Ledringhem

Not to be confused with Ledinghem, a village in the Pas-de-Calais department.
Ledringhem
Ledringem

View of Ledringhem church, graveyard and town hall

Coat of arms
Ledringhem

Coordinates: 50°51′19″N 2°26′30″E / 50.8553°N 2.4417°E / 50.8553; 2.4417Coordinates: 50°51′19″N 2°26′30″E / 50.8553°N 2.4417°E / 50.8553; 2.4417
Country France
Region Hauts-de-France
Department Nord
Arrondissement Dunkirk
Canton Wormhout
Intercommunality Yser
Government
  Mayor (20082014) Christian Delassus
Area1 7.01 km2 (2.71 sq mi)
Population (1999)2 507
  Density 72/km2 (190/sq mi)
Time zone CET (UTC+1)
  Summer (DST) CEST (UTC+2)
INSEE/Postal code 59338 / 59470
Elevation 11–26 m (36–85 ft)
(avg. 19 m or 62 ft)

1 French Land Register data, which excludes lakes, ponds, glaciers > 1 km² (0.386 sq mi or 247 acres) and river estuaries.

2 Population without double counting: residents of multiple communes (e.g., students and military personnel) only counted once.

Ledringhem is a commune in the Nord department in northern France.

It is situated also in the ancient territory of the French County of Flanders, in the Houtland (or woodland, with the cities of Cassel and Hazebrouck) in the Franse Westhoek (French Western corner) where French Flemish was still spoken until recently.

The residents of Ledringhem are called in French Ledringhemois.

Geography

Ledringhem in the arrondissement of Dunkirk

The village is about 4 kilometres (2.5 mi) southwest of the small town of Wormhout, and approximately 10 kilometres (6.2 mi) north of Cassel. Bigger cities are Dunkirk further to the north and Hazebrouck further to the south.

Ledringhem is crossed by the small river Peene Becque,[1] a tributary of the Franco-Belgian river Yser and there is one shorter tributary, the Lyncke Becque,[2] passing closer to the village center. Other small rivers are Trommels Becque, Putte Becque, Platse Becque and Kaliszewski Becque.[3]

The climate in Ledringhem is oceanic with a mild summer (Köppen Classification : Cfb).[4]

Village limits

Map

The river Peene Becque constitutes the southern border between Ledringhem and Arnèke and Zermezeele. It is also the South-Eastern limit with Wormhout until the limit crosses a field between rue des postes and rue de la Forgé. The North-Eastern limit with Wormhout is rue Louis Patoor. The village Western limit with Arnèke is Voie romaine (D52). The Northern limit with Esquelbecq is chemin de Rubrouck.

Place names

The village center consists of the main square (La Place), the church, the cemetery, the town's hall and the village park, forming an islet nested in a large turn of the route de Wormhout.

There are two subdivisions:

Other locations (Lieux-dits) are called Bas de la Plaine, La Belette, La Butte, La Motte, La Plaine, La Potence, Le Baron, Les Grenouilles, Les Tambours, Oost Houck (coin de l'Est), Planckeel (Planckael), Sainte Anne, Tampon court and Zinkepit.

Ledringhem is situated on the D55 road (actually called route de Wormhout towards Wormhout in the North-East direction and route d'Arneke in the West direction).
Other smaller roads include rue Henri Wallaert, chemin d'Esquelbecq, petit chemin d'Esquelbecq (north directions), chemin de Bodeye, chemin de la chapelle, chemin de la pâture grasse, chemin de Steenvoorde, chemin des postes, chemin des prairies, chemin d'Heenhout, chemin du moulin, chemin du tétard borne and voie nouvelle.[5][6]
The village is a little off the ancient Roman road, now D52, roughly North-South in direction.

Heraldry

The arms of Ledringhem are blazoned :
Gules, a chevron ermine between 3 pierced mullets of six argent.

