Halle-Booienhoven
Appearance
Halle-Booienhoven | |
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Coordinates: 50°48′22″N 5°6′47″E / 50.80611°N 5.11306°E | |
Country | Belgium |
Region | Flanders |
Community | Flemish Community |
Province | Flemish Brabant |
Arrondissement | Leuven |
Municipality | Zoutleeuw |
Postal codes | 3440 |
Area codes | 011 |
Halle-Booienhoven is a section of the municipality of Zoutleeuw, in the province of Flemish Brabant, Belgium. It was a municipality in its own right before the merger of the municipalities in 1977.
Etymology
- Halle – Old forms: circa 1050 Hala, 1107 Halle, 1139 Hallo. It comes from the Germanic word halha, which means "bend in the highland". A series of hilltops are lined up from Velm to Halle-Bisjeshoven. Between the peaks with a height of 83.75 and 80 meters is an outcrop, after which Halle was named.
- Booienhoven – Old forms: 1235 boedenhoeven, 1350 boedenhouen (read: -hoven), 1357 in bodenhouen (read: -hoven), etc. and with expulsion of d Boijenhouen in 1645. Booihoven, like Goetshoven and Gussenhoven, belongs to a younger layer of settlement names that originated between 600 and 700 AD. The type consists of a person's name in the Romanesque genitive singular + curtem, meaning "court, farm" of the named person. Following this the type was created: personal name in the Germanic genitive singular + hofum, singular of hofa, which means "farm". We can thus reconstruct Booihoven as Germanic Budon hofum, meaning "Budo's farm".[1]
Notes
References
- ^ Dr. P. Kempeneers, Zoutleeuw. Een toponymisch-geschiedkundige studie. Leuven, Instituut voor Naamkunde, Nomina geographica flandrica, Monografie XIX, 2003, 308 blz.