Uccle
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Uccle
| |
---|---|
• Governing party/ies | MR, Ecolo, Les Engagés |
Area | |
• Total | 22.87 km2 (8.83 sq mi) |
Population (2020-01-01)[1] | |
• Total | 83,980 |
• Density | 3,700/km2 (9,500/sq mi) |
Postal codes | 1180 |
NIS code | 21016 |
Area codes | 02 |
Website | www.uccle.be/fr (in French) www.uccle.be/nl (in Dutch) |
Uccle (
As of 1 January 2022[update], the municipality had a population of 85,099 inhabitants. The total area is 22.87 km2 (8.83 sq mi), which gives a population density of 3,720/km2 (9,600/sq mi), half the average of Brussels. It is generally considered an affluent area of the region, and is particularly noted for its community of French immigrants.
History
Origins and medieval times
According to legend, Uccle's Church of
Lordship of Stalle
A large part of the territory of modern-day Uccle used to be part of the Lordship (seigneurie) of Stalle, in addition to the old village of Uccle and the barony of Carloo.
The first Lords of Stalle (High Justiciaries) were:[2] Henri de Stalle, knight (died before 1357); Florent de Stalle, his son, alderman of Brussels in 1319 and knight. He married Lady Aleyde; and Florent de Stalle, knight and alderman of Brussels in 1357, member of the Seven Noble Houses of Brussels. It was he who, with his brother Daniel, founded the Stalle chapel and gave it lands.
Dependent fiefs of the Lordship of Stalle included the Fief of Overhem and the Fief of the Roetaert. The Fief of Overhem was located between the Dieweg and Stalle, it had a manor, a mill called Clipmolen, woods, and pasture. However, in 1465, Marguerite Hinckaert wife of Louis de Mailly, obtained from the sovereign the annexation of this fief to the Lordship of Stalle. The Fief of the Roetaert was located in Neerstalle, between the Kersbeek woods and the Ukkelbeek. Its surface amounted to 39.78 acres of land and meadows and it included the manor of Roetaert.[3][a]
18th century until today
At the end of the 18th century, a few years after the
Lying beyond
Main sights
Uccle is mainly a residential area but has a lot of parks and forested areas, such as the Wolvendael Park and the Verrewinkel Woods. Wolvendael is the site of a 1763 castle, owned by a number of notable aristocrats from the 18th and 19th centuries. The municipality is also situated to the immediate west of the Bois de la Cambre/Ter Kamerenbos. The Place de Saint-Job/Sint-Jobsplein and the area near St. Peter's Church and the Municipal Hall are two older parts of town, now filled with a happy mix of stores and pubs.
Uccle is the site of the Belgium national weather station, the Royal Meteorological Institute (IRM/KMI). Any information on Belgian weather, unless region-specific, is described by the statistics recorded there. Right next door is the Royal Observatory of Belgium.[4]
Other points of interest include:
- Uccle Cemetery, also known as Dieweg Cemetery, created following a cholera epidemic in Brussels in 1866. Although burials ended in 1958, the grave of Hergé, the creator of Tintin who died in 1983, can be found there.[5]
- The Henry Van de Velde as his first private residence.[6]
- The Château de La Fougeraie, built in 1911 for the industrialist Paul Wittouck by the architects Louis Süe and Paul Huillard, and decorated by Gustave Louis Jaulmes.
