Last modified: 2005-02-26 by ivan sache
Keywords: houthulst | bird (black) | raven | crozier (blue) | keys: 2 (red) | corbie |
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Houthulst (9,000 inhabitants) is located in the arrondissement of Diksmuide.
The flag of Houthulst is horizontally divided green-white-blue with the municipal coat of arms in the middle. The colors of the flag were derived from the former arms of Houthulst (white and green) and Klerken (white and blue).
The flag was adopted on 11 March 1981.
Source: Municipal website
Jarig Bakker, 2 October 2004
The coat of arms of Houthulst is:
Or a crozier azure supported by a raven argent with two turned keys gules.
The arms recall the origin of Houthulst. The arms of Houthulst (lit., woody holly) originally belonged to the abbey of Corbie. The raven (Latin: corvus, French: corbeau) cants for the name of Corbie. The keys symbolize St. Peter, first Pope and patron saint of the abbey. The crozier with its curl turned left refers to the exemption from the power of the local Bishop granted to the abbey. The exemption was first granted in 855 by Pope Benedict III. The arms were modified many times.
Source: Municipal website
Jarig Bakker, 2 October 2004
Corbie is today a small city (6,000 inhabitants) located in the
department of Somme (Picardie, France).
In 657, St. Bathilde (d. 680), wife of King Clovis II (635-657; King of
Neustria and Burgundy, 639-657), founded the monastery of Corbie.
In the Carolingian times, the monastery was ruled by St. Adalard, a
cousin of Charlemagne. It was one of the main centers of the Christian
civilisation at that time. More than 300 monks chanted night and day
the Lord's perpetual praise. St. Paschase Radbert wrote in Corbie the
first theological treatise on the Eucharist. Monks from Corbie founded
a daughter monastery in Corbey (Westphalia). Under the rule of St.
Anschaire (Oscar, born in Corbie in 801), the abbey of Corbey was the
main center of evangelisation of Northern Europe. The abbeys of Corbie
bore the title of Count and minted their own coins.
In the XIth century, St. Gerard, a monk of Corbie, retired in the
south-west of France, where he founded the monastery of Sauve Majeure.
St. Colette (1381-1447), the daughter of a carpentar from Corbie, lead
a cloistered life and had several visions. She abandoned reclusion and
reformed the Poor Clare