K-W Line

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View of bunker H4 and the water duct used to flood the area in front of the tank barricade near the village of Haacht. This is part of the KW-line.

The K-W Line, and abbreviation for the full title of Koningshooikt-Wavre Line,[1] was the main Belgian line of defence against a possible German armoured invasion through the centre of Belgium, during the initial phase of the Second World War.

The K-W Line, also known as the Dyle Line (Dijle-line) (named after the river Dijle) or Iron Wall, was requested by the Belgian Ministry of Defence and built between September 1939 and May 1940. It consisted of a connection of bunkers and barricades between the village of Koningshooikt and the city of Wavre. The barricades were either Cointet-elements connected to each other with steel cables, railway tracks drilled partly into swampy areas, concrete ditches filled with water, or other steel constructions that could hold off armoured vehicle attacks.

In 2009, an inventory of surviving emplacements was begun.[2]

See also

References

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  2. www.kwlinie.be


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