Flemish Heraldic Council
Vlaamse Heraldische Raad | |
---|---|
Formation | 11 April 1984 |
Purpose/focus | Granting and recording of heraldry in the Flemish Community of Belgium |
Region served | Flemish Community of Belgium |
Official languages | Dutch |
Website | Vlaamse Heraldische Raad |
The Flemish Heraldic Council or Vlaamse Heraldische Raad advises the Flemish Government on all matters relating to heraldry. It currently operates as the fifth division of the Royal Commission of Monuments and Sites or Koninklijke Commissie voor Monumenten en Landschappen.
The Council was created on 11 April 1984, as the successor to the Subcommittee for Heraldry or Subcommissie Heraldiek, established in 1978. Its prime task was to supervise the granting of a coat of arms and a flag to all municipalities of the Flemish Region. Following the reorganization of the Belgian provinces, the council's field of action was extended to provincial arms and flags in 1994. Since 2000 the Council has likewise advised the Flemish Government on grants of arms to Flemish individuals and corporations. In the mean time more than 100 of such grants have received official sanction.
Heraldry of provinces and municipalities
Before 1977 the heraldry of Belgian municipalities was regulated by two Royal Decrees. The Royal Decree of 6 February 1837 provided for the recognition of arms used by local governments during the Ancien Régime.[1] The Royal Decree of 14 February 1913 allowed municipalities that could not prove their entitlement to ancient arms to petition for a grant of new arms.[2] In either case recognitions and grants of arms to municipalities were made by Royal Decree. The procedure depended on the initiative of local councils and was administered by the Ministry of the Interior in close consultation with the Council of the Nobility. By 1976 39% of the Belgian municipalities were armigerous. There were, however, significant regional differences. Whereas 61% of the municipalities in the Flemish Region had the right to bear arms, only 25% of those in the Walloon Region enjoyed the same. The majority of armigerous municipalities was even more pronounced in the provinces of East Flanders (73%) and Antwerp (75%).[3] Broadly speaking these figures reflected the relative degree of urbanization and the long and strong tradition of local self-government in the erstwhile feudal entities of Flanders and Brabant.
Heraldry of families and corporations
Current members of the Flemish Heraldic Council
- André Vandewalle, president
- Jozef Dauwe
- Luc Duerloo
- Erik Houtman
- Véronique Lambert
- Monique Van Melkebeek
- Jean-Jacques van Ormelingen
- Patrick Van Waterschoot, secretary
Sources
- Viaene-Awouters, Lieve (1977). "Samenvoeging van gemeenten en gemeentewapens". Driemaandelijks tijdschrift van het Gemeentekrediet van België (Gemeentekrediet) 31: 289–301. ISSN 0773-9273.
- Scufflaire, Andrée (1979). "De gemeentewapens na de samenvoeging van gemeenten". Driemaandelijks tijdschrift van het Gemeentekrediet van België (Gemeentekrediet) 33: 171–179. ISSN 0773-9273.
- Viaene-Awouters, Lieve; Warlop, Ernest (2002). Gemeentewapens in België: Vlaanderen en Brussel. Gemeentekrediet. ISBN 90-5066-201-3.
See also
References
External links
- The Flemish Heraldic Council official site, with online register of all arms granted to private persons and corporations (in Dutch).