Belgium and Luxembourg (Eyewitness Travel Guides)

(WallPaper) #1
THE HISTORY OF BELGIUM 43

1740

1782–4 Under
Austrian reforms,
medieval walls
in Bruges are
demolished

as the Place Royale and Parc
de Bruxelles were laid out
in a fashionable Neo-
Classical style, which
also spread to other
cities. However, this
prosperity did not filter
down to the masses.
The people lived in
crowded, unsanitary
conditions and unem-
ployment was rife.
During this time, lace
became the industry of
the downtrodden.
The Austrian
Netherlands were
essentially conservative
and Catholic. When Joseph II (r.1780–
90) succeeded Maria Theresa, he
enforced a series of liberal reforms
including freedom of religion.
Monasteries closed, education was
secularized and administration was
increasingly based in Vienna. These
measures stoked up deep resentment
in the citizens. In 1787, a conserva-
tive rebellion, led by the Brussels
lawyer Henri van der Noot, escalated
into the Brabançon Revolt (1787–
90). The French
Revolution of 1789
further inspired a
mood of insurrection.
A battle at Turnhout
put the Austrians to
flight, although the
revolt was crushed by
Austrian troops dis-
patched by Joseph’s
successor, Leopold II.
This episode offered
a brief taste of inde-
pendence, but Belgium had to endure
further decades of foreign interven-
tion before that could be achieved.

famous victories at Ramillies
(north of Namur) and
Oudenaarde, which
pushed France out of the
Spanish Netherlands.
Under the 1713 Treaty
of Utrecht, it was
ceded to Austria.
Emperor Charles VI
ruled Austria after
Leopold, but failed to
produce a male heir.
His death resulted in
another eight years of
war, the War of the
Austrian Succession, to
resolve whether his
daughter Maria Theresa
should inherit the crown. The
Austrian Netherlands (as they now
were) were also drawn into the war.
French troops took Tournai,
Oudenaarde, Bruges, Dendermonde
and Ghent in 1745, and most of the
country the following year. With the
Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle (Aachen),
the French withdrew from the south-
ern Netherlands, and Maria Theresa’s
rule was finally acknowledged.

1720 1760 1780

1713 The Treaty of
Utrecht marks the
beginning of Austrian
rule in the Netherlands


1719 François Anneessens,
a guildmaster in Brussels,
leads a revolt against
Austrian taxes in Brussels
and is beheaded

1740–48 The succession of Maria Theresa to the
throne causes the War of Austrian Succession

1744 Charles of
Lorraine takes up his
post as Governor of the
Austrian Netherlands

1745 French troops led by Louis XV
invade the Austrian Netherlands

1790 The Republic of
United Belgium, formed
by the Barbançon
Revolt, is crushed
by the Austrians

A silver thaler depicting Maria Theresa

The Treaty of Utrecht that ended the
War of the Spanish Succession

Maria Theresa of
Austria (1717–80)

BOOM AND REVOLT
In 1744, Empress Maria Theresa
installed her sister Maria Anna of
Habsburg and her husband Charles of
Lorraine as joint governors of the
Austrian Netherlands. Maria Anna
died in childbirth the same year, but
Charles remained governor until his
death in 1780. His rule was a period
of revival – under the influence of
the Enlightenment, Charles’s court
attracted intellectuals and artists, and
Brussels became the most glamorous
city in Europe. Industry boomed with
the construction of new roads and
waterways. Brussels was transformed

Charles of Lorraine
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