Heist-op-den-Berg

Heist-op-den-Berg

Flag

Coat of arms
Heist-op-den-Berg
Location in Belgium
Coordinates:
Country Belgium
Region Flemish Region
Community Flemish Community
Province Antwerp
Arrondissement Mechelen
Government
 • Mayor Luc Vleugels (CD&V)
 • Governing party/ies CD&V, VLD
Area
 • Total 86.46 km2 (33.4 sq mi)
Population (1 January 2010)[1]
 • Total 39,866
 • Density 461.1/km2 (1,194.2/sq mi)
Postal codes 2220-2223
Area codes 015, 014, 016, 03
Website www.heist-op-den-berg.be

Heist-op-den-Berg is a municipality located in the Belgian province of Antwerp. The municipality comprises the villages of Booischot (including the hamlet Pijpelheide), Hallaar, Heist-op-den-Berg proper (including the hamlets: Heist-Goor,[2] Heist-Station, Zonderschot, Heist-Centrum,[3] and Bruggeneinde[4]), Itegem, Schriek and Wiekevorst.

Contents

History

The 48-meter-high hill on which Heist would later be built (hence the adjunct name op-den-Berg meaning “on the hill”) was formed during the early Ice Age. As can be appreciated from the artifacts shown at the regional museum on the city’s main square, this area was already populated in prehistoric times. Soon after the Romans yielded this land to the invading Germanic peoples in the 3rd and 4th century, Christianization followed. The village of Itegem, located right on the Nete River, was most likely the first hamlet to be founded, as suggested by a document dating from 976. Chapels in Hallaar and Itegem were built in the 12th century. This century also marked the beginnings of the Duchy of Brabant, of which this whole area was a part.

Around the year 1200, a military fort was built at the current location of the Ter Laken castle, on Booischot’s territory. Schriek, which was founded in 1125, got its own chapel in 1260 while the main church at Heist was built in 1340. These two religious buildings were heavily damaged during the wars of religion around 1600. During most of the Middle Ages, agriculture was driving the economy and several huge farming domains were built, some of which still subsist today (e.g., Wimpelhoeve in Wiekevorst, traces of which date from the 12th century, and Pandoerenhoeve in Schriek, dating from 1624). During the 17th and 18th century, the miraculous wooden statue of the Virgin and Child in the Hallaar church became an object of pilgrimage.

The current city hall was built in 1844, fourteen years after the foundation of Belgium as an independent country. Today, the city is mostly a residential centre, which offers services to the surrounding communities.

Events

Sights

Famous inhabitants

See also

External links

Footnotes

  1. ^ Population per municipality on 1 January 2010 (XLS; 221 KB)
  2. ^ Goor is an old Dutch word for swamp. In the old days there was a marsh here.
  3. ^ Centrum means center (of the village).
  4. ^ Bruggeneinde is 'the end of the bridge' in English.