Last modified: 2006-12-23 by ivan sache
Keywords: nord | coudekerque-branche | nieuw-koudekerke | nieu-coudekercque | porcupine | hedgehog | crown (yellow) |
Links: FOTW homepage |
search |
disclaimer and copyright |
write us |
mirrors
Flag of Coudekerque-Branche - Image by Olivier Touzeau, 2 April 2004
See also:
The municipality of Coudekerque-Branche (Dutch, Nieuw-Koudekerke; local
Flemish written form, Nieu-Coudekercke; 25,000 inhabitants, 902 ha) is
located a few kilometers south of Dunkirk.
The village of Coudekerque
has been existing at least since 1067 (as Koudkerque - the cold church). Following the
battle of the Dunes (1658), the territory of Coudekerque was divided into two parts,
the northern part being allocated to England and incorporated to the
Magistrate of Dunkirk while the southern part was allocated to Spain and
incorporated to the châtellenie of Bergues. The center of the village, in the southern part, remained known as Coudekerque, or
Coudekerque-Village, whereas the northern branch was called Branche-de-Coudekerque.
The foundation of the municipality of Coudekerque-Branche was
officialized by a Royal Decree on 14 December 1789 (the very same Decree that
calls the gathering of the States General!). In 1790, the population of the
municipality was 1,200. Coudekerque-Branche was divided into four
sections limited by canals:
- section A, between the sea and the canal of Veurne, which formed the municipality of Rosedael in 1860
- section B, between the canal of Veurne and the canal of the Moëres, which
formed the boroughs of Grand and Petit Steendam
- section C, between the canal of the Moëres and the canal of Bergues
- section D, between the canal of Bergues and the canal of Bourbourg.
The industrialization of Coudekerque-Branche started in the XIXth
century in the western part of the municipality, because of the canals
and the railway (1848) which made the city very close to the port of
Dunkirk. The Dickson mill was opened in 1837, followed by the Mahieu
sugar house, the Lavergne oil factory, the Clère && Boilet refinery, the
Pieters brickyard, breweries, and the Weill mill. Between the two World
Wars, the city enlarged to the east, with the warehouses of the
Coopérateurs de la Flandre et de l'Artois (1922). New boroughs were
built by the real estate company Le Foyer Flamand, which was a
subsidiary of the Weill mill.
Like any reputable city in Flanders, Coudekerque-Branche has a giant,
called Joséphine Peule, or la Peule, representing a mill worker. On 16
June 1996, la Peule was married to Celten the Roadie, the giant of the
Belgian city of Poelkapelle.
Source: Municipal website
Ivan Sache, 2 April 2004
The flag of Coudekerque-Branche shows the attribute of the municipal coat of arms, a crowned white hedgehog, on a red field.
The municipal coat of arms shows the crowned hedgehog on a black field, being
thus blazoned as:
De sable au porc-épic d'argent couronné d'or (Sable a porcupine
argent crowned or).
The blazon says porcupine, but the animal is indeed a hedgehog, as
proved by the name of local sport teams and associations. The municipal
arms were adopted in 1937 and reused the medieval arms of the lords of
Coudekerque or Coudecapeele.
Olivier Touzeau & Ivan Sache, 2 April 2004