Last modified: 2007-11-03 by ivan sache
Keywords: crisnee | saltire (red) | diamonds: 5 (red) | fusils: 5 (gules) |
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Municipal flag of Crisnée - Image by Arnaud Leroy, 30 May 2005
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The municipality of Crisnée (2,828 inhabitants on 1 January 2007; 1,685 ha) is located in the north of the province of Liège, 15 km from Liège and 10 km from Tongeren and Waremme. The municipality of Crisnée is made since 1965 of the former municipalities of Crisnée, Fize-le-Marsal, Kemexhe, Odeur and Thys. The municipality was not modified by the administrative reform of 1976.
The local historian Eugène Dethier claims that Crisnée was the site of the ancient town of Atuatica; his claim is based on the finding of the remains of a Roman estate (villa) near Crisnée in 1935. Before the Vth century, the region was evangelized by St. Materne and his followers, who organized parishes with a chapel and a presbytery. At that time, Kemexhe was the mother church of Thys, whereas Crisnée and Otrange depended on Fize; Odeur depended on Othée. Every year on Whit Tuesday, the parishioners organized a solemn procession and brought the church tax to the Canon of Tongeren. Today, a single priest serves the five parishes of Crisnée.
The region of Liège was scoured from 1290 to 1325 by a vendetta that opposed the local noble families. The writer Jacques de Hemricourt called it the War of the Awans and the Waroux, after the two main parties. In Kemexhe, the main families involved in the conflict were Beaurieu (who bore "Barruly of ten pieces argent and azure a lion gules overall") and Pénilh (who bore "Gules a lion or"). During the XVIIth century, Crisnée was occupied and sacked by troops fighting there: Duke of Marlborough stayed in Thys; the Dutch General Overkerke stayed in the presbytery of Crisnée; de Weert burnt down Odeur and Kemexhe was plundered by the Brandeburg troops.
Source: Municipal website
Ivan Sache, 30 May 2005
The municipal flag of Crisnée is white with five red lozenges and a
yellow canton with a red saltire.
According to Armoiries communales en Belgique. Communes wallonnes, bruxelloises et germanophones, the flag was adopted by the Municipal
Council on 23 October 2001, following the proposal made by the Heraldry and Vexillology Council
of the French Community, and confirmed by the Executive of the French Community on 15 July 2003, with the following description:
Blanc chargé de cinq losanges accolés rouges occupant tout le tablier
avec un canton jaune et la croix diagonale rouge couvrant la moitié
supérieure des deux premiers losanges à la hampe.
The flag is a banner of the municipal arms, adopted in the same time as
the flag, D'argent à cinq fusées de gueules, accolées en fasce, au
franc-quartier d'or au sautoir de gueules (Argent five fusils gules per fess a canton or a saltire gules).
These arms belonged in the Middle Ages to the lord of Crisnée.
Arnaud Leroy, Pascal Vagnat & Ivan Sache, 30 May 2005