The surroundings of Malonne have been inhabited for a long time, well into
Prehistory. In the valleys of the
Sambre and the
Meuse, in the middle of which Malonne lies, several digging sites have revealed signs of dwelling as soon as the
Paleolithic and throughout prehistory.
Namur then developed in the
Roman Era, a few kilometers from Malonne, having a strategical position between two streams. Proofs of Roman presence have been confirmed in the village, through a cemetery and an agricultural holding in the locality of Reumont dating to the Roman High-Empire. Malonne would have been founded around the year 600, or at least it's at this date that it enters history. Its founder, Saint-Berthuin, was an Anglo-Saxon Bishop (probably Irish). Legend says an angel visited him in his dreams, and asked him to leave all his goods behind and establish a village between the
Meuse and the Landoir. He is warmly welcomed by the landlords: Roga, the squire of
Flawinne hands over her domain of Malonne, on which Saint-Berthuin builds his oratory; Odoacre, landlord of
Floreffe, Gives him some land; and
Pepin of Herstal gives away 5 smallholdings, of which possibly
Reumont. These generous donations were commonplace during the
Merovingian period. In exchange for poor or hard-to-defend lands, the mighty ensured good relations with the Church both on earth and -hopefully- in the heavens. The
Vita Bertuini is the biggest source of information on the Saint's life. During the
Middle Ages, Malonne was under the authority of
Liège. It seems Saint-Berthuin's ownership slowly lost its strength, and was replaced by a group of
canons in charge of the domain. == See also ==