geraardsbergen (in French, Grammont; 31,543 inhabitants on 1 January 2007; 7,971 ha) is located 20 km south-west of Aalst, close to the borders of Flanders with Hainaut and Brabant. The muncipality of Grammont is made since 1976 of the former municipalities of Geraardsbergen (including the former municipalities of Onkerzele, Overboelare, Goeferdinge and Nederboelare since 1971), Grimminge, Idegem, Moerbeke, Nieuwenove, Ophasselt, Schendelbeke, Smeerebbe-Vloerzegem, Viane, Waarbeke, Zandbergen and Zarlardinge.
The current municipal territory was in the past shared between two
local entities: the town of Geraardsbergen belonged to the Land van
Aalst (Country of Aalst), whereas most of the surrounding rural
villages belonged to the Barony of Boelare, itself part of the Country
of Aalst.
The Country of Aalst was more or less the area located between the
rivers Scheldt and Dender. In the XIth century, the Count of Flanders
was able to take over the area, which originally belonged to Brabant,
from the German Emperor. The Country remained known as
Rijks-Vlaanderen or Keizerlijk Vlaanderen (Imperial Flanders), as
opposed to the Kroon-Vlaanderen (Princely Flanders), because the
Count of Flanders remained for that area under the Emperor's nominal
suzereignty. The Country of Aalst was made of the towns of Aalst and
Geraardsbergen, of the domains of Rode, Gavere, Schorisse and Zottegem, and of the Barony of Boelare.
In 1067-1070, Count Baudouin VI of Flanders (also Count of Hainaut)
build a fortified city (oppidum) in a strategic place. In order to
attract people, he granted several rights to the new town, initially not
written but later confirmed by Count of Flanders Philip of Alsace
(1168-1191). A replica of the chart, written in old, calligraphied
Dutch, can be seen in the town hall of Geraardsbergen since 1993. At
the end of the XIth century, the Count convinced the monks from the
abbey of Dikkelvenne (a village incorporate to Gavere in 1976) to move to the new town, where they founded the St. Adrian abbey. The abbey was so popular that Geraardsbergen was once
renamed Adrianopolis. Around 1200, the Our Lady Womens' Hospital, one
of the oldest hospitals in Belgium, was built in Geraardsbergen.
Congregatio Josephitarum, CJ), founded in 1817 for the Christian
instruction and education of young people.
The current municipality of Geraardsbergen includes nine out of the twelve villages which formed the Barony of Boelare, that is Goeferdinge, Idegem, Nederboelare, Nieuwenhove, Onkerzele, Overboelare, Smeerebbe, Vloerzegem and Waarbeke. The Barony is probably not as old as the County of Flanders; it was, along with Pamele, Cisoing and Eine, one of the four Peerages of Flanders. The lord of Boelare was therefore Peer of Flanders but also Baron. His castle, probably originating from a IXth-century fortress, was located in Nederboelare (Lower Boelare); it was nearly ruined at the end of the XVIth century and disappeared eventually in the early 1600s.
Source: Municipal website - texts by Etienne De Rijst
Geraardsbergen is famous for his Manneken Pis, said to be older than
the world-famous Manneken of Brussels and the mattentaart pie, made with fermented milk. However, most of the fame of Geraadsbergen is due
to its "Wall" known as Muur van Geraardsbergen or Mur de Grammont. The
Wall is one of the hotspots of the cyclist race Tour of Flanders and
has the same legendary aura as the Wall of Huy in the Flèche Wallonne, the Gap of Aremberg in Paris-Roubaix and the Poggio in Milan-San Remo.
The Wall of Geraardsbergen starts near the river Dender (elevation 18 m
asl) and reaches the top of the Oudenberg (110 m). Its length is 1.075
km, therefore the average slope is 9.2% with a staggering peak at
19.8%. The Our Lady chapel, rebuilt in 1906 on the Oudenberg by the
Josephites, marks the top of the Wall, which is also known as Kapelmuur
(or simply De Muur, The Wall). There is also there a restaurant called
"The Paradise"!