Toponymy

First appearances in texts

1609 map of the county of Flanders by Matthias Quad (cartographer) and Johannes Bussemacher (engraver & publisher, Cologne)

Etymology

An ancient and legendary explanation is that the name comes from the Latin form (Ledera) of the name of a local brook called the Leder. This explanation, given in tome II, page 572 of Flandria Illustrata (1641), and though doubtfull, is also provided for the name of nearby village Lederzeele. It comes from Sanderus (1586-1664) who wrote, citing Malbrancq, : Lederam pluribus ab ortu suo pagis nomem communicantem (The Leder was the source of many country names).[17][20][21]

In reality, the place-name Ledringhem is typical Germanic, with the common Germanic double end -ing-hem (name suffix + toponymic appellative) found everywhere in Flanders, corresponding exactly to the English one -ing-ham (e. g. Nottingham). This -ing-hem turned into -egem where Flemish-Dutch continued to be spoken, but remained the same -ing-hem where the Picard language replaced the Flemish one in the Middle Ages. The French language has retained the old version, and often frenchified it as -eng-hien or -ing-hien (see above Ledringhien in 1330, similar to Enghien for instance) but the existence of the evoluted Dutch form is attested : Ledregem in the 17th century.

The only problem that divides the specialists (the "toponymists") is the right identification of the personal name (male's name) contained in this place-name.

The current name Ledringhem could be of Frankish origin, with the -hem particle meaning "home" and Ledring- being the genitive form of Leodro, a common given name at the time,[22] who could have been a local chief. Hem is the same word as Old English hām (> home), the Old Low Franconian form would have been *haim.

Another explanation for the name etymology is the Old Low Franconian *Liuthari-ing-haim "home of Luithari's people".[23]

Ernest Nègre notices that the Germanic -heim (sic) is precisely rendered by the Latin mansiones in the earliest document. He hesitates about the personal name contained in this place-name, but believes that it is probably Liutradus instead of Liuthari supported by Marie-Thérèse Morlet,[24][25] after Albert Dauzat and Charles Rostaing.[26]

The Anglo-Saxon history specialist Daniel Henry Haigh (1819—1879) noticed that the village could share a common etymology with the civil parish of Letheringham in Suffolk, England.[27] and this theory of a Saxon or Anglo-Saxon origin is supported nowadays by linguists that analysed toponyms thought before to be Franconian as Saxon afterwards. Numerous archeological sites in the northern part of France along the channel coast show a very strong Saxon and Anglo-Saxon influence in the early Middle Ages.

Geology

Superficial geology

Ledringhem is situated in the Cenozoic Era Bassin de Flandre of French regional geology. It is north from the Weald–Artois Anticline.

Undersurface geology

Actual lands (with country boundaries) having been part of Avalonia terrane.

The territory of Ledringhem have been part of the microcontinent Avalonia in the Paleozoic era.

Euramerica, also known as Laurussia, was a minor supercontinent created in the Devonian as the result of a collision between the Laurentian, Baltica, and Avalonia cratons. Euramerica became a part of the major supercontinent Pangaea in the Permian.

In the Jurassic, when Pangaea rifted into two continents, Gondwana and Laurasia, Euramerica was a part of Laurasia.

In the Cretaceous, Laurasia split into the continents of North America and Eurasia. The Laurentian craton became a part of North America while Baltica became a part of Eurasia, and Avalonia was split between the two.

Ledringhem lies on the London-Brabant Massif, a structural high or massif that stretches from the Rhineland in western Germany across northern Belgium (in the province of Brabant) and the North Sea to the sites of East Anglia and the middle Thames in southern England. The London–Brabant Massif is part of the former microcontinent Avalonia. The formation formed an island at some point of the geological times. As the island was drifting past the Equator during the Carboniferous, on the shores grew a rich tropical forest swamp.

Prehistory

Europe during Weichselian- & Würm-Glaciation

The evidences of the last glacial period, alternatively named Weichsel glaciation or Vistulian glaciation in Europe, suggest that the ice sheets were at their maximum size for only a short period, between 25,000 to 13,000 BP. During the glacial maximum in Scandinavia, only the western parts of Jutland were ice-free, and a large part of what is today the North Sea was dry land connecting Jutland with Britain.

Early human settlements

Overview of the Hallstatt and La Tène cultures. The core Hallstatt territory (800 BCE) is shown in solid yellow, the area of influence by 500 BCE (HaD) in light yellow. The core territory of the La Tène culture (450 BCE) is shown in solid green, the eventual area of La Tène influence by 50 BCE in light green. The territories of some major Celtic tribes are labelled. Map drawn after Atlas of the Celtic World, by John Haywood (2001: 30–37).

