
Last modified: 2006-10-21 by ivan sache
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Municipal flag of Jette - Image by Ivan Sache, 18 April 2004
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The municipality of Jette (40,909 inhabitants, 504 ha) is one of the 19 components of the bilingual region of Brussels-Capital. The name of the municipality is the same in French and Dutch. Jette is the north-western "green lung" of Brussels, since the nature reserve of Poelbos and the king Baudouin's park are located on its territory (cumulated, 117 ha, i.e., 1/4 of the municipal area).
The oldest mention of Jette, as Jetta, dates from 1095. The
name of the city evolved as Jhet (1220), Iette (1389),
Yette (1435) and Getta (1146). In the Middle Ages,
Jette was fairly important since it was the seat of an
échevinage (municipal court) ruling ten neighbouring
villages. The Jette court followed
Uccle/Ukkel's Lax and owned a seal.
Supreme authority in the échevinage was exerted by the
Mayor of Merchtem, on behalf of the
prince.
The échevinage of Jette was dismembered in the XVIth
century when the villages formerly placed under its authority were
allocated to different domains. Until the middle of the XVIIth
century, the domain of Jette successively belonged to several private
owners. The County of Saint-Pierre de Jette was founded in 1659. At
that time, the municipality of Jette belonged to François de
Kinschot, lord of Rivieren. The domain, including the five villages
of Jette, Ganshoren, Releghem,
Hamme and
Bever, and the title were transfered by
marriage to Paul-Philippe de Villegas, whose family kept the domain
until the French Revolution.
The St. Peter's church, built in neo-Gothic style in 1880, keeps the Villegas' funerary monument, made of white and black marble, as well as a gilded St. Peter's reliquary, invoked to heal children sick with whooping couch. The Sacred-Heart's Convent was established in 1834 in the domain formerly owned by baron Bonaventure, one of the early owners of Jette.
The abbot's residence is the only remain of the Dieleghem abbey, which was in the past one of the most powerful abbeys in Brabant. The abbey was founded in 1095 and sold in 1789. In 1730, the monks built a road linking the abbey to Molenbeek-Saint-Jean / Sint-Jans-Molenbeek. A toll-gate was set up near the entrance of the abbey, which is recalled today by an inn called A l'ancienne barrière (At the ancient gate).
Source: Municipal website
Ivan Sache, 18 April 2004
According to Armoiries communales en Belgique. Communes wallonnes, bruxelloises et germanophones, the municipal flag of Jette is vertically divided blue-yellow.
The municipal coat of arms of Jette is:
D'or à la fasce brétessée et
contrebrétessée de sable.
Or a fess bretessed and counterbretessed sable.
Bretesse (or bretèche), from ancient French
brétescher, to protect with a bartizan, means
"symmetrically crenellated on both sides". The name
bretèche (bartizan) comes from medieval Latin
brittisca, fortification, maybe related to popular Latin
brittus, Britton. It is a small machicolated, projecting
loggia used for defense.
According to the municipal website, the municipality of Jette has greater arms decorated with
supporters, helmet, crest etc., all derived from the ancient
municipal seal.
The seal of the municipality of Jette shows in the middle the
Blessed Virgin with the infant Jesus, flanked on the right by a
shield hold on the senester by a dame, who holds with her right hand
a heart placed on a starry veil and surmonted by a crown; and on the
left by an unicorn, a crowned helmet and a hawk.
In the XVIIth century, the county of Saint-Pierre-Jette had a seal
reproducing the arms of François de Kinschot, showing the
Blessed Virgin with the infant Jesus in a Gothic recess. The Blessed
Virgin was thepatron saint of the abbey of Dieleghem and was shown on
the ancient seals of the abbey (then Abbatia Jettensis;
1180, 1247, 1261, 1297).
The modern seal never belonged to the Kinschot family, although it
includes their arms. It was indeed the seal of the
échevins (municipal magistrates) of the county of
Saint-Pierre Jette. It can be seen on a municipal act dated 28 May
1661, kept in the archives of the Municipal Center for Welfare in
Brussels.
Ivan Sache & Pascal Vagnat, 18 April 2004
The Vendel- & Trommelkorps Draposmaaiter was founded in Jette in December 1995; before, it was a section of the folkloric circle Meigraaf. The name of the group comes from the Brussels dialect: Vendel- & Trommelkorps is the Flag and Drums Corps, whereas Draposmaaiter is made of drapo, flag (in French, drapeau) and smaaiter, thrower. The Draposmaaiter performs traditional figures from the Flemish tradition, such as De Blauwvoet (after an old Flemish song), De Brechtse reeks (The figures of the town of Brecht) and De Vendelgroet van Leefdaal(The flag salute of Leefdaal, a city today part of the municipality of Bertem). They use big flags weighing 5 kg, bigger than the traditional flags thrown in Italy.
Sources:
Jan Mertens & Ivan Sache, 14 May 2006