Frankish origins and medieval period The first houses built in this forested area along the Geleysbeek, a
tributary of the river
Senne, date from the 7th century. The village's first church was dedicated to Saint
Dionysius the Areopagite. The legend of
Saint Alena, a young convert to
Chalcedonian Christianity murdered by her father's troops for hearing mass at the church of Dionysius, also takes place in the 7th century. The chapel and cult of Saint Alena, however, date only from the 12th century. The saint's
cenotaph, one of the rare examples of 12th-century sculpture in Belgium, can still be admired in the chapel today. The contiguous Church of St. Denis (Dionysius) was rebuilt in the
Romanesque style at around the same time. The abbots of
Affligem, which had been the ecclesiastical owners of the parish since the
bishop of Cambrai ceded it to them in 1105, decided to build a
priory for women in Forest;
Forest Abbey. The first abbess of the Forest priory was appointed in 1239. Also in the 13th century, the Romanesque Church of St. Denis was rebuilt in the newer
Gothic style. The neighbouring abbatial church was rebuilt in the 15th century.
17th century until today During the period of the
Austrian Netherlands, especially during the reigns of Archdukes
Albert and
Isabella, Forest prospered, thanks to the Abbey. On 26 March 1764, however, a devastating fire ruined some of the buildings and destroyed many of its artworks. Three decades later, in the years following the
French Revolution, the religious community was disbanded, the nuns forced to flee, and the buildings sold. The municipality bought the Abbey in 1964 and proceeded to restore it to its former glory. ==Government and infrastructure==