Last modified: 2008-04-26 by ivan sache
Keywords: zelzate | lion (black) | eagle: double-headed (black) | assenede |
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Municipal flag of Zelzate - Image by Filip van Laenen & Ivan Sache, 4 January 2008
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The municipality of Zelzate (12,190 inhabitants on 1 January 2007; 1,371 ha) is located north of Ghent, on the Ghent-Terneuzen Canal and on the border with the Netherlands.
Zelzate, located in the north of the Ghent business park set up along
the Ghent-Terneuzen Canal, is a very industrialized town, with
steelworks (SIDMAR, today ArcelorMittal Gent, part of ArcelorMittal) and a chemical plant.
The Ghent-Terneuzen Canal is the follower of the old Sas Canal
(Sassevaart), built after the siltingup of the Zwin, which prevented
the communication between Ghent and the North Sea. Authorized by
Charles V on 26 May 1547, the Sas Canal was completed in 1563 with the
building of a fortification near the new village of Sas (today, Sas van
Gent, located in the Netherlands). On 21 May 1572, the Sea Gueuzen
seized Sas van Gent and destroyed the lock and the village; it took
five years to reestablish maritime traffic. In 1648, the Dutch forbid
navigation on the Scheldt to Sas van Gent and Antwerp. The Sas Canal silted up and was forgotten until the reunification of the Netherlands in 1815.
In 1823, King William I ordered the increase of the Sas Canal to
Terneuzen; the canal was inaugurated on 18 November 1827. Navigation on
the canal was stopped again from 1830 to 1841, following the
independence of Belgium.
Zelzate is the birth town of the mezzo-soprano Rita Gorr (b. 1926 as Marguerite Geirnaert). Gorr made most of her career in the operas of Paris and Strasbourg, but also sang in the Bayreuth festival, the Met of New York, the Scala of Milan, Covent Garden in Londeon and the State Opera of Vienna. In July 2007, aged 81, she performed on stage for the last time in Ghent, as the Countess in Tchaikovsky's "Queen of the Spades".
Ivan Sache, 4 January 2008
The municipal flag of Zelzate is vertically divided green-white-green,
with, in canton, a yellow shield with a black lion holding in its right
foot a black double-headed eagle.
According to Gemeentewapens in België - Vlaanderen en Brussel, the flag was adopted by the Municipal Council on 21 May 1992, confirmed by the Executive of Flanders on 6 October 1992 and published in the Belgian official gazette on 21 June 1994.
The flag was designed after the municipal arms, "Per fess, or a
half-lion sable holding in dexter a double-headed eagle of the same,
vert a pale argent".
The upper part of the arms comes from the former arms of Assenede, from which it depended in the Middle Ages.
According to Servais, the old coat of
arms of Assenede is identical to the old coat of arms of the Four
Lordships (Boekhoute, Assenede, Axel and Hulst). The lion recalls the
County of Flanders whereas the eagle recalls that the Four Lordships
belonged to the Bishopry of Utrecht, then part of the German Empire.
The lower part of the arms symbolizes the Ghent-Terneuzen Canal flowing
in the middle of the pastures.
Pascal Vagnat & Ivan Sache, 4 January 2008