At Adegem all is simple: no fortress or historic chateau, no important road or waterway. Or was there a fortress where the Tardoes Farm stood with its moat all around it?
The town was named as Addingahim and Hattingem in the annals of the year 840 of the St Peters Abbey of Ghent. That meant: the place where Ado's people live. Prehistoric finds of the Bronze Age prove that people have been living at Adegem for quite a while. A Roman well was also found.
In a report
by Galbertus on the murder in 1127 of Charles the Good, count of Flanders,
Raverschoot, on the border with the
Maldegem Corporation and Eeklo was described as
"an almost invincible and inaccessable oppidum". The place was
nonetheless burnt to the ground and totally destroyed in that same year because
its occupant Robert Jr, thought to have been an accomplice in the murder was
ensconced there with his coconspirators. Indeed, in this settlement of
scores Robert and friends all lost their lives. We don't know who he was
nor what evidence there was for his alleged part in this murder. And now
there is even uncertainty as to where exactly this fortified farm might have
stood.
The center of this town was described in an 18th Century land
registry: on the east side of town there were then only 7 dwellings. To
the west where the church stood there were 9 more and to the south in Church
Street there was a cartwright's. And right in front of the church where
later an inn would be built there lived Jacob Danckaerts. He also served
beer although he had no official licence. To the west of this street Jan
Potvliege built an inn in 1791 with official permission. Further south,
next to the church there was an inn called "De Hert" (The Stag) and
next to it a house that stood against the cemetery wall. South of that
another house and then another inn called St. Hubertus. This was also a
brewery. Still further south a couple more houses and that was the town
center.
Adegem belonged to the Corporation of Maldegem until the end of the 18th Century. It had its own administration from 1800 but a town hall wasn't built until 1864. It was then also used as a school house. In December 1867 Adegem had 3430 inhabitants. There was a distillery, a brewery and three windmills. Adegem's last windmill stood in the Kruisken (Little Cross) district. It was a post mill belonging to Alfons and Leon Standaert, Adegem's last millers. It was pulled down on 3 May 1937.
Adegem near the Schipdonk Canal was a target in both World Wars. In 1940
there was an airstrip here. There was very heavy shelling
and dozens of Belgian soldiers were killed in action.
The whole Meetjesland was liberated by Canadian (and Polish) soldiers in
1944. The Adegem Canadian War Cemetery is a
stark reminder of those painful pages in our history.
Another reminder of that same war is the
Canada War Museum.
This museum, a private initiative, has a very impressive collection of authentic
World War II paraphernalia. It is another tribute to Canada whose soldiers
came to rid our land of the Nazi tyranny. And on 21 September 2004 in the
presence of his Majesty King Albert a totally new museum was opened here to the
public: the Maple-Leaf Miniature Museum
shows authentic WW II battlefields in 1/35 scale. It also has a section
on the Belgian Royal Family. There are also the charming French, English
and Japanese gardens and there is the tearoom. I urge you to visit their site
on the world wide web and the real thing in Adegem.
![]() |
This is the man, Gilbert Van
Landschoot, who made it all happen: the
Canada War Museum,
its Maple-Leaf
Miniature Museum and the gardens are his creations. And he can be truly proud
of them. See here what more a Brit has to say on the matter. |
![]() |
On 23 April 2006, back in Sleidinge, we stopped a convoy of WW II military vehicles. Read here all about our encounter with "Call of Duty - United Soldiers". |
Here is a link to a
superb website in Dutch where Geert and his pals keep us up-to-date on current
affairs in Adegem.
And here
is a link to a few pages, in Dutch, about the history of Adegem beautifully
handwritten by Maria De Baets in... 1928.
![]() |
Here we have a few photographs taken in Adegem by Mr. Romano Tondat between 1962 and 1975. |
Most recent update: 2007-07-21 08:01:18 +0200
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