Belgium and Luxembourg (Eyewitness Travel Guides)

(WallPaper) #1

B


oth a young country and a very old one, Belgium won


independence for the first time in 1830, but owes its name to


Gallic tribes who confronted the Romans in 58 BC. Its location


on the crossroads of northern Europe made it both a hub of inter-


national trade and the battlefield for contending nations. Today, its


position has brought new benefits, at the heart of the European Union.


THE HISTORY OF BELGIUM


INTRODUCING BELGIUM AND LUXEMBOURG 37

When Julius Caesar set out to
conquer the Gauls of west-
ern Europe in 58 BC, he
encountered a fierce group
of tribes there, known as
the Belgae. Roman victory
in the region led to the
establishment of the province
of Gallia Belgica. Following
the collapse of the Roman
Empire in the 5th century,
the Germanic Franks came to power
here, initially making Tournai, in
modern-day Wallonia, their capital.
The Frankish ruler Clovis I estab-
lished the Merovingian dynasty
(AD 481–751), whose empire soon
encompassed all of Gaul. During
this time, Christianity was spread
across the land by missionaries such
as the French saint Eligius in
Flanders. The Merovingians were
followed by the Carolingian dynasty
(751–987), which produced one of
the most important figures of the
Middle Ages – Charlemagne, who
extended his borders to cover most
of western Europe and was crowned
by the pope as Emperor of the West.
After Charlemagne’s death, the
empire was divided up among his
grandsons, and the province of
Belgium was split along the River

Scheldt. Louis the German, as
King of East Francia, took
the southern portion called
Lotharingia (Lorraine). This
included the Walha (later,
the Walloons) – Romanized
Celts who occupied the
Meuse valley. Charles the
Bald, King of West Francia,
took the western portion,
which encompassed a large
chunk of Flanders. The French claim
to Flanders would haunt the region
for the next 600 years.

FLOURISHING TRADE
From about 1100 onwards, a number
of fortified trading cities developed
on inland waterways. Flanders
became the focus of the cloth trade,
weaving high-quality wool imported
from England into valuable textiles
and tapestries. By the late medieval
period (14th century), trade routes
led to France, Germany and Spain,
and over the Alps to Renaissance
Italy. Belgian towns such as Brussels,
Ghent, Ieper, Antwerp and Bruges
became famous for their wealth and
luxury. Their elaborate town halls,
belfries and market squares were
physical symbols of their wealth,
pride and sense of independence.

Seal of Charles the Bald,
King of West Francia

58–50 BC The Belgae
are defeated by Julius
Caesar and Roman
occupation begins


AD 460–86
Tournai serves
as capital of the
Franks, until
Clovis I moves
it to Paris

843 Charlemagne’s
Belgium is divided
along the Scheldt:
Flanders goes to France
and Lotharingia to
Louis the German

1099 During the First Crusade,
Godefroid de Bouillon (see
p233) becomes the first ruler
of the Kingdom of Jerusalem

860 France makes
Baldwin Iron-Arm the
first Count of Flanders

979 Official
founding of
Brussels

1134 A storm creates
the Zwin, a tidal inlet,
giving Bruges access
to the North Sea

Charlemagne (768–814)

AD 600

Coat of arms of the
Kingdom of Jerusalem

Charles the Bold (1433–77) in Rules and Ordinances of the Order of the Golden Fleece, a 15th-century vellum

700 800 900 1000 1100 1200

TIMELINE
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