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The Ancient Celts
Beginning
in 57 BC, Julius Caesar extended the power of
Rome into the region of Europe that is now Belgium.
The people he encountered there were the Belgae,
one of the various Celtic tribes of early Gaul,
and the Romans dubbed their new province Gallia
Belgica. In the fourth century AD, with Rome
in decline, control of Gaul was ceded to the
Franks, a Germanic tribe that the weakened empire
employed as mercenaries. As the Franks flourished,
they decided to dispense with their Roman employers.
By 431, they had established an independent
dynasty, the Merovingian, with its capital at
Tournai. Soon after, under Clovis I (c.466-511), the
Merovingians succeeded in pummeling the last
of the Romans in Gaul. They held large parts
of present day France and Belgium as well as
southwestern Germany. Clovis also adopted Christianity,
thus gaining the support of the Church.
After
Clovis' death the Merovingian kingdom began
to fragment, and the Frankish lands did not
come together under single rule again until
the reign of Pepin III (the Short) in 751. Pepin
deposed the last of the Merovingians and founded
the Carolingian dynasty, which is named after
his son Charlemagne.
Charlemagne
succeeded his father in 768 and ruled for almost
a half century, creating during that time an
empire that covered nearly all of continental
Europe, with the exception of Spain and Scandinavia.
In 800, Pope Leo III crowned him Emperor of
the West. Although Charlemagne spent much of
his reign conquering and subduing various parts
of Europe, he also did much to foster commerce
and the arts. The beginnings of organized trade
along Belgium's rivers was one result of his
reign, as was the preservation of classical
learning and the arts.
On
Charlemagne's death, his empire was divided,
and familial feuding led finally to the Treaty
of Verdun in 843. Under the terms of the treaty,
three of Charlemagne's grandsons split the empire
between them. West Francia, under Charles the
Bold, formed the basis of France. The Middle
Kingdom was given to Lothair, though it would
soon fragment. East Francia, under Louis the
German, became the basis of Germany. West Francia
included the narrow strip of land north and
west of the Scheldt river in today's Belgium.
The remainder of present-day Belgium was included
first in the Middle Kingdom, under Lothair,
but it gradually came under the sway of the
German kings.
Medieval
Belgium
This
division was soon to have great consequences
for the development of Belgium's nascent cities.
In the northwestern part of Belgium, which nominally
belonged to the young kingdom of France, there
arose the powerful Counts of Flanders.
The first of these was Baldwin Iron Arm, who
amply demonstrated his independence from the
French by carrying off and marrying one of the
daughters of Charles the Bold. Baldwin also
began the process of creating fortified towns
in Flanders in order to curtail the depredations
of the Norsemen. The first of these was Ghent
(c.867), and the process was continued by Baldwin's
heir (Baldwin II) with the fortification of
Bruges and Ypres.
The southeastern part of today's Belgium eventually
became part of the Duchy of Lower Lotharingia
or Lorraine, under the German kings.
In
977, Charles, Duke of Lorraine, built the fortress
on the Senne River that was the foundation of
Brussels. For the most part, however, the southeastern
portion of today's Belgium became split into
a number of minor spheres of power, one of which
was the prince-bishoprie of Liege.
At
the outset of the new millennium, Belgium consisted
of the cities of Flanders, unified under their
strong Counts, and the less unified cities to
the south and east of the Scheldt. As the Norse
raids fell off and Europe's major kingdoms gradually
stabilized, trade began to grow by leaps and
bounds. For Flanders in particular, this was
the beginning of a golden age. By importing
wool from England and weaving it into fine cloth
for sale on the continent, the Flemish cities
became exceedingly wealthy, populous, and powerful.
By 1300, Ghent, Bruges, and Ypres, in particular,
had gained virtual autonomy from aristocratic
rule, developing the proud civic culture that
still distinguishes them today.
Needless
to say, this situation did not please the aristocracy,
who itched to regain control over such attractive
sources of wealth and power. The Counts
of Flanders wanted to regain their local
authority, and France very much wanted to reassert
its claims to Flanders. In 1302, the cities
successfully rejected such claims, utterly defeating
the French nobility at the Battle of the Golden
Spurs. But the aristocracy persisted, and its
unity eventually proved stronger than that of
the cities, where local rivalries complicated
unified resistance. By 1329, the independence
of the cities had been broken, and Flanders
once again came under the control of France.