The territory of Northern France is part of the areas of influence of the Beaker culture (c. 2800-1800 BC), the Atlantic Bronze Age (approximately 1300–700 BC), then of the Hallstatt culture (800 -500 BC) and La Tène culture (450 BC).

History

The origins of the village are unclear.

Gaulish times

Map of Gallic tribes in Gallia Belgica.

The village could have been occupied since Gaulish times. At that time, the village territory was dry land (or moorland), to the contrary of other territories which were underwater, in the "plaine maritime" (see the three Dunkirk transgressions), a polder region made from Les Moëres, part of the French Flanders.

The nearby presence of a Roman road (now voie romaine - D52) from Cassel and leading to the sea could have been a reason for an early settlement. This road could have preceded the Romans.[28]

1852 Ledringhem's treasure discovery

As a proof of possible gaulish origins, a hoard was discovered in 1852 in Ledringhem. This treasure has been estimated by Jérémie Landron (1840–1904), a pharmacist-chemist-gold-and-silver assayer, to be composed with 35 000 golden small coins, described as staters, and locally known as Ledringhem's buttons (boutons de Ledringhem).[29]

The coins were retrieved in an 18 liters vase, that has been lost, by two workers cleaning a farm cesspit of the Mormentyn farm.[30] Each coin was 18 mm wide and weighed approximately 6 grams.

Half of the coins were reddish, color due to a higher richness in copper in the gold-silver-copper alloy, the remaining coins being yellow-white-colored. They presented a running wild horse representation on one of the two faces.[31]

It has been hypothesized that this treasure could have been hidden underground and never been recovered by its Morini or Menapian owners, during troubled times like during the Gallic Wars.[32]

Roman time

Map of Roman Empire in the 2nd century (116), with Gallia Belgica province highlighted in red.

Julius Caesar conquered the Belgae, beginning in 57 BC. He marched into the territory of the Suessiones and besieged the town of Noviodunum (Soissons). Seeing the Romans' siege engines, the Suessiones surrendered, whereupon Caesar turned his attention to the Bellovaci, who had retreated into the fortress of Bratuspantium (between modern Amiens and Beauvais). They quickly surrendered, as did the Ambiani.

The Nervii, along with the Atrebates and Viromandui, decided to fight (the Atuatuci had also agreed to join them but had not yet arrived). They concealed themselves in the forests and attacked the approaching Roman column at the river Sabis (previously thought to be the Sambre but recently the Selle is thought to be more probable). Their attack was quick and unexpected. The element of surprise briefly left the Romans exposed. Some of the Romans did not have time to take the covers off their shields or to even put on their helmets. However Caesar grabbed a shield, made his way to the front line, and quickly organised his forces. The two Roman legions guarding the baggage train at the rear finally arrived and helped to turn the tide of the battle. Caesar says the Nervii were almost annihilated in the battle, and is effusive in his tribute to their bravery, calling them "heroes".

The Atuatuci, who were marching to their aid, turned back on hearing of the defeat and retreated to one stronghold, were put under siege, and soon surrendered and handed over their arms. However the surrender was a ploy, and the Atuatuci, armed with weapons they had hidden, tried to break out during the night. The Romans had the advantage of position and killed four thousand. The rest, about fifty-three thousand, were sold into slavery.

In 53 BC the Eburones, led by Ambiorix, along with the Nervii, Menapii and Morini, revolted again and wiped out 15 cohorts, only to be put down by Caesar.

The Belgae fought in the uprising of Vercingetorix in 52 BC.

The Menapii again rebelled along with their neighbours, the Morini, in 30 or 29 BC. The Roman governor of Gaul, Gaius Carrinas, successfully quelled the rebellion and the territory of the Menapii was subsequently absorbed into the Roman province of Gallia Belgica.

After their final subjugation, Caesar combined the three parts of Gaul, the territory of the Belgae, Celtae and Aquitani, into a single unwieldy province (Gallia Comata, "long-haired Gaul") that was reorganized by the emperor Augustus into its traditional cultural divisions. The population was partially Romanised from the 1st to 3rd centuries.

