Name The Latin name
Cortoriacum means the settlement near the curb in the river. There is also mention of 'Cortoracum' in some literature. Its name later evolved to 'Cortrycke', 'Cortryck' and 'Kortrijk' (19th century). In French and in English, the city is called Courtrai.
Origins Roman times Findings from an archeological dig in 1950 in which remains of three Roman
funeral pyres were found suggest that the
vicus was used as an encampment by the Romans during their
invasion of Britain in AD 43.
Cortoriacum was a larger
Gallo-Roman vicus of
civitas Menapiorum at an important crossroads near the
Lys river of the Roman roads linking
Tongeren and
Cassel and
Tournai and
Oudenburg. It was first mentioned in a document from the 4th or 5th century called where the cortoriacenses (cavalry) troops were mentioned. In the 9th century,
Baldwin II, Count of Flanders established fortifications against the
Vikings. The town gained its
city charter in 1190 from
Philip, Count of Flanders. The population growth required new
defensive walls, part of which can still be seen today (the
Broeltorens,
Armory, Kortrijk). Several local places still refer to physical parts of the defensive structures around Kortrijk (Walle, Waterpoort, Menenpoort, Gentsepoort, Brugsepoort, Kasteelkaai); Most of the physical parts have been overbuilt or destroyed. In the 13th century, the battles between
Fernando of Portugal, Count of Flanders and his first cousin, King
Louis VIII of France, led to the destruction of the city. The Counts of Flanders had it rebuilt soon after. To promote industry and weaving in the town,
Joan, Countess of Flanders exempted settlers in Courtrai from
property tax. From that time, Kortrijk gained great importance as a centre of
linen production.
Battle of the Golden Spurs In 1302, the population of
Bruges started a successful uprising against the French, who had annexed
Flanders a couple of years earlier. On 18 May the French population in that city was massacred, an event that could not go unpunished. The famous ensuing
Battle of Courtrai in 1302, also known as the
Battle of the Golden Spurs (Dutch:
Guldensporenslag), between the
Flemish people, mostly commoners and farmers, and
Philip the Fair's knights took place near Courtrai on 11 July, resulting in a victory for Flanders; the date is commemorated as a national holiday by the
Flemish community. Following a new uprising by the Flemish in 1323, this time against their own
Count Louis I, the French invaded again. These Flemish acquisitions were consolidated by the French at the
Battle of Cassel (1328). Louis I's son
Louis II lost the city to a Flemish uprising led by
Philip van Artevelde in 1381, but the Flemish were later decisively defeated at the 1382
Battle of Roosebeke by Louis II with French support, resulting in a new wave of plundering and destruction.
15th century to modern times Most of the 15th century was prosperous under the
Dukes of Burgundy, until the death of the Burgundian heiress
Mary of Burgundy in 1482, which ushered in renewed fighting with France. The 16th century was marked by the confrontations engendered by the
Reformation and the uprising of the Netherlands against Spain.
Louis XIV's reign saw Courtrai occupied by the French five times in sixty years and its former fortifications razed. The
Treaty of Utrecht assigned the area to the Austrian Habsburgs. After the
French Revolution and the
Napoleonic era, the textile industry, based on
flax, and the general economy of the city prospered again. The city had a population of 18,000 inhabitants by the 1840s. Courtrai was heavily bombed in the summer of 1917, but
was liberated by the British Army the following year. During World War II the city was an important railway hub for the German army, and for this reason was the target of several Allied airstrikes. On 21 July 1944 (the Belgian National Day) around 300
Avro Lancasters dropped over 5,000 bombs on the city centre. Many historical buildings on the central square, as well as the old railway station, were destroyed.
Battle of Courtrai Battles fought there in 1302, 1382, 1580, 1793, 1794, 1814, 1815, and
1918 have each been called
Battle of Courtrai. == Geography ==