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Austrian Netherlands (1713-1786)

Oostenrijkse Nederlanden

Last modified: 2002-03-02 by ivan sache
Keywords: austrian netherlands | oostenrijkse nederlanden | cross: burgundy | eagle: double-headed (black) | oostendse compagnie | ostende | oostende |
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Austrian Netherlandsby Mario Fabretto

Country: Austrian Netherlands.
Type of flag: Civil ensign.
Date of use: 24 September 1781 - 31 December 1786.
Proportion: 2:3
Source: The Flag Bulletin [tfb] #32, 6/155 (1993)

Mario Fabretto, October 1998


See also:


Austrian Netherlands

Originally all "17" Dutch provinces (Burgundian kreits) revolted against the Spanish King Philip II, but in 1579 the southern provinces decided to stay loyal, and they remained Spanish. They became known as the Southern or Spanish Netherlands, since 1713 Austrian Netherlands, while the Northern Netherlands formed the Republic of the United Netherlands.
In 1814 they were reunited, together with the former prince-bishopric of Liège which was neutral untill then. However, the differences turned out to be too big and the South revolted to form Belgium in 1830.

The fields on the shield are:

Behind the Imperial Austrian eagle is the cross of Burgundy.

Mark Sensen, 9 November 1999

The southern provinces were ´convinced' to stay loyal by the Spanish army, and as a result, the entire intellectual elite from the Southern Netherlands moved to the Northern Netherlands.

Filip Van Laenen, 9 November 1999

Oostenrijkse Nederlanden (Pays Bas autrichiens), 1713-1795, that is from the end of the Spanish Succession War till the conquest by France. The country was divided in two by a broad stripe consisting of Sticht Luik (bishopric of Liège) and the abbey of Stavelot. Eight Cities in the Oostenrijkse Nederlanden were declared 'barrier cities' with a Dutch garrison until 1781; there were 8 redemptie-dorpen (redemption villages) northwest of Liège, which belonged to Staats-Brabant (the Dutch part of Brabant, now Noord-Brabant). The whole territory was littered with enclaves, uncertain boundaries, etc.

Jarig Bakker, 9 November 1999


Oostendse Compagnie

[Unidentified ensign]scanned by Hans Vermeersch

The source of this flag is to be traced to the East India fleet of the Austrian Netherlands, sailing from Ostend in West-Flanders to Calcutta and Canton. The flag is supposed to have at least being used between 1723 and roughly 1740.
I checked a original document in the archives and indeed the flag is listed as shown above.

Hans Vermeersch, 3 August 2001

The Oostendse Compagnie was founded by Emperor Charles VI in the Southern Netherlands to promote ecomomic life; by octroy of 19 December 1722, the Compagnie impériale et royale des Indes Orientales, établie dans les Pays-Bas autrichiens got the monopoly for 30 years of trade with East- and West-Indies and Africa. The company was allowed to make treaties with indigeneous peoples and to found colonies.
The ships sailed from Oostende (the only port in the Southern Netherlands after the closure of the river Scheldt) to China (Canton) and India (Gabelon and Banquibazar). The company grew rapidly and both England and the Northern Netherlands got upset. The United Provinces doubted the legitimacy of the Flemish colonial trade, based on Hugo de Groot's De iure belli ac pacis, while the Southern Netherlands based their policy on Hugo de Groot's Mare liberum. However Charles VI needed the approval of the Northern Netherlands and England (sic!) for the recognition of his daughter Maria-Theresia as his successor (Pragmatic Sanction), so he suspended the Compagnie on 31 May 1727 (Preliminaries of Paris) and revoked the octroy on 16 March 1731 (Treaty of Vienna).

Source: Nijhoffs Geschiedenislexicon Nederland en België (1981)

Jarig Bakker, 3 August 2001