The Gallic Empire under Tetricus I by 271 AD (in green)

The Gallic Empire (Latin: Imperium Galliarum) is the modern name for a breakaway realm of the Roman Empire that existed from 260 to 274. It originated during the Crisis of the 3rd Century (AD 235–284). It was retaken by Roman Emperor Aurelian after the Battle of Châlons in 274.

Constantius Chlorus’ first task on becoming Caesar was to deal with the Roman usurper Carausius who had declared himself emperor in Britannia and northern Gaul in 286. In late 293, Constantius defeated the forces of Carausius in Gaul, capturing Bononia (Boulogne-sur-Mer). This precipitated the assassination of Carausius by his rationalis Allectus, who assumed command of the British provinces until his death in 296. Constantius spent the next two years neutralising the threat of the Franks who were the allies of Allectus, as northern Gaul remained under the control of the British usurper until at least 295.

Later Emperor Diocletian restructured the provinces around 300, and split Belgica into two provinces: Belgica Prima and Belgica Secunda. Belgica Prima had Treveri (Trier) as its main city, and consisted of the eastern part. Belgica Secunda was situated between the English channel and the River Meuse, which therefore contained the original "Belgium" that Caesar had described. Reims (Durocortorum) was the capital of that second province.

The Saxon Shore (Latin: litus Saxonicum) was a military command of the late Roman Empire, established during the Crisis of the 3rd Century and consisted of a series of fortifications on both sides of the English channel. It was established in the late 3rd century and was led by the "Count of the Saxon Shore". In the late 4th century, his functions were limited to Britain, while the fortifications in Gaul were established as separate commands, dux tractus Amoricani and dux Belgicae Secundae, with headquarters at Portus Aepatiaci (possibly Étaples).

Frankish Empire

Situation of Pagus Mempiscus. The blue zone corresponds to the future polders (only in the 10th century). The coastline is from the 9th century
Southern part of the Low Countries with bisschopry towns and abbeys c. 7th century. Abbeys were the onset to larger villages and even some towns.

In Gaul, the Franks, a fusion of western Germanic tribes whose leaders had been strongly aligned with Rome since the 3rd century, subsequently entered Roman lands more gradually and peacefully during the 5th century, and were generally endured as rulers by the Roman-Gaulish population. In 406 AD, the Vandals, Burgundians and other tribes crossed the Rhine and defeated the Gaulish forces. The Franks had already infiltrated Germania Inferior and controlled it since at least 350 AD. They emerged victorious and Belgica Secunda became in the 5th century the center of Clovis' Merovingian kingdom and during the 8th century the heart of the Carolingian Empire.

The current territory of the village of Ledringhem became part of Francia, the territory held by Franks, in 481. It became part of West Francia in 843, and more accurately part of Neustria.

From 830 until around 910, the Vikings invaded Flanders. After the destruction caused by Norman and Magyar invasion, the eastern part of the region fell under the eyes of the area's princes.

In 962, Baldwin III, Count of Flanders, son, co-ruler, and heir of Arnulf I died and Arnulf bequeathed Flanders to Lothair of France. On Arnulf's death in 965, Lothair invaded Flanders and took many cities, but was eventually repulsed by the supporters of Arnulf II. He temporarily remained in control of Arras and Douai.[33]

Old Dutch was the Frankish dialects spoken and written in the Low Countries during the Early Middle Ages. It evolved from Old Frankish around the 6th century and in turn evolved into Middle Dutch around the 12th century.

Middle Ages

The Seventeen Provinces (orange, brown and yellow areas) and the Bishopric of Liège (green)
Map of the County of Flanders in the late 14th century.

During the Middle Ages, Ledringhem was one of the 6 fiefs in the Bergues fiefdom, composed out of 24 villages.[34] under the jurisdiction of Counts of Flandres. Esquelbecques and Ledringhem were parts of the same fief, but both villages had their own town magistrates.[35]

The County of Flanders was one of the territories constituting the Low Countries. The county existed from 862 to 1795. It was one of the original secular fiefs of France and for centuries was one of the most affluent regions in Europe.

