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Kayakers on the River Semois, meandering through Eastern Wallonia’s green landscape
The immaculately maintained and serene Abbaye d’Orval, a functioning Cistercian monastery
BELGIUM AND LUXEMBOURG REGION BY REGION
Throughout much of its
history, Liège traced a
path different from that
of the rest of Belgium.
Ruled by prince-bishops
since the 10th century, it was
a principality of the Holy Roman
Empire, but was fiercely proud of
its autonomous status. Its territory
stretched at times right across the
central band of Belgium to the
French border. Liège retained its
prince-bishops until they were over-
thrown by rebels during the French
Revolution in 1789–94. In 1830, it
joined Belgium in the struggle for
independence. The Belgian industrial
revolution also began near Liège,
kick-started by the English entrepre-
neurs William and John Cockerill, who
brought the age of steam to Wallonia’s
textile industry in the 1800s and set
up iron mills just outside the city.
Maps have been repeatedly
redrawn in the border areas between
Belgium and its neighbours. The
Province of Luxembourg
formerly belonged to the
Duchy of Luxembourg, but
under the Treaty of
London of 1839, the
Duchy was split in two.
The eastern part became
an independent country,
the Grand Duchy of
Luxembourg, while the western part
was incorporated into Belgium.
Similarly, having been intermittently
in Belgian possession, Eupen and the
German-speaking community in the
Cantons de l’Est have been reclaimed
into the Province of Liège since the
end of World War II.
Over the years, the once sparsely
populated region of Eastern Wallonia
has become popular with holiday-
makers and outdoor enthusiasts. In
winter, skiers flock to the highest
areas of the Ardennes, around Spa
and the Haute Fagnes. Several
medieval castles, modern battlefields
and museums attract summer visitors.
EASTERN WALLONIA
K
nown above all for its slice of the Ardennes, Eastern Wallonia
is a dramatically hilly area of farmland and forests, threaded
by fast-flowing rivers and dotted with tranquil towns and
villages. Comprising the provinces of Liège and Luxembourg, this once
remote region now attracts many visitors, who come to walk or cycle
through the beautiful landscape or go kayaking on its swift rivers.