CENTRAL AND
EASTERN FLANDERS
(see pp140–69)
EASTERN WALLONIA
(see pp212–33)
CENTRAL
WALLONIA
(see pp192–211)
GRAND DUCHY
OF LUXEMBOURG
(see pp234–53)
BELGIUM AND LUXEMBOURG AT A GLANCE 51
Luxembourg City (see pp240–45)
has a refined elegance befitting
the capital of the Grand Duchy.
This is exemplified by the large
central square named Place
Guillaume II, with its eques-
trian statue of the grand duke
of the 1840s, William II.
The River Semois (see pp228–9) snakes
through the Belgian provinces of Luxembourg
and Namur, past a charmed landscape of
forested hills. Walkers, canoeists and
motorists come to enjoy the tranquillity
and the breathtakingly spectacular views.
Waterloo (see pp196–7)
has been preserved as a
battlefield site since the
defeat of Napoleon in
- The man-made
hill of the Butte du Lion
is its central landmark.
Antwerp (see pp144–55) is Belgium’s second
biggest city, a major European port and an
industrial hub. However, its historic centre
gives little indication of this. Its primary land-
mark is the magnificent Gothic Onze-Lieve-
Vrouwekathedraal, whose dainty spire soars
above the stump of its uncompleted twin.