Belgium and Luxembourg (Eyewitness Travel Guides)

(WallPaper) #1
BELGIUM AND LUXEMBOURG REGION BY REGION 105

Tour groups cruising down the scenic Dijver canal through historic Bruges

Owing to its location


at the crossroads of
northern Europe, and


to its boundary with
the North Sea, Western


Flanders has often been
thrust into the forefront of his-


torical events. Although a Flemish-
speaking land, it was ruled during


the Middle Ages by French kings (see
pp37–8) – a cause of much frustra-


tion and strife. Despite this, many of
the cities, notably Bruges, Ghent,


Ieper, Kortrijk and Veurne, were rich
from the cloth trade and industrious


with crafts meticulously regulated by
their proud guilds. The Golden


Age followed in the 15th century,
when the dukes of Burgundy took


possession and made Bruges the
glittering capital of their empire.


However, between 1500 and 1945,
Western Flanders was in the doldrums.


The economy became largely rural,
with small cottage industries such as


lace-making. The land became a pawn


in the big-game politics of
Europe, battered by religious
struggles in the 16th century
as the Spanish Netherlands
disintegrated, then fought
over by the Austrians, the
French and the English in
succeeding centuries. The
20th century brought World
War I, which scored a line through
Western Flanders, creating a wasteland
on either side and demolishing Ieper.
All this changed over the latter half
of the 20th century with the rise of
Flanders as one of Europe’s most
prosperous regions. The architectural
treasures of the old medieval towns,
sidelined and ignored for centuries,
but preserved untouched, were
restored, and the historic heritage of
Flanders has now become one of its
greatest assets. Furthermore, Western
Flanders has done much to encourage
visitors, be it in the great cities, the
countryside, on the coast, or on
the battlefields of the Western Front.

WESTERN FLANDERS


C


harming, fascinating and glorying in the treasures of its historic


heritage, Western Flanders is home to vibrant cities such as


Bruges and Ghent, and smaller towns such as Oudenaarde,


Kortrijk and Veurne. Around them lies a tranquil rural landscape of


flat or gently hilly farmland, threaded with rivers and canals. To the


north, sandy beaches face out on to the bracing North Sea.


The traditional Flemish way of shrimp fishing from horse-drawn carts, at the Oostduinkerke beach

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