Breendonk

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Inside the fort
Inside the fort

Breendonk is a small town in Belgium, population 3,000, halfway between Brussels and Antwerp.

Its name stems from the medieval Bredene Dunc which translates as "wide mound" or "a dry spot in the marshes."

In the 19th century it was known for its beautiful Neo-Gothic church and the lavish mansion of the Earl de Buisseret. Both were destroyed by the Belgian army at the start of World War I because they obstructed the gunner's view from the local fortifications.

From the 20th century on it was best known for its fortification, built in 1906. It was judged that Antwerp, being continental Europe's second most important port, needed two circles of fortifications for its defence. Breendonk's fortification was part of the outer defensive ring. These fortifications were built on the same site previously occupied by Roman fortifications, this site having been selected because it was the only source of clean water in what until the 1700s was swampland. The modern fortifications fell to the Germans after only a seven day siege.

During World War II the fort was briefly used as the General Headquarters of King Leopold III, leading the Belgian armed forces. After his surrender to the Germans it was transformed into a concentration camp by the Nazis (primarily as a transit camp for transport to Auschwitz). It gained a grim reputation as a place of torture and interrogation of a wide variety of prisoners.

The fort is now home to the "Breendonk Fort National Memorial" which provides a historical record of the Nazi terror in Belgium. This museum is referenced for its historical significance in a W. G. Sebald novel titled Austerlitz.

Breendonk is now most famous for its brewery where the Belgian blond beer Duvel (meaning "Devil" in the local South Brabantian dialect of Dutch), is brewed. The brewery reputedly uses the same spring once used by the Romans and the World War I fortifications, but this needs confirmation.

The village of Breendonk was merged in 1977 into the commune of Puurs, while the fort and surrounding area east of the A12 road (leading from Antwerp to Brussels) became part of the commune of Willebroek.

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Coordinates: 51°03′N, 4°20′E