From 1323 to 1328 people from Ledringhem took part to the peasant revolt in Flanders and five of them died in 1328 during the Battle of Cassel.[11]

In 1436, Wautier de Ghistelles was seigneur d'Ekelsbeke et de Ledringhem (Lord of Esquelbecq and Ledringhem) and governor of La Madeleine hospital in Bierne.[36]

English rule over Northern France

On May 21, 1420, the Treaty of Troyes is signed. With the Burgundian faction dominant in France, King Charles VI of France acknowledges Henry V of England as his heir and as virtual ruler of most of France.

Charles VII of France and Philip the Good, Duke of Burgundy, then signed the 1435 Treaty of Arras, which allowed the Burgundians to return to the side of the French just as things were going badly for their English allies. With this accomplishment, Charles attained the essential goal of ensuring that no Prince of the Blood recognised Henry VI as King of France. Over the following two decades, the French recaptured Paris from the English and eventually recovered all of France with the exception of the northern port of Calais and the Channel Islands.

Habsburg Netherlands

Ledringhem was part of the Habsburg Netherlands (1526 to 1556/1581).

On January 14, 1526, the Treaty of Madrid is signed. Peace is declared between Francis I of France and Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor. Francis agrees to cede Burgundy to Charles, and abandons all claims to Flanders, Artois, Naples and Milan.

Dutch Reformation

Blue: spread of the Beeldenstorm in the Low Countries.

During the Dutch Reformation Beeldenstorm iconoclasm movement, an episode took place in Ledringhem on Friday 16 August 1566.[37] A depiction of the events is given in:[38]

Jan de Druck was a busy iconoclast. He participated in attacks in Broxeele, Eecke, North and South Berkijn, and Ledringhem, for which he was condemned to death on october 28, 1567, by Alba's special law court, the council of Troubles. His crimes centrered on destruction of religious art and objects in parish churches in mid-August 1566: ... He also ransacked several altars at Ledringhem, stealing money amounting to 3 or 4 Parisian pounds and intended "for common devotion." ... Druck's deeds mirror those of other individuals and small groups; at Ledringhem, on September 10, a crowd of about thirty-two seized the priest's house, eating and drinking heartily before they settled down for the night there. Refreshed, the next morning they sacked the local parish church, destroying four altars. They scattered for the balance of the day, some going to Ekelsbeke, other to Arnèke, both sets listening to sermons, only to return at nightfall, this time to the chaplain's house,where they had something to eat and pocketed four candles. Afterward, they randomly searched private houses looking for objects the churchwardens might have hidden, or domestic altars or shrines. The next morning, they continued their efforts, overturning basins of holy oil, smashing up more altars, and shredding the priest's and chaplains's books. As a parting shot, they derisively cut up the chaplain's bonnet.

Spanish Netherlands period

The Low Countries Map (1556-1648)

Ledringhem was part of Southern Netherlands (Dutch: Zuidelijke Nederlanden, Spanish: Países Bajos del Sur, French: Pays-Bas du sud, also called the Catholic Netherlands), a part of the Low Countries controlled by Spain (Spanish Netherlands, 1579–1713), then by Austria after the signing of the Treaty of Utrecht in 1713 (Austrian Netherlands, 1713–1794). The Southern Netherlands remained part of the Burgundian Circle of the Holy Roman Empire until its annexation to France in 1794.

From February to May 1638, a plague episode made victims in Ledringhem.

On May 22, 1659, France, England and Netherlands signed the Hedges Concerto treaty.

Return to French rule

Parts of Flanders became a French possession following the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle in 1668, ending the War of Devolution (1667–1668) which saw Louis XIV's French armies overrun the Habsburg-controlled Spanish Netherlands. With the fall of the fortresses of Bergues (6 June 1667), Louis XIV took hold of Ledringhem, part of the Châtellenie.

France gained some territory in Flanders, but nearly all of the Spanish Netherlands, as well as the Franche-Comté, was returned to Spain. Inwardly, Louis XIV was seething. He had hoped to take the entirety of the Spanish Netherlands and felt betrayed by the Dutch, who, to French eyes, were only independent due to French assistance in the Eighty Years' War. The War of Devolution thus led directly to the Franco-Dutch War of 1672–1678.

The consequences of the War of Devolution were manifold. From a purely military perspective, France had gained some advantages, by breaking through the ring of fortresses that surrounded the Spanish Netherlands. This simultaneously increased the French defensive power, as Vauban immediately set about expanding the conquered cities into strong fortifications. These in turn served as starting points from which further French campaigns of conquest could be launched in later wars.

