County of Namur
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The County of Namur (Template:Langx) was a medieval county of the Holy Roman Empire with its military and administrative capital at the town of Namur, at the merging of the Sambre and Meuse rivers in what is now French-speaking Belgium. Like most of what is now Belgium, during the late Middle Ages it became part of the Burgundian Netherlands, which subsequently became a possession of the Kings of Spain, and later of Austria. The county ceased to exist during the French Revolution, when the entire region was conquered by the revolutionary French Republic.
The modern Belgian province of Namur is larger than the old county. The boundaries of the province are based upon those of the French départment of Sambre-et-Meuse, and stretch further eastwards and southwards.
Prehistory to the Roman periodEdit
The city of Namur most likely arose around 'the Champeau', a rocky hill between the Sambre and Meuse rivers. Numerous prehistoric flint weapons have been found in the area. During Roman times, the region around Namur was first mentioned in Julius Caesar's {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} in the second half of the 1st century BC. The exact boundaries of the peoples he mentioned are not known, but to the west of Namur were the Nervii, and to the east the Germani cisrhenani. It has been suggested that Namur itself may have been within the territory of the Aduatuci who Caesar described as descendants of the Cimbri and Teutons, whose main main fort was possibly at {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}.<ref>Oppidum van de Aduatuci ligt in Thuin (Henegouwen) Template:In lang</ref>) Caesar and the Romans conquered the Belgae cities and their territory were incorporated into the Roman Empire.
OriginsEdit
From at least the 8th century, the larger region between the Sambre and Meuse rivers was in fact commonly referred to as the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} or {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} of Lomme (the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} in Latin, or {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} in German), which also stretched north of the river junction, at least as far as Gembloux. From at least about 800, this region was one of the ones under the religious jurisdiction of the bishopric of Liège, along with Hasbania, Condroz and the Ardennes to the west of it.<ref name=nonn/>
During the late 9th century, and throughout the 10th century, there are also references to a county of Lomme ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}), apparently indicating that this region had only one count.<ref name=nonn>Template:Citation</ref> In the year 832 a document by Emperor Louis the Pious indicates that at least part of the region could be referred to as the pagus of Namur, because it refers to Beez and Wépion, two places now within the city of Namur, as being in the countryside ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}) of Namur (Template:Langx). There was however no mention is this period of any county or count of Namur. During the 10th century, records mentioning local counts Berengar, his possible descendant Robert, and Robert's son Albert I, demonstrate that the counts of Lomme were established at a fort in Namur. Berengar was referred to as a count of Namur in 919, but it is only in the time of Albert that the normal terminology changed. An imperial document of 992 calls Albert a count of Namur. Another imperial document of 986 refers to a county of Namur, when it says that Brogne was in the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} of Lomme, and the county of Namur. After this period, the term Lomme was no longer used.<ref name=nonn/>
The first house of NamurEdit
Template:Chart top Template:Chart/start Template:Chart Template:Chart Template:Chart Template:Chart Template:Chart Template:Chart Template:Chart Template:Chart Template:Chart Template:Chart Template:Chart Template:Chart/end Template:Chart bottom Albert III (1063–1102) took over some positions which had been held by his wife's previous husband, including the office of advocate of the Princely Abbey of Stavelot-Malmedy. Until the start of the 12th century, Namur was threatened by its powerful neighbours Brabant, Hainaut and Liège. Important parts of the county were annexed. The city of Dinant, for example, came into possession of Liège. From the 12th century on, the counts of Namur managed to more or less compensate for the losses they had suffered. Count Godfrey, for example, acquired the county of Longwy, thanks to his marriage with Ermesinde of Luxembourg.
The last ruler in the first line that ruled Namur was Henry the Blind (1139–96), who also inherited the counties of {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, La Roche-en-Ardenne and Luxembourg.
12th and 13th centuriesEdit
After Henry's death, a fierce succession war broke out between his sister's son Baldwin V, Count of Hainaut, and Henry's daughter Ermesinde. Baldwin V, who also became count of Flanders, eventually received the county of Namur, while Ermesinde received the Ardennes counties of Luxembourg, Laroche and Durbuy.
