Lonely Planet India - August 2016

(lily) #1
2012
The Flemish Nationalist Party
(NVA) becomes the largest
political force in Flanders
and demands greater autonomy
for the region

2016
Brussels’s Zaventem Airport
and Maalbeek metro station
are attacked by terrorists
leaving 35 dead
and more than 300 injured

Y


OUR room at The Dominican
sited in a gorgeous building
conveniently located behind
the opera house will be
dark and characterful
with haunting polyphonic
music. You will be tempted to linger.
Don’t.
Walk out to the opera house officially
named the Theatre Royal de la Monnaie.
The money reference comes from the fact
that it was built on the site of the former
mint. Today Belgium’s premier opera house
it has also earned its page in the history
books for being the spot where supposedly
a passionate appeal in performance
for freedom is said to have sparked
an impromptu revolution in 1830.
To your left as you face the opera house
is the new shopping street; to your right
a chance to step into medieval Brussels
with some buildings still dating back
to the 16th and 17th centuries.
Go with the old and find your way
to the Café Georgette for Belgian fries to eat
as you walk through Rue du Bouchers –
one of Brussels’s main restaurant streets –
where you will find some of the city’s iconic
restaurants as well as maitres d’ cajoling
you to dine in near-perfect Hindi.
Off in a side street is the Jeanneke Pis
gender twin to the town’s more famous
Manneken Pis created in 1985 and opposite

her in the same alley the Delirium Café
with its promise of a menu of 2400 beers.
Step back onto restaurant street bat a few
more maitres d’ away and turn right onto
the Galerie de la Reine a street lined with
superior chocolateries like Neuhaus Mary
and Pierre Marcolini and the boutiques
of high-end labels like Delvaux and Chanel.
Cross at a diagonal past the house where
in 1830 Madame Abts made the first Belgian
flag and onwards. All streets lead to the
Grand Place a feast of gorgeous buildings
former guild houses gilded and carved
flanking the magnificent 15th-century
Tow n Ha l l that was never destroyed. Listen
to the stories – the Maison des Brasseurs
built in 1698 is said to be where Karl Marx
wrote his manifesto for communism.
Opposite the lacemakers’ building is where
Victor Hugo supposedly retreated from
trouble in France to work on Les Miserables.
Wonder too at the misalignments in the
Town Hall and keeping your sights at
top-of-the-houses level find the house with
the golden phoenix – it burned down and
was re-erected thrice – and the one next to it
topped by lions that looks like a galleon.
Step out onto Rue au Beurre where
Leonidas and Elisabeth chocolates await you;
Leonidas has a vaguely-confusing token
system to allow you to make your purchases
while Elisabeth has some of the smiliest
girls in Belgium helping you choose your

Brussels


Brussels is considered the capital of the comic and
the city sure gives the funnies their due. Comics truly
came into their own in Brussels when the German
occupiers banned the import of American comics
around 1914 and the Belgians went on to fill the gaps
with arguably more realistic less superhero-inclined
offerings. Today comics are everywhere; pick up
a little fold-out guide from the Visit Brussels office
and follow the Comic Strip Trail. Make sure you visit
the Comics Art Museum. If you’re a hard-core fan
the Comic Strip Festival annually celebrates the ninth
art in the heart of Brussels. Expect book-signing
sessions balloon parades and more. Even if all you
know about Belgian comics is Tintin you can follow
that intrepid reporter around Brussels on a walk that
explores the different locations featured in the books.

Brussels’s Comic World


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EASY EUROPE FLANDERS

PHOTOGRAPHS: © MSP TRAVEL IMAGES/ ALAMY STOCK PHOTO (1) © DEBORAH HARMES/
ALAMY STOCK PHOTO (2) © OLIVER KNIGHT/ ALAMY STOCK PHOTO (3) FACING PAGE: GETTY IMAGES


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