Havré

Sub-municipality of the city of Mons, Belgium
Sub-municipality of Mons in French Community, Belgium
Havré
Avrè (Walloon)
Sub-municipality of Mons
St. Martin Church
St. Martin Church
Coat of arms of Havré
Coat of arms
Location of Havré
Map
Location of Havré in Mons
Location of Havré in Mons
50°27′52″N 4°02′43″E / 50.46444°N 4.04528°E / 50.46444; 4.04528
Country Belgium
Community French Community
Region Wallonia
Province Hainaut
ArrondissementMons
MunicipalityMons
Area
 • Total17.94 km2 (6.93 sq mi)
Population
 (2020-01-01)
 • Total6,211
 • Density350/km2 (900/sq mi)
Postal codes
7021
Area codes065

Havré (French pronunciation: [avʁe]; Walloon: Avrè) is a sub-municipality of the city of Mons located in the province of Hainaut, Wallonia, Belgium. It was a separate municipality until 1977. On 1 January 1977, it was merged into Mons.[1]

Etymology

The village's name would likely originate from the old name Haverec. However, etymologists are uncertain about the origin and meaning of the name. Some say it would mean Country of the hops, some other think it would mean cleared ground, and more recently a German line of thought associate it with a German word that could translate to wild ash tree.

Geography

Havré is a village situated at the confines of the Borinage and the Centre region. It is traversed by the Canal du Centre and the Haine river. It is situated next to Boussoit, Bray, Mons, Obourg, Saint-Symphorien, Ville-sur-Haine, and Villers-Saint-Ghislain.

Economy

Havré was a wealthy municipality from the 19th century to 1950, with forests, salt refinery, tannery, tabac fabric, gunpowder factory, glass factory, phosphate quarry, but mostly thanks to coal mines which employed more than a thousand people.

In 1960, after the last coal mine closed, the village became a commuter-town for people mainly working in Brussels, Mons, and Charleroi.

In the tertiary sector of the economy, Havré counts small and medium supermarkets, and there are retail and handicraft shops. Sport is also developed with infrastructure for tennis, football, and basketball.

Population

  • 1837 : 1869 inhabitants
  • 1846 : 2043 inhabitants
  • 1860 : 1155 inhabitants
  • 1870 : 1915 inhabitants
  • 1910 : 3689 inhabitants
  • 1929 : 3713 inhabitants
  • 1961 : 5225 inhabitants
  • 1976 : 5390 inhabitants
  • 1990 : 5500 inhabitants
  • 2001 : 5930 inhabitants
  • 2004 : 5856 inhabitants
  • 2011 : 6157 inhabitants

Places

  • Havré Castle
  • Train station
  • Place d’Havré (town square)
  • Church Saint-Martin (on the town square)
  • Priory of Saint-Antoine-in-Barbefosse
  • Chapel of Bon-Vouloir (Good-will)
  • Havré, Old Castle.
    Havré, Old Castle.
  • Havré, Chapel of "Bon Vouloir" (17th century).
    Havré, Chapel of "Bon Vouloir" (17th century).
  • Havré, Old water mill (19th century).
    Havré, Old water mill (19th century).
  • Havré, Old Oak.
    Havré, Old Oak.
  • Terril N°1 (spoil tip Nr 1).
    Terril N°1 (spoil tip Nr 1).
  • Bois d'Havré (forest)
    Bois d'Havré (forest)

References

  1. ^ "LISTE ALPHABETIQUE DES COMMUNES - Fusions de 1963 à 1977" (PDF).
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Havré.
  • v
  • t
  • e
Populated places in Mons
Sub-municipalitiesVillages and hamlets
  • Ghislage
Authority control databases Edit this at Wikidata
International
  • VIAF
National
  • France
  • BnF data
  • Germany
Stub icon

This Hainaut Province location article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  • v
  • t
  • e