Fortifications of Antwerp

Het Steen (literally: 'The Stone')

This article will document the development of Antwerp as a fortified city, and explain why barely anything remains of the former 10th century enceinte, and why the fortifications of the 16th and 19th century are totally invisible for the casual tourist. Only some remains of the first city wall can be seen near the Vleeshuis museum at the corner of Bloedberg and Burchtgracht, and a replica of a burg(castle) named Steen has been partly rebuild near the Scheldt-quais during the 19th century. Parts of the canals that protected the city between the 12th and 16th century have been covered and used as sewage system, and can be visited but on the surface of the city they are totally invisible. Both the 16th century city walls and the 19th century fortifications have been covered up by major infrastructure works during the 19th and 20th century. This article is related to the development of the Port of Antwerp, other related articles are History of Antwerp and Historic timeline of Antwerp.

Overview

Antwerp's development as a fortified city is documented between the 10th and the 20th century. The fortifications were developed in 6 phases:

From the 18th century major works and construction projects have changed the nature of the original innercity canals, and in the 19th and 20th century the projects for the development of the port have destroyed all visible signs of the fortification works and made the canals disappear from view.

Some of the fortifications are still being used as military installations

First Fortification ca 10th century AD

Antwerp, 19th century drawing of the 10th century fortifications
Antwerp 1st fortification from X1th century Scetch on a 19th-century streetmap, with overlay of 19th century construction of Scheldt quais

Since the Treaty of Verdun (843) the river Scheldt was the natural an political border between the County of Flanders (belonging to the Kingdom of France]] to the west and the German Empire. In 980 the German Emperor Otto II awarded Antwerp a margraviate, and ordered a fortification build on the wharf, part of his fortification program of his western border. Around 1106 the Counts of Leuven, the later Dukes of Brabant, acquired the Margraviate_of_Antwerp, and it continued to be part of the Duchy of Brabant until the end of the Ancien Régime.[1] [2]

The first fortification consisted of a wall about 5 metres (16 ft) high and 1.35 metres (4.4 ft) thick and a ditch (on the north esat and southside of the fortification wall (at the current location of the street called Burchtgracht (a name that translates literally into "Fortress ditch"). In 1104 Emperor Hendrik IV reinforces the walls to 12 metres (39 ft) high and 2 metres (6.6 ft) thick.

The wharf, was a dry landmass, a dry hill protruding about 30 m into the main track of river Scheldt (measured from the current 19th-century Scheldt-quaiside). The enceinte was about 2.5 hectares (270,000 sq ft) in size, and contained 3 streets: the old Steenstraat (the current ramp leading to the building), the Zakstraat and the Mattestraat, and there was a square the Burgplein. The rivershore sloped steeply into the river at the south and west of the wharf and more gently at the northside (the quays in the drawings to the right were constructed at a later date). There was a fortification wall (no ditch) facing the river with a Tollhouse at the Wharfgate. Within the enceinte the most important buildings were:

Just outside the south wall and the ditch was the fish-market (west of the Steenstraat gate) and the butchers guild build a slaughterhouse Vleeshuis at the southeast (south of the Zakstraat gate). During recent excavations behind the Vleeshuis on the intersection of the -current- Vleeshuisstraat and Burchtgracht, the remainder of the medieval wall structure was excavated and also the floor of the cellar of house De Gans (the goose, an inn) and a well, and the another part of the fortification wall that had been enclosed in the old "badhuis" building (formerly the public baths) was made visible again when that building was demolished (a new structure has been build on the badhuis site but the remainder of the medieval fortification wall is now better preserved, see gallery).

Before the 13th century

The city developed quickly outside its initial fortification and by 1200 it had quadrupled in surface. Because trade had become the main activity of the city, canals were dug around its extremities, to allow barges to bring cargo into the city to and form the ships moored at the wharf. Those canals were called rui (plural ruien).[3] The canals flooded at high tide and emptied at low tide. The canals that connected with the main river Scheldt were called vliet (plural vlieten).[4]

Initially the barges moored in the early canals would come to rest on the muddy bottom making cargo handling nearly impossible. So at certain places attempts were made to build wooden jetties and stone fortified quays to replace the sloping embankments of the canals such that barges could be moored alongside and be discharged and loaded even if the canal was empty of river water. The triangle of canals (ruiendriehoek) enclosed about 20 hectares (2,200,000 sq ft). The current street names still remind of the "rui", "vliet" and "brug" (bridge) allowing access to the city. The canals were considered the second fortification of Antwerp.