The legend says that the first racer to reach the chapel will
eventually win the race ("The Wall shall choose the winner"). This is
not exactly true, but what is sure is that racers not reaching the
chapel in the first places have no chance to catch up the lead, since
the finish line is located only 17 km further. However, famous winners
of the Ronde, such as Johan Museuuw and Peter Van Petegem, have won the
race after attacking in the Wall.
The Wall is very narrow, made of nasty, horizontal cobbles particularly
skiddy when weather is wet, something not uncommon in Flanders. The
fall of an unexperienced, inattentive or exhausted racer usually causes
the fall of all those who follow him and the incredible vision of a
mess of bikes and fallen racers, quickly morphing into a flock of
mud-coated racers pushing their bikes up to the top of the hill.
The Wall was included in the route of the Ronde in 1950, 1951 and 1952,
and then skipped until 1970. In 2004, the municipality of Geraardsbergen decided to fully restore the Wall and the removed cobblestones were sold 2.5 € each. The total cost of
the renovation was 1,256,494 €.
Ivan Sache, 19 September 2006
The municipal flag of Geraardsbergen is white with a red, three-stepped calvary, flanked by two yellow shields, the one on the viewer's
left being charged with a black double-headed eagle (Empire) whereas
the one on the viewer's right is charged with a black lion (Flanders).
According to According to Gemeentewapens in België - Vlaanderen en Brussel, the flag was adopted by the Municipal Council on 23 March 1987, confirmed by the Executive of Flanders on 26 May 1987 and published in the Belgian official gazette on 3 December
1987.
The flag is a banner of the municipal arms, which are shown
on another website on the history of Geraardsbergen. The website gives the text and images of Royal Decree
#65831, signed by éopold II on 19 April 1907, which granted arms to
Geraardsbergen. The grant states that the Municipal Council of the town
applied for arms on 27 July 1906. The Council required the permission
to use the arms shown on the seals commonly used by the municipal
magistrates before 1795. The granted arms are described as:
In goud en rood Calvariekruis op drie trappen gevoegd met zilver,
vergezeld rechts van een zwarten dubbelen adelaar en links van een rood
genagelden en getongden zwarten leeuw met gouden kroon, het schild
overdekt met een gouden stede kroon.
Or a red three-step calvary masoned argent, flanked right by a black
double eagle and left by a black lion armed and lampassed red and
crowned or, the shield topped with a golden municipal crown (right and
left have to be read heraldically here).
Servais adds that these arms were originally granted by (Dutch) Royal Decree on 4 August 1818.
The oldest known municipal seal, dated 1244, shows a mountain (berg)
with trees and a cross; a later seal (XIIIth century) shows the
mountain with the cross only. The mountain, the cross, the lion and the
eagle appear on a seal dated 1287. They reflect of course the
geographical location of Geraardsbergen in the Imperial Flanders. The
mountain was then progressively transformed into a monument.
Johannes Blaeu's Atlas Major (1648) shows a sight on Geraardsbergen
labelled Gerardimontium vulgo Gheertsberghe. The upper left corner of
the plate is decorated with the coat of arms of Flanders, whereas the
upper right corner of the plate is decorated with the coat of arms of
Geraardsbergen, which is similar to the today's one, but with the cross
blue instead of red. The plate can be seen on the website of the historical society Geschied- en heemkundige kring Gerardimontium.
A coin from the Country of Aalst, dated 1617, shows the arms of Aalst
and Geraardsbergen, again with the two shields within the shield. The
coin can be seen on the website of the historical society Het Land van Aalst.
Therefore, it seems that the today's arms of Geraardsbergen are closest
to the historical arms than were the arms applied for and granted in
the XIXth century.
Arnaud Leroy, Pascal Vagnat & Ivan Sache, 19 September 2006