Belgium and Luxembourg (Eyewitness Travel Guides)

(WallPaper) #1
BELGIUM AND LUXEMBOURG REGION BY REGION 53

Café life in the Lower Town, beneath a comic-strip mural and the spire of the Hôtel de Ville

The origin of Brussels


lies in the Frankish
settlement known as


Bruocsella (Village in
the Marshes) and a castle


built in AD 977. From these
beginnings, it became a mas-


sively fortified power base for the
ruling dukes of Brabant and Burgundy


and evolved into a sophisticated city.
From the 12th century onwards,


commerce was the engine of growth.
The trading centre around the Grand


Place was in the Lower Town. In
contrast, the palaces of the dukes


and nobles stood aloof on the crest
of a hill in the Upper Town – a divi-


sion between the rulers and the ruled
that is still detectable in the architec-


ture today. Because French was the
language of the elite classes, it


became that of the city, which is a
French-speaking bubble surrounded


by the Dutch-speaking province of
Vlaams-Brabant. Officially, if not in


practice, Brussels is a bilingual city


and all the street names are in
both French and Dutch. The
city remained the capital as
the Spanish Netherlands
gave way to the Neo-
Classical era of the Austrian
Netherlands. During the
19th century, it underwent
rapid expansion as a result
of which the elegant Quartier
Léopold developed in the Upper
Town. Today, this zone of orderly
avenues and green spaces is home to
institutions of the EU. Punctuated with
modern buildings, it busies itself
with the governmental bureaucracy
so readily attached to Brussels’s name.
With an urban area of 160 sq km
(60 sq miles) and a population of one
million, Brussels juggles its great his-
torical legacy and its role in the mod-
ern world by offering the best of both
heritage and urban prosperity. And
true to a city that has the Manneken-
Pis as its mascot, a ripple of good
cheer is never far from the surface.

BRUSSELS


T


he capital of Belgium, and effectively the capital of Europe,


Brussels has always been a hub of trade and politics. Yet, despite


its international prominence, the city retains an intimate,


human scale, with a web of medieval streets centring upon the superb


Grand Place. Brussels’s glorious architecture and gilded spires rise


over high-fashion boutiques and quaint, time-warped taverns and cafés.


The Palais Royal, seat of the royal family in Brussels and centrepiece of the Upper Town

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