Last modified: 2008-06-21 by ivan sache
Keywords: momignies | macon | fleurs-de-lis: 3 (yellow) | ermine (black) | flowers: 3 (yellow) |
Links: FOTW homepage |
search |
disclaimer and copyright |
write us |
mirrors
Municipal flag of Momignies - Images by Arnaud Leroy, 15 May 2007
Left, flag in use
Right, flag proposal, not in use
See also:
The municipality of Momignies (5,140 inhabitants on 1 January 2007; 8,558 ha, including 2,785 ha of forests) is located in the Boot of Hainaut, west of Chimay. The municipality of Momignies is made since 1976 of the former municipalities of Momignies, Macon, Monceau-Imbrechies, Macquenoise, Beauwelz, Forge-Philippe and Seloignes. Some 3/4 of the limits of the municipality is made by the border with France.
The main monument of Momignies is the big bandstand built on the village square. The bandstands represent a local tradition dating back to the end of the XIXth century. In the Boot of Hainaut and in the country of Avesnois (in France), most villages had a square with a bandstand. They were the ordinary people's alternative to the private concerts given by the wealthy in their parks and residences. The Momignies bandstand, build in 1887 is a classical, octogonal edifice, in which the musicians sit slightly above the ground level (in French, this is called kiosque à musique and is a common, old-fashioned feature of the spas). The kiosque à danser seems to be specific of Hainaut: the edifice has the shape of a mushroom and the stand is located on a stalk, so that the dancers can go under it.
On 8 February 1944, the American B17 Susan Ruth heading to Francfort
was shot and crashed down near Beauwelz. Two out of the 10 crew members
were killed during the crash, another three were captured and executed
by the Germans in Saint-Rémy on 22 April. Four out of the five
survivors could attend the inauguration of the commemorative stele in
August 1989.
On 2 September 1944, the American troops entered Belgium at the border
hamlet of Cendron, near the village of Forge-Philippe. The first
fighting for the liberation of Belgium took place the same day on the
ridge of Imbrechies, where 12 GIs were killed.
Momignies has a long tradition of glassmaking, which dates back to the
Roman times. There was plenty of wood, sand, soda and water in the
region. The local sandstone was used to build the ovens and the
crucibles. The glassworks were set up on the edge of the forests;
Emperor Charles V allowed the glassmakers to build ovens wherever they
wanted. Several glassworkers came from Venice or Germany, and the trade
secrets were transmitted only from father to son. In the XVIIth
century, most glassworks disappeared from Momignies because of the
wars. Moreover, the beginning of industrial coal mining in the basin of
Charleroi encouraged the glassworkers to move there: the first
glassworks powered by coal was set up in Charleroi in 1669, so that the
town became quickly one of the main world centers of glass production.
Several glassworks still existed near Momignies, but in France. In
1898, the French manufacturer Chambon decided to set up glassworks in Belgium because the English
import tax was lower for the Belgian than for the French
products. The Momignies glassworks employed in 1889 53 men, 5 women and
30 children. The glassworks was a good example of paternalistic
capitalism, with a three-day festival on St. Lawrence Day, decorations,
medals, a choral etc. Édouard Chambon wrote around 1923 a
Glass-blowers' Song.
The mechanization of glass-blowing started in 1932 and was completed in
1946. The Momignies factory was incorporated to the Verlipack group in
1975; in March 1985, the group was bankrupted and the Momignies
glassworks was reopened as the Nouvelles Verreries de Momignies. It
was incorporated to the German group Gerresheim in 1997 and submitted
to a major restructuring programme in 2002-2004. Today, the Nouvelles
Verreries de Momignies produce 240 millions pieces per year, mostly
for the French luxury industry (L'Oréal, Givenchy, Dior, YSL, Chanel...)
Sources:
Ivan Sache, 15 May 2007
The municipal flag of Momignies is vertically divided blue-white-red with the
municipal coat of arms in the middle.
The coat of arms of Momignies is "Quarterly, 1 and 4 argent three fesses
gules, 2 and 3 quarterly azure three fleurs de lis or placed 2 and 1
gules an escutcheon ermines all over, an escutcheon gules three
quintefoils or.
On the flag , the shield is topped by a crown and surmonts a yellow
label with the name of the municipality in black letters.
According to Servais, these were the arms of Macon before 1976.
The first and fourth quarters are the arms of Croÿ, found on several
Belgian municipal coat of arms.
Arnaud Leroy, Pascal Vagnat & Ivan Sache, 15 May 2007