However quickly buildings would be constructed on the outside of the ruien and as trade increased two expansions occurred during the 13th century:

Before 1325

At the end of the 13th century (1295) John II, Duke of Brabant decided to create new fortifications, which made the city grow to 156 hectares (0.60 sq mi). He started in the south incorporating the St Michielsadbij that had been built south of the St Jansvliet) inside the fortifications and build the Kronenburg-tower on the river bank, the fortification went in a nearly straight line east to the Bluetower (currently Blauwtorenplein) where the fortification went north through the Wapper (where Rubens had its residence and atelier) and Cauwenberg right up to the Paardenmarkt (horse market) where it joined the north fortification of the Falconrui.

16th century

Also the 16th century "Spanish fortifications" and the old citadel defended by General Chassé in 1832, have totally vanished. Modern Antwerp's broad city-center boulevard (Italielei, Frankrijklei, Britselei and Amerikalei [6]) marks the position of the original (second) Spanish fortifications.

19th century

At the time of the establishment of Belgian independence, Antwerp was defended by the citadel and an enceinte around the city. In 1859, seventeen of the twenty-two fortresses constructed under Wellington's supervision in 1815–1818 were dismantled and the old citadel and enceinte were removed. A new enceinte 8 miles (13 km) long was constructed, and the villages of Berchem and Borgerhout, now boroughs of Antwerp, were absorbed within the city.

This enceinte is protected by a broad wet ditch, and in the caponiers are the magazines and store chambers of the fortress. The enceinte has nineteen openings or gateways, but of these seven are not used by the public. As soon as the enceinte was finished, eight detached forts from 2 to 2.5 miles (3.2 to 4.0 kilometres) from the enceinte were constructed. They begin on the north near Wijnegem and the zone of inundation, and terminate on the south at Hoboken. In 1870 Fort Merksem and the redoubts of Berendrecht and Oorderen were built for the defence of the area to be inundated north of Antwerp.

In the 1870s, the fortifications of Antwerp were deemed to be out of date, given the increased range and power of artillery and explosives. Antwerp was transformed into a fortified position by constructing an outer line of forts and batteries 6 to 9 miles (14 km) from the enceinte.

Literature

De Stad Antwerpen van de romeinse tijd tot de 17de eeuw , Topografische studie rond het plan van Virgilius Bononiensis 1565; Authors: Voet, Asaert, Soly, Verhulst, De Nave & Van Roey; 1978; Publisher: Gemeentekrediet van Belgie, Brussel.

References

  1. Geschiedenis van Antwerpen, Provincial Council of Antwerp, History (in dutch)
  2. Blog , by writer and historian Jan Lampo
  3. rui: old-Dutch meaning ditch, fosse or canal from French reye, Latin riga "aquaeductus, fossa publica", geallic rica (Welsh, Irish) and Russian reék réjka (verkl. woord, vgl. R. v. d. Meulen, Verh. AW Amsterdam 66, 2, 1959, 76) from P.A.F. van Veen en N. van der Sijs (1997), Van Dale Etymologisch woordenboek and J. de Vries (1971), Nederlands Etymologisch Woordenboek
  4. vliet from fliet old ducht for river, river that fills/empties with tidal water from P.A.F. van Veen en N. van der Sijs (1997), Van Dale Etymologisch woordenboek; J. de Vries (1971), Nederlands Etymologisch Woordenboek; N. van Wijk (1936 [1912]), Franck's Etymologisch woordenboek der Nederlandsche taal
  5. vest form veste, vesting, oldducht for fortified place, fortification ditch from P.A.F. van Veen en N. van der Sijs (1997), Van Dale Etymologisch woordenboek; J. de Vries (1971), Nederlands Etymologisch Woordenboek; N. van Wijk (1936 [1912]), Franck's Etymologisch woordenboek der Nederlandsche taal
  6. map will follow

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