Last modified: 2008-03-29 by ivan sache
Keywords: middelkerke | lombardsijde | westende | lion (black) | anchor (black) | star: 6 points (black) |
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Flag of Middelkerke - Images by Arnaud Leroy, 24 March 2007
Left, flag in use
Right, official flag, not in use
See also:
The municipality of Middelkerke (18,080 inhabitants on 1 January 2007; 7,565 ha) is located on the North Sea, a few kilometers south-west of Ostend. The municipality of Middelkerke is made since 1976 of the former municipalities of Middelkerke, Leffinge, Spermalie (the result of the merging in 1971 of Schore, Sint-Pieters-Kapelle, Mannekensvere and Slijpe), Westende (including Lombardsijde since 1971) and Wilskerke. In 1971, the borough of Raversijde, formerly part of Middelkerke, was incorporated into Ostend.
In the Middle Ages, the nine villages belonged to the Country of Bruges (Brugse Vrije), except Lombardsijde that had been granted municipal rights in the early Middle Ages; the eight other villages, except Schore and Sint-Pieters-Kapelle, belonged to the domain of Camerlincx.
In 1795, the French administration set up nine municipalities, each of
them being a kerkdorp (village grouped around a church). The
windmills and the churches were used as visual landmarks, especially
the big church of Leffinge, known as "The Cathedral of the North".
In 1885, the opening of the steam (later electric) tramway line between
Ostend and Middelkerke opened up the villages and boosted the
development of coastal tourism. The line was increased the next year to
Nieuwpoort. A company founded in Brussels in 1876 attempted to build a sea resort without involving the local administration; they opened a
casino in 1891 but had to transfer the development of the resort to the
municipality of Middelkerke.The main tourist attraction at that time,
although inexpected, was the Tilted Well, a freshwater harnessing made
of concrete that progressively tilted in the sand.
The first vacation houses in Westende were built by people from
Brussels in 1896. The First World War completely wiped out the early
development of the sea resorts: the casino and the town hall of
Middelkerke were ruined, as was Westende, including the once famous
Grand Hôtel Bellevue, and most of the rural villages of the hinterland.
During the Second World War, the Germans built on the coast
fortifications belonging to the Atlantic Wall; the batteries of
Leffinge protected Ostend while those of Westende protected
Nieuwpoort. After the Liberation, several building dedicated to flat
tourism were built in Middelkerke and Westende, suppressing the last
remains of the earlier sea resorts.
Source: Municipal website
Ivan Sache, 24 March 2007
The municipal flag of Middelkerke is vertically divided, left four rows and three
columns of squares, in turn blue and white, right a black lion walking
on a tilted black anchor surmonting a white six-pointed star.
According to Gemeentewapens in België - Vlaanderen en Brussel, the flag and arms were adopted by the
Municipal Council on 10 February 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.
The lion comes from the former arms of Lombardsijde, as shown by Servais. On 25 January 1973, these arms became the arms of Westende, with a slightly modified design based on the XVIth-century seal of the village.
However, the flag in use in Middelkerke, as communicated by the municipal administration, is not the official flag but a white flag with the municipal logotype.
Arnaud Leroy, Pascal Vagnat & Ivan Sache, 24 March 2007