First fortification ca. 10th century AD
Since the
Treaty of Verdun (843) the river
Scheldt was the natural and political border between the
County of Flanders (belonging to the Kingdom of France) to the west and the
Holy Roman Empire to the east. In 980 the German Emperor
Otto II awarded Antwerp a
margraviate, and ordered a fortification built on the wharf, part of his fortification program for his western border. Around 1106 the
Counts of Leuven, the later
Dukes of Brabant, acquired the
Margraviate of Antwerp, and it continued to be part of the
Duchy of Brabant until the end of the
Ancien Régime. The first fortification consisted of a wall and ditch surrounding an enceinte built partly on the wharf. The wall was about high and thick and the ditch (on the north and southside of the fortification wall) was about - wide. The ditch was located at the north and eastside at the current location of the street called
Burchtgracht (a name that translates literally into "fortress ditch"), in the south it was at the
Palingbrug. In 1104 Emperor
Hendrik IV reinforced the walls to high and thick. The remnants of this wall can still be seen near the west face of the
Vleeshuis at the end of the
Vleeehuisstraat. The wharf was a dry landmass, a dry hill protruding about 30 m into the main track of the river Scheldt (measured from the current 19th-century Scheldt-quayside). The enceinte within the wall was about in size, and contained 3 streets: the old
Steenstraat (the current ramp leading to the
het Steen building), the
Zakstraat and the
Mattestraat, and there was a square : the
Burgplein. The river shore sloped steeply into the river at the south and west of the wharf and more gently at the northside (the quays in the drawings to the right were constructed at a later date). On the westside there was only a fortification wall (no ditch) facing the river with a tollhouse at the wharf gate. Within the enceinte the most important buildings were: • house
het Steen, (part of the current monument), • house
het hof van Cruyninghe (the Margrave's residence), • the church dedicated to
St Walburga, (which has entirely disappeared) • the
Vierschaer (the tribunal) • a refuge of the
Affligem Abbey • a brewery. During recent excavations behind the Vleeshuis on the intersection of the current Vleeshuisstraat and Burchtgracht, the remainder of the medieval wall structure was excavated and also the floor of the cellar of house
De Gans (The Goose, an inn) and a well. Another part of the fortification wall that had been enclosed in the old "badhuis" building (formerly the public baths) was made visible again when that building was demolished (a new structure has been built on the badhuis site, but the remainder of the medieval fortification wall is now better preserved, see gallery). == Before the 13th century ==