Belgium and Luxembourg (Eyewitness Travel Guides)

(WallPaper) #1
GRAND DUCHY OF LUXEMBOURG 237

Luxembourg City’s vast fortress at the peak of its formidable glory around 1858


1600 1740 1880

2000 Grand Duke Henri
succeeds his father.

1914–18 Germany
occupies Luxembourg

1795–1814
Luxembourg
is ruled by
Revolutionary
France

1618–48
The Thirty
Years’ War

1714 Luxembourg is
assigned to Austria

European leaders at the Congress
of Vienna on 9 June 1815


1684–97 Louis
XIV of France
rules the Duchy;
Vauban fortifies
Luxembourg City

1815–40 The
Grand Duchy is
ruled by William I,
King of the
Netherlands

1839 The Grand Duchy
attains its current size

2006 Musée d’Art Moderne
Grand-Duc Jean opens

1940–45
Germany
occupies
Luxembourg a
second time

1957 Luxembourg is
one of the founder
nations of the EEC

replace the Holy Roman
Empire. The mighty fortress
of Luxembourg City was gar-
risoned by the Prussians.
After the Belgian Revolution
in 1830, William I lost control
of Belgium: this included,
under the 1839 Treaty of
London, the French-speaking,
western (Belgian) half of
Luxembourg. He retained the
eastern part, and the Grand
Duchy now assumed its
modern shape. The Dutch
kings William (Guillaume) I,
II and III remained grand
dukes of Luxembourg until



  1. The collapse of the
    Germanic Confederation in
    1867 led to an international
    crisis over Prussia’s claim to
    Luxembourg, but war was
    averted by the Second Treaty
    of London, under which the


AUTONOMY AND
OCCUPATION

In 1890, William III died
without a male heir. In the
Netherlands, his daughter
Wilhelmina could succeed,
but in Luxembourg, under
the ancient Salic Law of the
Franks, women were not
allowed to inherit the throne.
Instead, a relative, Duke
Adolphe of Nassau-Weilburg,
became grand duke, found-
ing the present dynastic line.
Salic Law was abandoned
by his son, William IV, who
passed on the title to his eld-
est daughter Marie-Adélaïde,
who became Grand Duchess
in 1912. Despite its neutral
status, Luxembourg was
invaded and occupied by the
Germans during World War I.
After the end of the war, in
1919, Marie-Adélaïde abdi-
cated in favour of her sister
Charlotte, who ruled as

FOUNDER OF THE EU

Luxembourg is a keen
advocate of international
cooperation. In 1950, it
formed part of the Benelux
Customs Union and in 1957,
it was one of the six found-
ing nations of the European
Economic Community, which
evolved into the European
Union. Today, Luxembourg
City is the location for vari-
ous EU institutions, including
the European Court of Justice
and the European Court of
Auditors. In 1964, Grand
Duchess Charlotte abdicated
in favour of her son Jean,
who had married Princess
Joséphine-Charlotte of
Belgium, thus linking the
two nations. In 2000, Grand
Duke Jean in turn abdicated
in favour of his son Henri.

states agreed to guarantee
Luxembourg’s independence
and neutrality. The Prussians
left Luxembourg City and
their fortress was dismantled.
In the last decades of the 19th
century, Luxembourg began
to prosper by exploiting its
high-quality steel, produced
in the south of the country.

2020

Grand Duchess until 1964.
During her reign, neutral
Luxembourg was again over-
run by the Germans, and in
1942 was formally annexed
to Germany. Conscription,
forced labour and other
oppression inspired a deter-
mined campaign of resistance.
In the bitter winter of 1944–5,
Luxembourg was the scene
of the devastating Ardennes
Offensive (see p231).

Grand Duke Henri
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