French Revolution

After the French Revolution, French rule has been secured with revolutionary victory in the Battle of Hondshoote in 1793 against English and Austrian troops wanting to get hold of Dunkirk port.
In 1794 the entire region of the Spanish/Austrian Netherlands was overrun by France ending the existence of this territory as such. This was resisted by the Flamingant movement organized by Roman Catholic clergy. Austria confirmed the loss of its territories by the Treaty of Campo Formio, in 1797.

Henri-Louis de Guernoval, marquis d'Esquelbecq (1729–1801) (marquis de Ledringhem), captain in second of Louis XIV Royal-Cravattes regiment was the last of the nobility member to administer Ledringhem.

First French Empire

Map of Belgium and the Netherlands during the French occupation (1793-1815).

Ledringhem became part of the First French Empire 1810 Napoleonic Nord département. Most of the Low Countries were also annexed. After Napoleon's defeat at Leipzig (October 1813), the French troops retreated to France. The Treaty of Kortrijk (Dutch: Verdrag van Kortrijk), signed 28 March 1820 in the Belgian city of Kortrijk laid out the boundaries between France and the United Kingdom of the Netherlands (under the reign of King William I of the Netherlands). Nowadays, these boundaries still stand, with some minor corrections, as the official boundary between Belgium and France. In 1830, the Belgian Revolution led to the separation of the Southern Provinces from the Netherlands.

World wars

Shrapnel, like canon shells and bullet casings can still be found in and around the fields here. They are usually found by farmers ploughing, and date back to World Wars.

World War I 

German Schlieffen Plan in 1914 was to invade Belgium to better attack France to the north.

Thus, at the beginning, the war was a mobility war. At that time, French bicycle riding 3e Groupe de Chasseurs Cyclistes were in Ledringhem during the First Battle of Ypres in November 1914.[39] As the war turned into a trenches war with the front established to the east near Ypres, some 30 km away, Ledringhem served as a resting and training place (billet) to the rear. French 12th cuirassiers were there in December 1914-September 1915,[40] British horse-riding 20th Hussars 7 May 1915,[41] the 75th Brigade RFA in May–June 1916,[42] the 1st Royal Marine Battalion from the 14th to 22 November 1917,[43] French 114ème Régiment d'Artillerie Lourde[44] and 15e Régiment de Dragons[45] in May 1918, and 2e Régiment d'Artillerie de Campagne in August 1918.[46] These French troops are then replaced (26–28 June 1918) by English men of the 187th and 190th brigades of the 41th division (2e RAC JMO 26N906-23, 27 & 31).

World War II 

A violent battle took place in Ledringhem during the Battle of France in May 1940, which involved British soldiers against German troops. On the 27th to 29 May 1940, the British 5th Glosters got separated from the rest of the British forces in Ledringhem and became involved in fierce combats against motorized German troops. Several casualties among the British soldiers, including officers[47][48] and also French civilians, occurred during the fight. Nevertheless, the village was never conquered by the Germans at that time, and finally the British escaped to embark in Dunkirk evacuation during Operation Dynamo.[49] There is a Military Cemetery located at the site of the battle. Other casualties were made by Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler by killing prisoners gathered in a barn at La Plaine au Bois in Wormhoudt on Tuesday May 28, 1940.[50]

Also during that period, the windmill in Ledringhem has been burnt down. The head of the windmill served to repair the Drievenmeulen[51] in Steenvoorde.

After the 1940 defeat, Belgium and Northern France were put under Nazi Germany control. The structure remained in existence until July 1944.

War monuments

The French Monument to the Dead (Monument aux Morts) presents 25 names, 15 of which being French soldiers killed during the first World War, the other ten being civilian victims during World War II.[52] It is situated in the cemetery near the church.

