Last modified: 2008-01-19 by ivan sache
Keywords: lo-reninge | lion (black) | eagle: double-headed (black) |
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Flag of Lo-Reninge - Image by Arnaud Leroy, 27 June 2006
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The municipality of Lo-Reninge (3,317 inhabitants on 1 January 2007; 6,294 ha) is located between Ieper and Veurne. The municipality of Lo-Reninge is made since 1976 of the former municipalities of Lo (1,247 inh.; 1,569 ha; including the former municipality of Pollinkhove [620 inh.; 1,381 ha] since 1970) and Reninge (1,083 inh.; 2,290 ha; including the former municipality of Noordschote [356 inh.; 1,055 ha] since 1970).
Lo-Reninge is known as the Town of the Three Bishops.
His Grace Albert Dondeyne (Lo, 1901 - Leuven, 1985) studied in
Poperinge and was ordained priest in 1926. He was Professor with the
Catholic University of Leuven from 1933 to 1981 and was a famous
theologian and philosoph. He supported the aggiornamento and the
democratic reforms of the church after the Council of Vatican II
(1962-1965).
His Grace Gustave Bouve (Lo, 1902 - Lier, 1989) was ordained priest in 1928 and sent to Belgian Congo, where he was appointed bishop. He
spent five years in the small mission post of Lubunda. During the
uprising of 1 January 1962, ten of his missionaries were slaughtered.
He came back to Belgium in the mid-1970s.
His Grace Urbain Morlion (Pollinkhove, 1894 - Kirungu, 1985) served as
a priest for 62 years and as a bishop for 45 years. He was
stretcher-bearer on the Yser front during the First World War and later
apprentice priest in North Africa; he was ordained priest in 1922 in
Carthago. Appointed bishop by Pope Pius XII in 1939, he took for motto
sub tuum praesidium (Under Thy Protection). His arms shows on a
black background two spreading white birds symbolizing protection and
in the lower part a big cross and a yellow star on a blue background,
symbolizing Belgian Congo. From 1941 to 1945, Morlion served as Vicar
Apostolic in Boudewijnstad (Moba), where the grand seminary trained
priests for Katanga and Kivu. From 1959 to 1966, he was Bishop of
Kalemie-Kirungu, where he has to endure rebellions and the dead of
several missionaries in the 1960-1964 years.
Lo was surrounded in the Middle Ages by a wall defended by four
gates; the town was then 400 m in diameter. The Westpoort (Western
Gate), dating from the XIVth century, is the only gate still visible;
it was restored in 1852 and 1991. Near the gate is located a big yew
known as Caesar's tree. The legend says that Caesar on his way to
Brittania tied up his horse to the yew and had a nap under its shadow.
The St. Peter's abbey of Lo was active from 1093 to 1797; it was
destroyed and burned by the Gueuze in 1578-1580 and rebuilt in the
first half of the XVIIth century. The pigeon house was built under
Abbot Patricius Fraeys in 1710 on the domain of the abbey. The legend
says that when the newly appointed abbot went to Rome, the monks
prepared him a surprise for his return; when back, he saw the pigeon
house with its 1,132 boxes. The pigeon house was indeed the symbol of
feudal power; only the lords of higher rank were allowed to build one.
Noordschote has a monument to the Unknown Zouave, inaugurated in 1951, recalling the sacrifice of a French zouave on 11 September 1914. He was captured by the Germans who forced him to march with them as a human shield. Coming near a French position, he shouted Mais tirez nom de Dieu ce sont les boches ("Shoot for God's sake the Krauts are coming") and was killed by the French with all his enemies.
Reninge had in the past a castle built in Renaissance style in 1627 but
nothing has been kept of it. The modern castle of Reninge was built
after the First World War. Its facade shows the coat of arms granted to
the family Vilain XIII. The family motto, to be read above the entrance
gate of the castle, is De Gand Vilain sans reproche (From Ghent Vilain beyond reproach).
Reninge is the birth town of the painter Matthijs De Visch (1701-1765),
the most important painter in West Flanders of his time. His works can
be seen in museums in Bruges, Damme, Ieper and Bergues (France), in the
castle of Belœil and in several churches, including those of Lo and Reninge.
Pollinkhove has the B-17 Monument, recalling the crash of an American B-17 aircraft on 13 January 1943. The plane came from the English base of Chelveston and was hit by the German Flak above Fives, near Lille (north of France). The ten crew members died in the crash. The monument was built by architect Wouter Robbe in the borough "De Groenen Boomgaard" (lit., the Green Orchard) where the plane crashed. It was inaugurated on 23 November 2003 in the presence of five relatives of the plane navigator.
Source: VVV Lo-Reninge website
Ivan Sache, 27 June 2006
The municipal flag of Lo-Reninge is white with a black double-headed
eagle surmonted with a yellow shield charged with a black lion.
According to Gemeentewapens in België - Vlaanderen en Brussel, the flag and arms of Lo-Reninge were adopted by the Municipal Council on 5 September 1984, confirmed by the
Executive of Flanders on 7 July 1987 and published in the Belgian
official gazette on 3 December 1987.
The flag reproduces the dexter part of the municipal arms, which are the arms of the former
municipality of Lo.
The senester part of the arms of Lo-Reninge reproduces
the arms of the former municipality of Reninge, "Ermine an escutcheon
argent a fess sable".
Arnaud Leroy, Pascal Vagnat & Ivan Sache, 27 June 2006