- The Van Buuren Museum & Gardens, a former private house with extensive gardens, now a museum and park, built from 1924 to 1928 in Art Deco style for the banker and art collector David Van Buuren and his wife Alice.[7]
- Nemo 33, the second deepest indoor swimming pool in the world.[8]
-
Uccle Cemetery
Education
Most of Uccle pupils between the ages of 3 and 18 go to schools organised by the
- European School, Brussels I
- Lycée Français Jean Monnet
- Collège Saint-Pierre, founded in 1905 by Cardinal Pierre-Lambert Goossens
Notable inhabitants
- Armand Abel (1903–1973), academic and scholar of Islam
- Salvatore Adamo (b. 1943), singer, lyricist, poet and novelist
- Jean Améry (Hans Maier) (1912–1978), author and essayist
- Queen Mathilde of Belgium (b. 1973)
- Sandrine Blancke (b. 1978), actress
- Cédric Blanpain (b. 1970), academic, researcher
- Dedryck Boyata, football player
- Laetitia Darche (b. 1991), model
- Roger De Coster (b. 1944), professional motocross racer
- Hapoel Holon of the Israeli Basketball Premier League
- Jaco van Dormael(b. 1957), film director
- Jef Dutilleux (1876–1960), impressionist painter
- M. C. Escher (1898–1972), Dutch graphic artist
- Lara Fabian (b. 1970), singer-songwriter
- Jean-Michel Folon (1934–2005), artist, illustrator, painter, and sculptor
- Isabelle Gatti de Gamond, educationalist, feminist, and politician (1839–1905)
- Martin Gray (1922–2016), Warsaw Ghetto and Holocaust survivor, writer
- Pierre Harmel (1911–2010), lawyer, politician, diplomat, and Prime Minister
- Hergé (1907–1983), comic book author, creator of The Adventures of Tintin
- Burnley
- Boris Johnson, Stanley Johnson, Jo Johnson, Rachel Johnson, Charlotte Johnson Wahl; British political and journalistic family, lived there in the 1970s.
- Joachim Lafosse (b. 1975), film director
- Prince Wenzeslaus of Liechtenstein and Prince Rudolf of Liechtenstein(b. 1974 and 1975, respectively)
- Marianne Merchez (b. 1960), doctor and astronaut
- road bicycle racer
- Economic History at the Université libre de Bruxelles(ULB)
- Erik Pevernagie (b. 1939), painter and writer
- Louis Pevernagie (1904–1970), painter
- Alizée Poulicek (b. 1987), Miss Universe Belgium 2008
- Joseph Raphael (1869–1950), impressionist painter
- Axelle Red (Fabienne Demal) (b. 1968), singer
- Sybille de Selys Longchamps (b. 1941), baroness and aristocrat
- Willy Sommers (b. 1952), crooner
- Olivier Strebelle (1927–2017), sculptor
- Jacques Tits (1930–2021), mathematician
- Henry van de Velde (1863–1957), painter, architect, and interior designer
- Angèle Van Laeken, better known as Angèle (b. 1995), singer-songwriter
- Pierre de Maere (b. 2001), singer-songwriter
- Princess Stephanie of Windisch-Graetz (1909–2005), died there.
Twin cities
- Neuilly-sur-Seine, France
References
Footnotes
- ^ It belonged successively to: 1) Demoiselle Anne Marie Pauwels, widow of Sieur Henri van Nijs, per purchase on 19 July 1692 from the heirs of Guillaume Lemmens. 2) Lambert van der Meulen, husband of Élisabeth Cosyns, per purchase from the heirs of François Opdenbosch, on 22 November 1718. 3) Lambert Benoît François van der Meulen, his son, after his father's death. 4) Demoiselle Élisabeth van der Meulen (1720-1769), wife of Sieur Jean-Baptiste van Dievoet (1704-1776), on 24 October 1754. 5) François-Joseph van Dievoet (1754-1795) after his mother's death on 11 December 1769. 6) Demoiselle Marie Élisabeth van Dievoet (1752-1828), wife of Sieur Charles Marie Joseph Leyniers (1756-1822) per purchase from her brother François Joseph van Dievoet on 24 November 1784, ten years before the end of the Ancien Regime in modern day Belgium.
Citations
- ^ "Bevolking per gemeente op 1 januari 2020". Statbel.
- ^ Henry de Pinchart, « Court historique du hameau de Stalle-sous-Uccle, in : le Folklore brabançon, March 1979, no 221, p. 71 à 110.
- ^ Henry de Pinchart, « Court historique du hameau de Stalle-sous-Uccle », « Possesseurs », in : le Folklore brabançon, March 1979, no 221, p. 90.
- ^ "Brussels - Royal Observatory - The Green Guide Michelin". travel.michelin.com.
- ^ "Brussels - Dieweg Cemetery - The Green Guide Michelin". travel.michelin.com.
- ^ "Villa Bloemenwerf – Inventaire du patrimoine architectural". monument.heritage.brussels (in French). Retrieved 24 October 2023.
- ^ "Musée Van Buuren – Inventaire du patrimoine architectural". monument.heritage.brussels (in French). Retrieved 24 October 2023.
- ^ "Discover Y-40 - Y-40 The Deep Joy". www.y-40.com.
External links
- Media related to Uccle at Wikimedia Commons
- Official website (in French and Dutch)