The counties of Flanders, Hainaut and Namur didn't remain united for long, eventually coming into the hands of the descendants of three different lines of descendants of Baldwin's daughters. In 1263 the count of Namur, Baldwin II of Courtenay, sold his county to the count of Flanders, Guy of Dampierre. A branch of the house of Dampierre ruled until 1429. In 1421 John III sold the right to inherit Namur to the Duke of Burgundy, Philip the Good, who was also count of Flanders. Philip became count of Namur on John's death in 1429.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Namur, Flanders, Hainaut, Luxembourg, Brabant, and Holland became united under Philip of Burgundy. Template:Chart top Template:Chart/start Template:Chart Template:Chart Template:Chart Template:Chart Template:Chart Template:Chart Template:Chart Template:Chart Template:Chart Template:Chart Template:Chart Template:Chart Template:Chart Template:Chart Template:Chart Template:Chart Template:Chart Template:Chart Template:Chart Template:Chart Template:Chart/end Template:Chart bottom
The Burgundian and Habsburg periodsEdit
Philip the Good integrated the county of Namur into a large territorial and political union, called the Burgundian Netherlands. From the 15th century on, the county of Namur, along with the rest of the Netherlands, were ruled by the Habsburgs. During this period, the Burgundians and Habsburgs strengthened the city and built new walls around it. During the 16th and 17th centuries, the city became an important military stronghold, and was repeatedly besieged for this reason. Template:Chart top Template:Chart/start Template:Chart Template:Chart Template:Chart Template:Chart Template:Chart Template:Chart Template:Chart Template:Chart Template:Chart Template:Chart Template:Chart Template:Chart Template:Chart Template:Chart Template:Chart Template:Chart/end Template:Chart bottom
The Spanish king Philip II wanted to turn Namur into a Roman Catholic bastion as a bulwark against the rise of Calvinism. Namur received a bishopric's seat in 1559 and several religious orders were required to establish themselves in Namur. In consequence, the city gained a specific Catholic character. Philip II also managed to make considerable reinforcements to the Citadel of Namur. In 1577, Philip II sent Don Juan of Austria to the Netherlands as the new governor. In Namur, Don Juan received Margaret of Valois (the sister of the French king), and organised a magnificent celebration in her honor.
Troubled times and changing rulersEdit
Namur has had a crucial military role throughout history. After the Spanish period, the strategically important city was repeatedly besieged. In 1692, the troops of Louis XIV of France took the city after a lengthy and furious siege. Louis and his legendary military engineer Sébastien Le Prestre de Vauban personally oversaw the siege. Three years later, in 1695, William III of Orange retook Namur. But the Dutch occupation did not last long. At the Treaty of Utrecht of 1713, the Southern Netherlands came under the rule of the Austrian house of Habsburg. Though the Austrians ruled over the city, the strategically important citadel remained in the hands of the Dutch. The Austrian rule returned peace and calm to the Netherlands.
The French revolutionists and the United Kingdom of the NetherlandsEdit
In 1790 the county of Namur was one of the founders of the United States of Belgium. In 1794 the revolutionary France occupied Namur, immediately introducing a repressive regime. Namur became part of the French department of Sambre-et-Meuse. The French occupation was abruptly ended following Napoleon's defeat at the Battle of Waterloo in 1815. In the Congress of Vienna that followed, the southern and Northern Netherlands were combined to form the United Kingdom of the Netherlands. In this period, the citadel was again rebuilt and more or less received its present-day looks. The kingdom of the Netherlands would not last long. In 1830 the Belgian Revolution broke out, in which Belgium became independent from the Netherlands. The strategically important bastion of Namur played a decisive role in the battles associated with the Belgian Revolution.
Economic activitiesEdit
The economic activities of the County of Namur were diverse. Next to the cultivation of grapes in the river valleys, the agriculture also cultivated flax, that formed the basis of the wool industry. Clay formed the raw materials for the ceramic-production and for the making of molds for the so-called dinanderie, the overall name for the yellow copper brass art objects such as lecterns, candleholders, tableware and others. The metal industry was also important: in the 16th century the mouth of the Meuse (Dinant, Bouvignes, Namur, but also {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} and Liège) was the central region for metallurgy in the Southern Netherlands. Along the banks of the Meuse, limestone was mined and exported.
See alsoEdit
ReferencesEdit
- Léon Vanderkindere, La formation territoriale des principautés Belges au Moyen Age, Tome II, p200