Campine

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Landscape (Campine) by Frans Van Giel
Landscape (Campine) by Frans Van Giel

Campine (Dutch: Kempen) is a region which once consisted mainly of moor or swamp, heath and sandy peat. The Campine encompasses the east of Antwerp province (with Turnhout as the most important city), part of Limburg province in Belgium (a former coal-producing region) as well as part of Noord-Brabant, a Dutch province.

Nowadays, the Campine is becoming a popular destination for tourists searching for a quiet and relaxed weekend. Old farms were transformed into bed and breakfast-hotels, the restaurant and café business is very active and an ingenious network for bicycle tours has come to life the past few years.

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[edit] Origin of name

The name of the region is a distortion of the Latin Campinia or Campina, which means region of fields (campus means field). The inhabitants of the Campine region are called kempenaars. Many tales originated in the region, such as about the Goat riders (Dutch: Bokkenrijders) and about the gnome king Kyrië (Dutch: Kabouterkoning Kyrië).

[edit] Culture

The region, described as a desolate flat land often appears in the books of the prominent Flemish writer Hendrik Conscience (1812-1883), who spent much of his childhood there. Another author who has written many novels playing in the Campine was Georges Eekhoud (1854-1927). The painter Frans Van Giel (1892-1975) has painted many Campine landscapes.

The Museum Kempenland in Eindhoven has a considerable and historically important art collection of painters, draughtsmen, sculptors, blacksmiths and other craftsmen from this region. The old way of living and the Campine dialects have been the topic of scientific research [1]. In the Roman time the name of the region was Toxandria or Taxandria.

[edit] History

The Campine is an area which is located in the Belgian provinces Antwerp, Limburg and the extreme north of the province Flemish Brabant, and in the south of the Dutch province Noord-Brabant. It stretches from the east of the city of Antwerp and towards the west of Eindhoven. Furthermore towards the east the Campine proceeds in the Groote Peel, a region which is geographically related to the Campine. The South border is formed by the river the Demer. The East border by the valley of the river Meuse. The Campine plateau is part of the Campine region. The Campine Basin, which extends from Belgium into the Netherlands is formed by the Devonian and Carboniferous sedimentary rocks on the northern flank of the Brabant Massif.

Since it was a region with a poor sand soil, one finds only a few old or large cities in the region. Most of those cities are located at the outer rim of the region, such as Hasselt, Diest, Aarschot, Lier (the gate of the Campine, but also claimed by the Northern-Brabant Oirschot), Breda, Tilburg, Eindhoven, Maaseik, and Maastricht. Turnhout is an exception, and is sometimes called the Capital of the Campine. West of Turnhout clay was used for the production of barge, which is one of the reasons why the Noord-Kempens Canal was dug to Antwerp. Also the more central Herentals was an historical industrial center, thanks to its textile industry of which the Lakenhal on the main market place is a remaining monument. The printing industry in Turnhout is historically important, with companies such as Brepols and more recently Cartamundi.

The region was sparsely populated, and therefore chosen by monks who were looking for silence such as the abbeys of Achel, Brecht, Zundert, Postel and Westmalle). In the nineteenth and twentieth century industry established itself in the region, such as the metallurgy in Balen-Overpelt-Lommel. In 1872 the Sablières et Carrières Réunies (SCR), now Sibelco, was founded to extract the silica sand layers in Mol for industrial applications (glass). In the twentieth Century the first nuclear installation in Belgium, at the SCK•CEN in Mol in 1962. The European Institute for Reference Materials and Measurements (IRMM) was founded in Geel in 1957. Pharmaceutical industry was founded in Beerse in the sixties, with Janssen Pharmaceutica and more recently with Genzyme in Geel. Soudal (silicon) in Turnhout and Ravago (plastics) in Arendonk became leading companies in their markets. Wide open spaces with scarce population also lead to the establishment of several military bases, such as the base of Leopoldsburg, the airport of Kleine Brogel and Oostmalle and the former shooting range of Brasschaat.

Due to the exploitation of the Campine coal basin, especially after World War II, new industrial activity was established, such as in Geel, Beringen and Genk. The most picturesque villages in the Dutch, Northern-Brabant Campine are Oirschot, Eersel and Hilvarenbeek. The other villages have lost much of their historical elements in their course towards industrialisation. In the Dutch Campine eight villages are located which are known under the name acht zaligheden (E: eight blessed ones). The denomination zaligheden has been borrowed from the sel, which is at the end of the name of seven of these eight villages selligheden).

Kalmthoutse Heide
Kalmthoutse Heide

In the Campine there are still a number of bunches, marshes, heathlands and pastures. Where the Campine, up to around 1960 includes mainly heathland, oak grove and marsh, these were modified by heavy fertilisation and building activities and were gradually changed into a rather small-scale landscape. Here and there still up to several dozens acres of large heathland - and forests, such as the Kalmthoutse Heide (E: Kalmthout heathland) at Kalmthout, Belgium, the De Maten in Genk, the moors around Turnhouts, the Liereman (Oud-Turnhout, Belgium), natural reserves De Teut in Zonhoven and Ter Haagdoornheide in Houthalen-Helchteren and the Nationaal Park Hoge Kempen. To the North, the area between Boxtel and Oisterwijk is called Kampina. In a number of villages one can still see the typical Campine langgevelboerderijen (E: long facade farms). Much of the architectural, agrarian and historical and cultural heritage of the Campine can be visited in the museum of Bokrijk.

[edit] SS La Campine

SS. La Campine (2,595 GRT), was built by Palmers' SB. & Iron Co., Ltd., Newcastle for F. Speth & Co., Antwerp and sailing for the American Petroleum Company. It was a steamship with auxiliary sails, an early oil tanker that was launched in 1892, and was sunk by U-boat UC 50 in North Sea waters (Doggersbank, 56.00 North - 04.57 East) on March 13, 1917, on its way from Rotterdam to New York.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Antonius Petrus de Bont, Dialekt van Kempenland, 1962

[edit] External links