Amay (; ) is a municipality of Wallonia located in the province of Liège, Belgium.
On 1 January 2006 Amay had a total population of approximately 14,231. The total area is 27.61 km<sup>2</sup> which gives a population density of approximately 476 inhabitants per km<sup>2</sup>. It owes its site to a ford of the Meuse that was still in use in the Middle Ages but had begun as a Gallo-Roman vicus of the civitas Tungrorum (Tongeren).
The municipality consists of the following districts: Amay, Ampsin, Flône, Jehay, and Ombret-Rawsa.
Places of interest
- Castle of Jehay-Bodegnée, a 16th-century castle
thumb|none|175px|Old Romanesque tower (12th century)
Famous inhabitants
- François Walther de Sluze (1622–1685), mathematician and abbot of Amay
- Zénobe Gramme (1824-1902), inventor of the dynamo
References
- Richard Stillwell, ed. Princeton Encyclopaedia of Classical Sites, 1976: "Amay, Belgium"
External links
- The Amay lock in 1921. from the Site of the Walloon regional archives (fr).
