User:Vb/Wallonia

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Flag of Wallonia
Location of Wallonia in Europe


Wallonia (French: Wallonie, German: Wallonien, Dutch: Wallonië, Walloon: Waloneye) is the French-speaking southern part of Belgium. This region makes up about 31% of the Belgian population.

Since 1970, Wallonia has approximately coincided with the territory of the Walloon Region, which is a federated component of the Belgian state and provides a government and a parliament to both Wallonia and the smaller German-speaking Community of Belgium (73,000 inhabitants). Wallonia is therefore also the name colloquially given to the Walloon Region [1]. The inhabitants of Wallonia are belonging to the French Community of Belgium also referred to as Wallonia-Brussels Community[2] which includes both Wallonia and the French-speaking inhabitants of Brussels-Capital Region (a little less than one million inhabitants).

Wallonia takes its name from the Walloons (from the Germanic word Walha, the strangers), the population of the medieval Low Countries speaking Romance languages.[3]

Geography[edit]

The Sambre-Meuse valley[edit]

The blew blot from Mons in the west to Verviers in the east. Other blue blot in the North is in Flanders

The Sambre-Meuse valley is the dividing line between Middle and High Belgium. It is the most populated region of Wallonia: about 2 million inhabitants (out of 3,4 million) and 1000 km2 (out of 16.000 km2). It includes the main cities: Mons, La Louvière, Charleroi, Namur ,Liège and Verviers. The valley, along with its prolongation along the Haine river to the west and along the Vesdre river to the east, is the historical center of the Belgian steel industry and is therefore also called the sillon industriel in French, the industrial furrow. This industrial region can be divided into several subareas: Borinage (around Mons), Le Centre (around La Louvière, the Pays noir (around Charleroi), Basse-Sambre (near to Namur, the region around Liège and the region around Verviers.

In the North of the Sambre-Meuse valley[edit]

The Walloon Brabant[edit]

The Westwork of Saint Gertrude in Nivelles

The North of the Sillon industriel is also the South of Brussels, the old capital of the Duchy of Brabant and the capital of the old Belgian province which was fragmentend in three parts: the Flemish Brabant, Brussels itself (Brussels Capital Region) and the Walloon Brabant. The Walloon Brabant was created in 1995 when the former province of Brabant was split into the three parts. The split was made to accommodate the federalization of Belgium in three regions (Flanders, Wallonia and Brussels, but Walloon Brabant is also a very old name of this region in the North of Wallonia. Walloon in Walloon Brabant is likely one of the first use of the word. [4]

In the North-West of Hainaut[edit]

Tabula Peutingeriana. Tournai (Turnaco) on the right side
Iguanodon bernissartensis compared in size to a human.
China lacquered pannel of the Chineese Room of the Castle of Enghien, Wallonia's Major Heritage

The name of the North-West part of Hainaut was generally Hainaut occidental. Since the creation of an autonomous Wallonia, it is also named Wallonie Picarde, underlining by this appelation Wallonia includes the Hainaut occidental and the regional language of its inhabitants (Picard language). The name Wallonia doesn't mean a country where the Walloon language is spoken but in a wide sense, a country where Romance languages were spoken for a long time vis-à-vis the other inhabitants of the Low countries where Germanic languages were spoken.

The most important city of the Wallonie picarde is Tournai which is also the oldest city of the Low countries. The Tournai Cathedral, has been classified both as a Wallonia's major heritage and as a World Heritage Site.Tournai is labelled on Tabula Peutingeriana. Tournai gives its name to the Tournaisian: The “Calcaire de Tournai” comprises the limestone forma-tions cropping out in the Mélantois-Tournaisis Anticline (...) which have been quarried since the Roman conquest. Its relationship with the succession of the Dinant area was only understood following study of the Asile d’Aliénés borehole at Tournai and the Vieux-Leuze borehole at Leuze [...] These boreholes exhibited a rather typical middle Tournaisian succession below the “Calcaire de Tournai” that was easy to correlate with the succession of the Dinant area.[5]

The largest find of Iguanodon remains to date occurred in 1878 in a coal mine at Bernissart, at a depth of 322 m (1056 ft).[6]

Casterman, an important company based in Tournai. published Franco-Belgian comics In 1934, Casterman took over the Le Petit Vingtième editions for the publication of the albums of The Adventures of Tintin. And after the great success of Hergé's albums, authors such as Jacques Martin, François Craenhals and C. & V. Hansen, the first albums of Corto Maltese by the Italian author Hugo Pratt? The company established its monthly magazine (A Suivre), which was to have an impact on the comics revival of the 1990s. It is now part of the Flammarion Publishing group.

