Pagus of Brabant


The pagus of Brabant was a geographical region in the early Middle Ages, in what is now Belgium. It was the first region known to have been called Brabant, and it included the modern capital of Belgium, Brussels.
Although it was eventually divided between powerful neighbouring counties, the parts which went to the Counts of Leuven, not only kept the name in use, but became the primary name of their large lordship. This led to many other regions now being named Brabant, such as the French and Dutch-speaking areas east of the Dyle, including Leuven and Wavre; and the province of North Brabant in the Netherlands.
It is and was multi-lingual, divided between Dutch speakers in the north, and French speakers in the south. Today the region is divided between the modern Belgian provinces of Vlaams Brabant and East Flanders, Hainaut and Walloon Brabant, as well as Brussels, which is officially bi-lingual.

Geographical definition

It lay between the rivers Scheldt, Rupel, Dyle and Haine.
This territory includes not only Brussels but also Aalst. It does not include Louvain.
The modern Dutch province of North Brabant was not originally part of Brabant, but acquired the name because it was integrated politically.
In the modern Belgian province of Antwerp, Klein-Brabant is geographically in the original pagus of Brabant.

Etymology

In its earliest forms such as those collected by Nonn, the first part of the name was written with variants such as brac-, brag-, brach-, braim, and brei. According to Deru this element could derive from Germanic *brakti implying fallow land, or *braki implying marshy land. These would both be derived from reconstructed Proto-Germanic *:wikt:brekaną|brekaną "to break".
The second element of the name -bant is found in several other Frankish pagus names in this region, such as nearby Oosterbant, and Swifterbant and Teisterbant, to the north, and is believed to be connected to the medieval concept of a "ban", relating to areas of duty and authority.

Pre-history

As demonstrated by Deru, the pagus of Brabant between the Scheldt, Haine, Lasne and Rupel rivers, corresponds closely with the northern extension of the Belgic Nervii, both in terms of archaeological evidence such as Nervian coin finds, and also because it lay within the Roman era civitas of the Nervians, and its successor, the medieval bishopric of Cambrai - both of which had their main centres in the south, in the areas of Hainaut and Cambrai.

History

The oldest records of Brabant come from the Liber Traditionem of Saint Peter's Abbey in Ghent, beginning around 750. Though it was on the opposite side of the Scheldt from Brabant, St Peter's had a strong involvement in lands between the Scheldt and Dender.
In 870, in the Treaty of Meerssen Brabant was mentioned as containing four counties, but the definitions of these political entities can now only be speculated upon. Much of its history in the Early Middle Ages is difficult to reconstruct. Although Leon Vanderkindere and Paul Bonenfant both attempted it, these attempts have been criticized by later historians. What can be said is limited:
After 925 the boundary between the major Frankish kingdoms became permanently fixed along the Scheldt river, making Brabant a frontier province or "March" of what would become the Holy Roman Empire, and eventually Germany. On the western side of that boundary lay the expansionist Counts of Flanders, who were within the western Frankish kingdom that would become France. They developed the fortified city of Ghent upon this river frontier.
In response to this situation, the emperors in Germany established their own March on their side of the Scheldt. One of the first frontier lordships named was at Ename in Brabant, and there were also Valenciennes to the south and Antwerp to the north.
As the 11th century progressed, three large parts of Brabant became permanently politically connected to their powerful neighbours.
The remaining part of Brabant between Brussels and the Flemish part of Brabant, also came into the hands of the counts of Leuven and Brussels at some point, and from at least 1085 they referred to themselves also as Landgraves of Brabant, indicating a higher status than a normal Count. Van Droogenbroeck has argued that the counts of Leuven acquired this title to Brabant from their relative Hermann II, Count Palatine of Lotharingia, who died at this time.