Last modified: 2007-11-03 by ivan sache
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Municipal flag of Damme - Image by Arnaud Leroy, 10 June 2007
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The municipality of Damme (10,853 inhabitants on 1 January 2007; 8,952 ha) is located in north-eastern West Flanders, 10 km north-east of Bruges. The municipality of Damme is made since 1976 of the former municipalities of Damme, Moerkerke (including the former municipalities of Hoeke and Lapscheure since 1970), Oostkerke and Sijsele.
After the floods of the XIth century, dykes were built to protect
Bruges and its hinterland and to set up new land for agriculture.
Following this and the withdrawal of the sea, the channel (Scheure)
that linked Bruges to the see silted up. A new canal was dug to link
again Bruges with the Scheure. The flood of 1134 formed the Zwin. The
dykes on the two banks were linked near "Ten Damme" (the dam); a new
canal was dug between Bruges and Damme. There was a lock at the end of
the canal, allowing the ships to be transferred. Damme became the outer
harbour of Bruges.
Damme was originally called Hondsdamme, but this name has nothing to do
with a dog (in Dutch, hond), whatever the municipal arms cant. The
name was indeed derived from honte, "a marshy area near the mouth of a
river". The legend says that the devil, with the appearance of a stray
dog, scared the dyke builders with his yelling. When a dyke once broke, the
dyke builders cut the head of the dog, pushed the body in the gap of
the dyke and Damme was saved both from the flood and the dog's yelling.
Hopefully for the dog, this is only a legend.
To boost trade, Count of Flanders Philip of Alsace granted municipal
rights to Damme in 1180. The sea ships sailed up to Damme, where their
cargo was transferred to smaller ships and forwarded to Bruges through
the canal. Due to overproduction, Damme was also allowed to store
herrings and wine. The town grewq uickly, with the building of the
church, the market hall, the St. John's hospital, a Beguine convent and
several chapels. Damme was then one of the biggest outer harbours of the
time. When King of France Philippe-Auguste seized the town on 1213, the
whole French fleet, made of 1700 ships, could moor in the harbour. In
1262, the Lieve canal was dug between Ghent and Damme, which entered
inside the town via a lock. Damme was not protected by walls; following
the conquest of the town by King of France Philippe le Bel in 1297
and its quick reconquest by the Flemings, fortifications were built. A
second wall was achieved in the XIV-XVth century.
The entrance of the harbour progressively silted up and the big ships
could no longer reach Damme. The main maritime trade moved to other
ports with deeper waters, mostly Lamminsvliet (today, Sluis). This was the end of the trade in Damme, which transformed into a military
stronghold.
The Eighty Years' War between Spain and the Northern Low Countries
broke out in 1568. In 1604, Prince Maurice of Nassau seized Sluis and
Aardenburg, so that Damme was located on the frontline. From 1615 to 1620, the Spaniards completely rebuilt the town fortifications as a
seven-pointed star. The former harbour was tranformed into an
ammunition depot. The town was ruled by a military governor and Damme
remained a fortified town until 1760. During the Spanish Succession War
(1703-1713), the fortifications of Damme were even increased, which
caused their occupation in 1706 by the troops of Duke of Marlborough.
Eighty years later, Emperor Joseph II ordered to sell most of those new
fortifications.
In 1810, Napoléon I attempted to link Bruges to the Scheldt via a canal.
This canal, known as the Damse Vaart, is not completed yet and ends in
Sluis. Unfortunately, the canal crossed Damme and several historical
buildings, including the grain market and burghers' houses, were
destroyed. The three waterways that merge in Damme (the Lieve, the Reie
and the Zwin) were filled up with the sand extracted to dig the Damse
Vaart.