Saluk in Calenelle (Péruwelz) produces and distributes billiard balls under the registered trademark Aramith in more than 85 countries, and has a marketshare of 80 % worldwide (90 % of the US market) [7]

In the South of the Sambre-Meuse valley[edit]

Between Sambre-et-Meuse[edit]

The Condroz[edit]

The Gaume[edit]

The Ardennes[edit]

Ardennes in Wallonia
Provinces of Wallonia
High Fens in the winterWallonia's Major Heritage A Walloon poet wrote about it as Our Siberia, located in the East of the Province of Liège

L' Ardenne (Wallonian spelling), is an old mountain formed during the Hercynian orogeny as for instance in France the Armorican Massif, the Massif Central and the Vosges. At the bottom of these old mountains, coal, iron, zinc, and other metals are often found in the sub-soil. This geologic fact explains the greatest part of the geography of Wallonia and its history. In the North and West of the Ardennes lie the valleys of the Sambre and Meuse rivers, forming an arc Sillon industriel going across the most industrial provinces of Wallonia, for example Hainaut, along the river Haine (the etymology of Hainaut) : the Borinage, the Centre and Charleroi along the river Sambre, Liège along the river Meuse.

The Ardennes is the most popular region of Wallonia for tourism. This geological region is also very important in the history of Wallonia because this old mountain is at the origin of the economy, the history, and the geography of Wallonia. Wallonia presents a wide range of rocks of various ages. Some geological stages internationally recognized were defined from rock sites located in Wallonia : e.g. Frasnian (Frasnes), Famennian (Famenne), Tournaisian (Tournai), Visean (Visé), Dinantian (Dinant) and Namurian (Namur)[8] The Tournaisian excepted, all these rocks are in the Ardennes viewed as a geological area.


The Ardennes includes the greatest part of the province of Luxembourg (number 4), the south of the province of Namur (number 5) and the province of Liège (number 3), and a very small part of Hainaut (number 2). There were the first furnaces in the four Walloon provinces, using, before the 18th century, charcoal which was made in the Ardennes forest. This industry was also in the extreme South of the Luxembourg, in the region called Gaume. After this century, the most important part of the Walloon steel industry, using then coal, was built around the coal-mines, principally in the region around the cities of Liège, Charleroi, La Louvière, the Borinage, and further in the Walloon Brabant (in Tubize). Wallonia became the second industrial power of the world in proportion to its territory and to its population (see further). L' Ardenne is the origin of the most important event in the history of Wallonia : the industry. This region had also a very important strategic role during World War I and World War II.

History[edit]

The industry[edit]

The Flemish economy was bound up with the production of cloth, particularly of linens. It is not the case for Wallonia except three Walloon arrondissements : Arrondissement of Ath, Arrondissement of Tournai (in the Hainaut occidental), and Arrondissement of Verviers in the East of the Province of Liège [9].

From the Roman Empire to the industrial Revolution[edit]

Font of Renier de Huy (Mosan art): The baptism of the catechumens. A kind of an old Walloon know-how in making the brass i (12th century).

The industrial revolution in the Sillon industriel has other origins. Wallonia is different from Flanders even on the economic plan. The Sillon industriel includes four industrial basins (Borinage, La Louvière - called Centre - Charleroi, Liège) and a semi-industrial basin in Namur [10]:

During ancient times these fourth basin was a major center of iron manufacture and one of the important industrial areas of the Roman Empire. With the fall of the Empire, however, iron was more or less displaced by various types of brass or bronze, and the local centers of medieval metalworking in Belgium moved to Huy and out of the iron regions, on up the Meuse river to the forested areas around Dinant and Chimay. In the twelfth and thirteenth centuries the iron masters of Liège evolved a method of refining iron ore by the use of a blast furnace. Called the Walloon Method, this development was instrumental in making possible the re-substitution of iron for brass after the fifteenth century. Apart from increasing the industrial importance of Liège, however, it apparently did not otherwise relocate the centers of metal production. There were a few coalmines around Liège, Charleroi, and the Boringae as early as the thirteenth century but their production was small. The main medieval use of coal was neither for household heating nor for metalworking. Rather, it was principally consumed as a fuel by various industries such as breweries, dyeworks, soap and brick factories, and by the important glassmaking industry that sprang up in the Charleroi basin during the fourteenth century. Coal was mined in those days as a kind of rural, part-time enterprise to supplement peasant incomes.