England,
as the supplier of raw wool to the cloth trade,
was more than a little displeased by this outcome.
It stopped sending wool, and began a long attempt
to break French power, both in Flanders and
in France itself. For almost a century, the
French and English clashed repeatedly in the
Hundred Years' War (1337-1453), and in Flanders
the struggle coincided with repeated attempts
by the cities to regain their autonomy. The
struggles finally ended when Philip the Bold
of Burgundy, who had benefited from Burgundy's
long alliance with the English against the French,
became the ruler of Flanders in 1384.
The Burgundian
Period
Under
Philip the Good (ruled 1419-1467), the Burgundian
empire in Belgium expanded and began to flourish.
Philip gained control of the southeastern areas,
including Brussels, Namur, and Liege. He suppressed the independence of the cities,
brought them under central rule from Brussels,
and consolidated the region's economy. Philip's
reign brought new prosperity and, with it, a
great era of cultural development.
Painting
especially reached new highs in the work of
Robert Campin, the brothers
van Eyck, and Rogier van der Weyden. After
Philip's death, his rule over present-day Belgium
passed first to Charles V.
In
the 1490s, as Bruges'
waterways to the sea gradually silted up, trade
shifted further north and Antwerp
emerged as the pre-eminent commercial city in
the region
The
ascension of Philip II to the Spanish throne in
1555 brought on the next crisis in Belgium's history,
as King Philip's strident Spanish Catholicism
coincided tragically with the rise of Protestantism
in northern Europe. In the Flemish cities especially,
Protestantism was a deeply political movement,
linked to the long tradition of resistance to
aristocratic domination. Social unrest in the
cities was met by Philip with harsh and rigid
repression, including the introduction of a massive
Spanish military presence in the north as well
as the execution of thousands of Protestants.
By 1565, a powerful League of Nobility, under
the leadership of William of Orange and Count
Egmont (governor of Flanders), had joined in the
opposition to Spain. Philip responded by sending
in the notorious Duke of Alva at the head of an
army of 10,000 troops.
Alva
outlawed William, executed Egmont and other leading
nobles in Brussels' Grand'Place, and began terrorizing
the country. Popular opposition exploded, particularly
in the north, and within a few years Alva found
himself powerless to exercise control over any
but the southern cities, which had remained much
closer to the Catholic church.
By
1576, William's power in the north was virtually
unchallenged, and he came to terms with the Spanish.
The United Provinces, as the northern regions
came to be known, struggled for the next seventy-five
years to maintain their independence. The Catholic
regions to the south remained faithful to Spain,
becoming known as the Spanish Netherlands. In
1648, with the Treaty of Munster, the much-weakened
Spanish not only recognized the independence of
the United Provinces, but also agreed to close
the Scheldt to navigation. As a result, Antwerp
and Ghent, like Bruges before them, lost their predominance as the region's
centers of trade. For the next several centuries,
the Dutch port of Amsterdam would play that role.
The Battleground
Over
the next century, France emerged as the most
powerful state in Europe. Under the rule of
Louis XIV (1659-1715), the French made sustained
efforts to extend their control over the Spanish
Netherlands. Louis' ambitions were feared not
only by the Spanish, but also by the Dutch,
who had no desire to see powerful France extend
its borders to their own. England also opposed
French expansion, especially after William III,
ruler of the Dutch, accepted the English throne.
As a result,
present-day Belgium was for much of the century
a battleground between Louis XIV and the shifting
alliances of his opponents.
These
struggles reached their climax during the War
of the Spanish Succession (1702-1713), prompted
by the death of the childless King Charles II
of Spain. Before his death, Charles had named
as his successor Philip of Anjou, who also happened
to be Louis' grandson. As one might expect, Louis
informed his young relative that it would be best
for all concerned if Philip would immediately
cede the Spanish Netherlands to France. It was
an offer that Philip could not refuse, but also
one that no one else in Europe could accept. For
the next decade France attempted repeatedly to
establish its rule, while Dutch, English, and
Austrian armies consistently rejected each attempt.