In the British military part of the cemetery containing 52 graves, there is a Cross of Sacrifice.[53][54]

Historical population
YearPop.±%
1793710    
1800700−1.4%
1806710+1.4%
1821704−0.8%
1831739+5.0%
1836719−2.7%
1841704−2.1%
1846702−0.3%
1851689−1.9%
1856658−4.5%
1861650−1.2%
1866635−2.3%
1872659+3.8%
1876649−1.5%
1881612−5.7%
1886599−2.1%
1891603+0.7%
1896523−13.3%
1901478−8.6%
1906487+1.9%
1911485−0.4%
1921480−1.0%
1926466−2.9%
1931446−4.3%
1936433−2.9%
1946431−0.5%
1954408−5.3%
1962399−2.2%
1968418+4.8%
1975403−3.6%
1982522+29.5%
1990533+2.1%
1999507−4.9%
2006 649+28.0%
From the year 1962 on: population without double counting
Source: INSEE[55]
Source : Cassini
2006 : provisional population estimation by Insee

Administration

Town hall :.[56][57]

Mayors :

Ledringhem doesn't participate in a twinnage program with a foreign country municipality.

Transportation

There is a bus stop, for pupils to go to collège in Wormhout, or the high school in Hazebrouck, or to go to Wormhout.

The nearest train stations are in Arnèke and Esquelbecq.

Accommodations

View on Ledringhem's school

There is a municipal school (Ecole "Les boutons d'Or - Butter Bloeme") in Ledringhem, a multi-sport stadium and a feasting hall (salle des fêtes).

There is le Trou Flamand estaminet[58] (Flemish-style café-restaurant)[59] which is also a general store situated on the main square and the inn Auberge Du Kok-smid situated along route de Wormhout.[60]

Economy

The village main resources are agriculture productions. These include cereals (wheat, barley, oat), flax, fodder (mangel) and sugar beets, potatoes, horticulture and cattle raising (cows, pigs, fowls, ...).

There are also a few other businesses including a general practitioner.[61]

Social life

List of associations in Ledringhem:[62]

Patron saint fest (Ducasse) occurs during June first Sunday.

Main sights

Farmhouse (hofstede) in Ledringhem
Religious patrimony
Examples of rune-shaped designs found on Ledringhem's church (a five-lozenges cross and a heart on the gable.)