Moerkerke, mentioned for the first time in 1110, means "the church
(kerke) in the marshes" (moeras), even if the church was originally
only a chapel. In the past, the domain of Moerkercque was transferred
from the local family of the same name to the famous Flemish family van
Praet. The Sarepta convent was located in the fields between Moerkerke
and Sijsele; it was founded in 1468 by the nuns of St. Elisabeth and
abandoned one century later under the pressure of the Geuzen, who
burned it down in 1586. None of the seven mills of the village has
survived until now. The hamlet Het Molentje (The Small Mill) is named
after a mill that worked until 1922. The Schuts mill was destroyed on
12 September 1944 by a Canadian tank since it was used as an
observation post by the Germans. There were violent fightings here,
known as the battle of Molentje.
Hoeke was once a small town with a town hall and a port on the Zwin,
founded in the XIIIth century by merchants from Hamburg, Lübeck and
Bremen. In the XIV-XVth centuries, Hoeke had a wealthy market for grain
and salted fish. It eventually merged with Monnikenrede and Damme in
1594. However, Hoeke was to small to resist the economic and military
competition with Bruges, Damme and Sluis. Invasions, blazes and floods
speeded up the decline of the town in the XV-XVIth centuries.
Lapscheure was known in the past as Lapiscura, Lappescura (XIIth
century), Lapscura (XIIIth century), Laepscure or Laepscuere (XIV-XVth
centuries), Laepschuere (XVIth century); the current name appeared in the
XVIIth century. It is related to a barn (in Dutch, schuur) belonging
to a farmer named Laepe. In 1110, Bishop of Tournai Balderic
transferred to the abbey of Saint-Quentin-en-Vermandois the churches of
Oostkerke together with the chapels of Lappescure, Moerkerke, Wulpen on
the Cadzand island, and Waescapelle. During the Eighty Years' War, the
rebels from Sluis broke the dykes of the Zwin and Lapscheure was
destroyed. The inlet called Lapscheurse Gat forms the border between
Belgium and the Netherlands. The village was on the front line, which
explains the building of several forts, for instance the Sint-Donaas
fort, the Frederikfort, and the Sint-Job fort. Lapscheure was seized by
the Dutch in 1704 and incorporated to the Netherlands in 1715.
Oostkerke (lit., "the Eastern church") had one of the earliest religious communities in the region, to which the churches of Moerkerke, Hoeke, Damme, Westkapelle and Lapscheure belonged for long. It was founded by St. Guthago, a monk of royal Scottish or Irish origin, who lived in the VIIth or IXth century. Guthago lived as a pilgrim and died near Oostkerke, where he was buried. A chapel was built and the Bishop of Tournai ordered in 1159 the transfer of the saint's relics into a shrine. The towers of the church were used by the seamen as beacons; at the end of the Second World War, they were dynamited by the Germans. Oostkerke had its port, called Monnikenrede, which was suppressed during the digging of the Damse Vaart. In 1974, Oostkerke was elected the most beautiful village of West Flanders.
Sijsele, as opposed to the other villages, is not located in the polders but in the sandy area. It is the most crowdy village of the municipality, with nearly half of the total inhabitants of Damme, and the oldest one. In 1239, Egidius van Breedene transfered a piece of land to Cistercian nuns, who built there from 1247 to 1257 the abbey of Spermalie. The Gueuze sacked the abbey in 1587 and the nuns escaped to Bruges. There was in the past a powerful feudal domain in Sijsele. Jan van Sisjele took in 1302 the French party (Leliaerts); after the Flemish victory, his domain was confiscated by the Count of Flanders until 1360. King Philipp II made of Sijsele a Barony.
Dource: Municipal website
Ivan Sache, 10 June 2007
The municipal flag of Damme is horizontally divided red-white-red with
a black dog in the middle of the white stripe.
According to Gemeentewapens in België - Vlaanderen en Brussel, the flag was adopted by the Municipal Council on 20 January 1981, confirmed by Royal Decree on 13 March 1981 and published in thev Belgian official gazette on 30 April 1981.
The flag is a banner of the municipal arms. The dog is a greyhound.
Pascal Vagnat & Ivan Sache, 10 June 2007