By 1713, Louis had had enough, and with the Treaty
of Utrecht France ceded its claims over the Spanish
Netherlands to the Habsburg rulers of Austria.
In
fact, the region continued to enjoy virtual independence,
paying as little attention to the Habsburg claims
as it had paid to the claims of the weakened Spanish
during the previous century. By the end of the
18th century Belgium was ready to assert its own
identity. With the outbreak of the French Revolution
in 1789, the country rose up in revolt against
the Austrians, and in 1790 independence was declared
in the form of the United States of Belgium. However,
the leaders of the new country were deeply divided
amongst themselves, and the Austrians rapidly
re-established control. Austria, however, soon
found itself at war with the French Republic,
and by 1795 the successful French had "liberated"
Belgium. Although the French instituted far-reaching
reforms that later served as the foundations for
the modern Belgian government, they were in fact
far more inclined to see Belgium as a source of
revenue and troops. Churches were seized and despoiled,
massive conscription was introduced, and popular
protest was crushed with a ruthlessness reminiscent
of the Spanish occupation.
The New
Kingdom
With
the rise of Napoleon, French rule over Belgium
became more constructive, including the revitalization
of industry and (with the opening of the Scheldt)
the partial recovery of Antwerp. With Napoleon's
fall, the great Allied powers decreed that Belgium
would become a part of the Kingdom of the Netherlands,
ruled by the pro-Dutch William of Orange. By
1830 the Belgians' patience had run out. Revolution
erupted in Brussels
and quickly spread across the country. William
made a brief effort to regain control, but within
a few months he withdrew. On 20 January, 1831,
after centuries of external rule, Belgium was
recognized as an independent nation.
The
Belgians chose Leopold of Saxe-Coburg to be
their first King, under a constitution that
significantly limited the power of the monarchy.
Under
Leopold I and then his son Leopold II, Belgium
flourished both economically and culturally.
Leopold II was succeeded in 1909 by Albert I, his
nephew. Albert's reign was dominated by World
War I, during which most of the country fell
under extremely harsh German occupation despite
determined resistance. The Belgian army survived
the invasion, and it played a central role in
retaking the country at the end of the war. Albert
lived until 1934, when he died in a tragic climbing
accident. His wife Elisabeth is remembered as
a great patron of the arts. Together with Eugene
Ysaye, she founded the world-renowned Queen Elisabeth
Contest, Belgium's foremost musical competition.
Albert
was succeeded by his son Leopold III, who like
his father was soon confronted by war.
In 1940, Germany invaded Belgium and Holland.
As the blitzkrieg swept across the country, the
Belgian government evacuated to London. Leopold,
however, surrendered to the German forces when
the Belgian lines at Kortrijk
were broken. The territories of Eupen, Malmedy
and St. Vith were annexed to the German Reich
and the rest of Belgium occupied. Leopold was
held prisoner in the palace of Laeken before being
taken to Germany. When the Allied Forces liberated
Belgium at the end of 1944, popular feeling against
Leopold was substantial, and his brother Prince
Charles assumed regency.
Leopold
III returned to Belgium in 1950, but popular
opposition to his rule remained substantial.
In 1951, he abdicated in favor of his son Baudouin.
In
the post-war period, Brussels has gradually
taken on its role as the 'capital' of Europe.
It is the headquarters of the European Community
and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization,
as well as gaining a reputation as the foremost
European center of international business. In
1957, Belgium formed, with the Netherlands and
Luxembourg, the Benelux Union.
Perhaps
the most significant of the postwar developments
has been the increasing local autonomy of various
regions of the country. In 1977 the country
was divided into three administrative regions:
Flanders, Wallonia,
and Brussels. In 1980, the
Belgian constitution was changed to recognize
this separation, shifting the structure of the
nation to a federation. In 1995, the provinces
of Flemish Brabant and Walloon Brabant were
created from the old province of Brabant, leaving
Belgium with a total of 10 provinces.
When
King Baudouin died in 1993, his brother Albert
II succeeded to the throne. Albert II is married
to Paola Ruffo di Calabria. The Royal couple
has three children, Prince Philip (the official
heir to the throne), Princess Astrid (who is
married to Archduke Lorenz of Austria), and
Prince Laurent.
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