References

  1. Cadastral map relating to Peene Becque risk assessment on nord.equipement.gouv.fr
  2. Cadastral map on ddaf59.agriculture.gouv.fr
  3. Map of rivers on Union des Syndicats d’Assainissement du Nord website (French)
  4. Le village de Ledringhem on www.annuaire-mairie.fr (French)
  5. Ledringhem roads on ruesdemaville.com
  6. Ledringhem roads on www.annuaire-mairie.fr
  7. PARS PRIMA FOLQUINI LIB. I. ad annum 723 Chartularium Sithiense (Saint Bertin cartulary), édit. Guérard, p. 49 on gallica.bnf.fr (French + Latin)
  8. H. Van Werveke, Grands propriétaires en Flandre au VIIe et au VIIIe siècle, Revue belge de philologie et d'histoire, 2/2 (1923), p. 323. (French)
  9. Eugène Mannier, Études étymologiques historiques et comparatives sur les noms des villes, bourgs et villages du département du Nord (1861), page 23. On Internet Archive (French)
  10. Albert Dauzat and Charles Rostaing, Dictionnaire étymologique des noms de lieu en France, Librairie Guénégaud, Paris, 1979, French ISBN 2-85023-076-6, p. 394a.
  11. 1 2 Henri Pirenne (ed.),Le soulèvement de la Flandre maritime de 1323-1328 (1900), p. 125. On gallica.bnf.fr (French)
  12. as an alternative form of the Latinized name Leodringas Ledringhem Latin name on crgfa.com
  13. Ferry_de_Locre at wikipasdecalais.fr (French)
  14. Études étymologiques, historiques et comparatives sur les noms des villes, bourgs et villages du département du Nord on books.google.fr (French)
  15. Ferreolus Locrius, Chronicon belgicum, 258-1600 (Arras, 1616) (Latin)
  16. Map Flandiae Descriptio by Matthias Quad, 1609 on commons
  17. 1 2 Annales de la Société d'émulation de Bruges, Volume 10, 1848, pages 68-69 (French)
  18. Map Artesia_Comitatus_Artois by Joan Blaeu, 1645 on commons
  19. 1750 Cassini's map detail on cassini.ehess.fr
  20. 1 2 Les Flamands de France: Études sur leur langue, leur littérature et leurs Monuments, Louis de Baecker, 1830, page 40 (French)
  21. Flandria Illustrata, Tomus II on lucia.kbr.be (Latin)
  22. Ledringhem on Quid.fr (French)
  23. B. Walker
  24. Ernest Nègre, Toponymie générale de la France, no. 18123 (French)
  25. Marie-Thérèse Morlet, Les Noms de personnes de l'ancienne Gaule..., t. I, p. 396a.
  26. DAUZAT 394a
  27. Daniel Henry Haigh, The Anglo-Saxon Sagas (London: John Russel Smith, 1861. Reprint, Read Books, 2008). ISBN 978-1-4097-8131-8 (English)
  28. Notice sur la commune de pitgam, au West-Quartier de Flandre, by A. Bonvarlet, Annales du comité Flamand de France, Tome 9, 1867, pages 183-329 (French)
  29. Article on Ledringhem treasure discovery in 1852 on didier.landron.perso.neuf.fr (French)
  30. Traité des Monnaies Gauloises. by Adrien Blanchet, 1905, page 584 (French)
  31. Ledringhem's treasure staters depiction on fredericweber.com
  32. Le trésor gaulois de Ledringhem. Essai d'interprétation, Leclercq P., 1978, in Trésors, monnaies et archéologie du nord de la France Lille, pages 753-759 (French)
  33. Pierre Riché, The Carolingians; A Family Who Forged Europe, trans. Michael Idomir Allen (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1993), pp. 264–65
  34. monarchie+ledringhem search on Google (French)
  35. La Flandre Maritime et Dunkerque sous la domination française (1659-1789), Alexandre Saint-Léger, 1900 (French)
  36. Bierne history (French)
  37. Chronologie of Iconoclasm movement on dutchrevolt.leidenuniv.nl (Dutch)
  38. Beggars, iconoclasts, and civic patriots: the political culture of the Dutch Revolt. Peter J. Arnade, Cornell University Press, 2008, page 108-109
  39. 3e Groupe de Chasseurs Cyclistes (French)
  40. Repos et Tranchées en Flandre, en Artois, en Picardie (Décembre 1914-Septembre 1915) (French)
  41. WarMemorialsSurnamesT
  42. Alfred Farrell Stanway - War Service History
  43. http://www.cwgc.co.uk/RNDdiary002.htm
  44. Historique du 114ème Régiment d'Artillerie Lourde 1914-1918 (French)
  45. Historique du 15e Régiment de Dragons 1914-1918 (French)
  46. Historique du 2e Régiment d'Artillerie de Campagne 1914_1918 (French)
  47. http://members.tripod.com/~Glosters/ww2off.html
  48. http://www.unithistories.com/officers/Army_officers_W01.html
  49. Chronicle of World War II battle that took place in Ledinghem in 1940 (English)
  50. La bataille pour Wormhout et les crimes de guerre commis par la Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler à Esquelbecq, Ledringhem, Wormhout / Rommelaere, Guy. Association franco-britannique, 2001 (The Battle for Wormhout and the War Crimes committed by the Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler at Esquelbeck, Wormhout and Ledringhem) (French)
  51. Story of Steenvoorde Drievenmeulen on asso.nord.fr (French)
  52. Ledringhem monument to the dead on memorial-genweb.org
  53. Ledringhem cemetery at Commonwealth War Graves Commission
  54. Pictures of graves in Ledringhem Military cemetery
  55. Ledringhem 2006 INSEE data
  56. Ledringhem's town hall page (French)
  57. Ledringhem Town's hall data (French)
  58. Le Trou Flamand on www.estaminets.fr (French)
  59. Le Trou Flamand on www.aurestaurant.com (French)
  60. Auberge du Kok-Smid on www.linternaute.com (French)
  61. Businesses directory on 118000.fr (French)
  62. List of associations in Ledringhem on Government Journal Officiel web site (French)
  63. Association Nature et Patrimoine de Ledringhem on www.lejournaldesflandres.fr (French)
  64. Les Quickpitchenaeres on free.fr (French)
  65. Ledringhem church old photograph on notrefamille.com
  66. Article on Ledringhem church's organ on patrimoine-de-france.org
  67. Article on Ledringhem church's retable on patrimoine-de-france.org
  68. Les symboles dits runiques en Flandre on Westhoekpedia (French)
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