Metadata: SI Merksplas 1996 B
Collection
- Country:
- Belgium
- Holding institution:
- State Archives in Beveren
- Holding institution (official language):
- Rijksarchief te Beveren
- Postal address:
- Kruibekesteenweg 39/1, 9120 Beveren
- Phone number:
- +32 (0)3 750 29 77
- Email:
- rijksarchief.beveren@arch.be
- Reference number:
- SAB-Beveren-512-M56
- Title:
- SI Merksplas 1996 B
- Title (official language):
- SI Merksplas 1996 B
- Creator/accumulator:
- Gevangenissen; Prisons
- Date(s):
- 1918/1986
- Extent:
- 23.3 linear metres
- Scope and content:
- A number of files from this fonds are of importance. Firstly, we mention nos. 26 and 28 containing incoming and outgoing correspondence, mainly with the Staatsveiligheid (State Security), who inspected the mail of the interned persons. These files also contain lists of internees, probably including Jewish internees, given the refugee issue of the 1930s. We also note lists of Jewish internees from the so-called German section of the prison, arrived in various transfers (1942-1943, see file no. 212). Jewish prisoners can probably also be found in the “transport lists” (no. 213; dated 1942), again from the German section, and the list of prisoners in the Belgian section of the prison in Angoulême (the French prison to which a part of the foreign prisoners from Belgium were transported in May-June 1940). Given the fact that many Jewish individuals were interned in Merksplas between 1938 and 1940, general files such as correspondence, opsluitingsdossiers (individual files; see for example no. 262-283 for files of ‘suspicious’ aliens), various series of population registers (i.a. of the German section), etc. are also of particular interest.
- Administrative/biographical history:
- Today, Belgium has 32 prisons – 16 in Flanders, 14 in Wallonia and 2 in Brussels. The Belgian prison system mainly dates back to the French period, when the corporal punishment of the Ancien Régime was abolished and replaced by prison sentences. Traditionally, a distinction is made between the sections reserved for uncondemned individuals (the arresthuis for suspects, justitiehuis for the accused, later also the huis van bewaring for so-called passers-by) and convicts (the strafhuis, with its various sections). The distinction between detained civilians and military personnel (the latter being locked up in the provoosthuis) dates back to the Dutch regime. These five departments, usually centralised in one single penitentiary complex, were collectively called verzekeringshuis in the 19th century, and later gevangenis (‘prison’). In Ghent and Leuven, where also tuchthuizen (created during the Ancien Régime) existed, the prisons were called hulpgevangenissen (‘auxiliary prisons’). The tuchthuizen were renamed ‘central prisons’. Since 1832, the administration of the prison system is one of the main tasks of the Ministry of Justice – in charge of, among others, the establishment and abolition, management, the staff and the infrastructure of the prisons, internment centres, welfare colonies (weldadigheidskolonies), etc. In the 19th century the prison system underwent only minor changes. The evolution from a communal system (in which the prisoners lived in large common rooms) to a cell-based regime led to a thorough reorganisation of the prison infrastructure. Criticism of this narrow concept resulted in the creation, in the course of the 20th century, of open and half-open prisons better suited for the rehabilitation of the inmates. A second important evolution was the ‘discovery’ and isolation of specific categories of prisoners (e.g. women, minors, vagabonds, beggars, mentally ill, recidivists, …). The specialisation of the prison system was a logic consequence of this evolution – as exemplified by the creation of anthropologic services (in the 1920s), psychiatric departments (from 1930), social services (1930s) etc. It should be noted that the organisation of (productive) prison labour is a significant aspect of today’s penitentiary system. Prison archives are of particular interest for genealogical research, social history, historical criminology etc. See for example the rollen of the different departments, various types of registers, and series of individual files (incl. correspondence, reports, often photographs) such as the ‘detention files’ of the prisoners and the anthropological files. In the context of this guide, it is noteworthy to point out that in the late 1930s many foreigners (notably German and Austrian refugees) deemed ‘subversive’ or unwanted were detained in various Belgian penal institutions. (http://justitie.belgium.be/nl/themas_en_dossiers/gevangenissen/belgische_gevangenissen/gevangenissen/; I. Rotthier, De gevangenisgids. Archiefgids betreffende de archieven van de Vlaamse penitentiaire instellingen, Miscellanea Archivistica Studia no. 142, Brussel, ARA-AGR, 2001.)
- Subject terms:
- Migration
- Prisoners
- Refugees
- Statistics
- World War II
- Access, restrictions:
- Consultation of documents older than 30 years containing personal information requires the authorisation of the Algemeen Rijksarchivaris or his representative, as well as the signing of a research declaration.
- Finding aids:
- B. Rzoska & K. Velle, “Inventaris van het archief van de strafinrichting te Merksplas. Overdracht 1996 B”, in B. Rzoska & K. Velle, Inventarissen van de archieven van diverse strafinrichtingen uit de provincies Antwerpen, Limburg en Brabant (20ste eeuw), T22 (Rijksarchief te Beveren), Brussel, ARA-AGR, 1997, pp. 59-81.
- Yerusha Network member:
- State Archives of Belgium