Belgium and Luxembourg (Eyewitness Travel Guides)

(WallPaper) #1

40 INTRODUCING BELGIUM AND LUXEMBOURG


TIMELINE

1500

1506 Margaret of Austria
moves the Burgundian
capital from Brussels
to Mechelen

1539 A rebellion in Ghent
is brutally crushed by
Charles V, and its leaders
publicly humiliated

1519 Charles V,
King of Spain,
becomes Holy
Roman Emperor

THE HABSBURG DYNASTY
Mary of Burgundy had two
children before she died,
leaving Maximilian and the
Habsburg dynasty the rul-
ers of Burgundy. Maximilian
began to raise taxes and
tried to reduce privileges
that had been granted by
Mary to secure the support
of the cities. By 1488,
Flanders was in revolt.
Bruges made the critical
error of holding Maximilian prisoner
in a house in the main square.
Maximilian exacted his revenge on the
city by transferring power to Ghent.
At this time, Antwerp also began to
rise as a leading commercial centre.
In 1494, Maximilian passed his rule of
the Low Countries to his son, Philip
the Handsome. Philip married Joanna
of Castile two years later, and their
first son, Charles, was born in Ghent
in 1500. While his parents ruled in
Spain, Charles was raised by his aunt,
Empress Margaret of Austria, who
acted as Regent of the Low Countries
and moved the capital to Mechelen.

SPANISH RULE
In 1516, Charles inherited the Spanish
throne and in 1519, he became the
Holy Roman Emperor as Charles V.
He was now master of a major
empire that spanned much of Europe,
and also included new overseas pos-
sessions in the Americas and East
Asia. Nevertheless, he considered
Flanders – under the governorship of
his sister, Mary – his real home. The
Low Countries prospered with land
reclamation, canal-building and the
expansion of industries producing
pottery, glass, tapestry and linen. In
1529, Charles V forced François I of

Maximillian of Austria with Mary
and their family, painted in 1516

1521 Erasmus helps
found the College
of Three Languages
at Leuven

Desiderius Erasmus

1520 1540

France to surrender his
claim to Flanders. This
was the result of a series
of battles – mainly for
the control of Italy –
including that of Pavia in
which François I was cap-
tured. However, Charles’s
empire was costly to run,
and in 1539, Ghent rose
up against heavy taxa-
tion and conscription.
Charles brutally crushed
this rebellion in his native city, forc-
ing its leaders to parade before him
in only shirts, with a noose around
their necks. Stroppendragers (noose-
bearers) is still a nickname for the
people of Ghent. Meanwhile, the
Reformation, begun by Martin Luther
in Germany, had started to arouse
serious religious conflict. Its ideas
took rapid hold in the Low Countries
and by the 1520s, Protestant converts
in the region were being burnt at the
stake. Charles V abdicated in 1555. In

1529 France is
forced to abandon
its claim
to Flanders

1555 Catholic Philip II
succeeds Charles V as
Protestant fervour takes
hold of the Low Countries

Tapestry depicting the Battle of Pavia in 1525 between
Francis I of France and the Hapsburg emperor Charles V

Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor
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