[11]

The Walloon Method. Beginning of the industrial Revolution[edit]

Statue of Louis de Geer (1587-1652) in Norrköping (Sweden) (1945 : at the bottom Father of the industry in Sweden
Oval courtyyard and statue of H. de Gorge who built this mining complex of Grand Hornu (1810-1830). A unique example of functional town-planning. Walloon Major Heritage

During the Middle-Age and mainly the Renaissance within the context of the demand for iron for artillery, important technological developments in iron working occurred in Wallonia (...) of particular importance in the County of Namur County of Hainaut (...) Principality of Liège, called Walloon method (usually in English Oregrounds iron) [12]. Peter N.Stearns defined this Waloon method and its dissemination: The "Walloon Method" entailed raising the hearths of the furnaces, mixing iron and charcoal together, and subjecting the whole to an air blast. Whereas previously impurities had been removed by heating the ore to a pasty mass and then beating it; thisd new process got rid of them by actually melting the metal. The procedure rapidly spread fromLiège throughout Europe and revolutionized Pig iron production [13]This method [14] will be revealed in Sweden [15], England and Germany by Walloon workers.[16]


Peter N.Stearns wrote:The improvement of the blast furnace and the development of the puddling process, both originating in England during the last half of the eighteenth century, accelerated the substitution of coke for charcoal. The first puddling furnace was not installed in Belgium until 1821, while the first coke-fed blast furnace didnot appear until two years later. By 1850, however, there were as many furnaces using coke as charcoal, and by 1870 the extensive use of charcoal in metalworking had been discontinued almost everywhere but in a few small establishments in Luxembourg and Namur provinces. Under the impact of these developments metalproduction moved out of the forested areas into the coal-producting vicinities of Charleroi and Liège. It was the perfection of the steam engine, however, which troggered the Industrial revolution in Belgium. In many ways the growth of steam power can serve as an index for the develoment of that revolution itself, since it was both a major cause and a major effect of its continuance. The earliest kind of steam-operated machine,a Newcomen-type steampump, was in use in mines near Liège as early as 1723 an dat Charleroi by 1725. THe first steamengines, bases on Watt's modifications, appeared on the continent in a cannon foundry at Liège in 1803. The meager four horsepower produced by the two machines installed there grew to 1,400 by 1830, to 30,000 by 1840 and to 100,000 by 1860.[17]



Image:Musée Curtius.jpg| The rich house of Curtius in Liège, one of the first capitalist (Weapons industry:17th century).

The industrial Revolution: a rich Wallonia depending on Brussels[edit]

Professor Michel Quévit wrote Wallonia has been a prosperous country depending on the financial powers in Brussels [18] . When arriving at the end of the first stage of the industrial revolution, Walloon captains of industry took huge risks because of the large increase of the production. The result was that the High Bank in Brussels took very important financial participation in the Walloon companies. In 1847, it is done. Brussels became the dominating structure of the Belgian space [19]


The Belgian State: Wallonia depending politically on the North[edit]

The language of Belgium's elites, Government, Monarchy, Bourgeoisie was French in 1830. And if Wallonia is now defined as a French speaking country, the French choice of the elites in 1830 was not a Walloon choice, in favour of this southern part of Belgium and to the northern part. French speaking elites at the head of the companies, the industry, the politics were all coming from both Flanders and Wallonia. It was not an ethnic choice but a social choice.

Quickly, Wallonia found it to its cost:In the history of Belgium, the legislative elections held on 11 June 1884 represent a pivotal point for the total victory of the Catholic Pary over Walthère Frère-Orban's liberals opened the way for thirty years of homogeneous governments, thirty years of domination by that party , whose main power was in Flanders. Above all, this 1884 victory had the effect - to quote Robvert Demoulin - of shifting the country's political centre of gravity from the South to towardd the North.[20]

Government composition, 1884-1911 [21]
Periods and Governments Flemish ministers Ministers from Brussels Walloon Ministers
A. Beernaert  : October 26 1884/ March 17 1894 60 % 14 % 26 %
J. de Burlet  : March 26 1894/ June 25 1896 75 % 9 % 16 %
P. de Smet de Naeye : June 26 1896/ January 23 1899 87 % - 13 %
J. Vandenpeereboom : January 24 1899/ July 31 1899 84 % - 16 %
P. de Smet de Naeyer : August 5 1899/ April 12 1907 76 % - 24 %
J. de Trooz : May 1 1907/ December 31 1907 67 % 11 % 22 %
F.Schollaert : January 9 1908/ June 8 1911 57 % 22 % 21 %
Ch. de Broqueville : June 18 1911/ August 4 1914 42 % 22 % 36 %

Economy[edit]

Demographics[edit]

Politics[edit]

Culture[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/634954/Wallonia
  2. ^ Wallonia-Brussels International
  3. ^ Footnote: In medieval French, the word Liégeois referred to all the inhabitants of the Principality vis-à-vis the other inhabitants of the Low-countries, the word Walloons being only used for the French-speaking inhabitants vis-à-vis the other inhabitants of the Principality. Stengers, Jean (1991), "Depuis quand les Liégeois sont-ils des Wallons?", in Hasquin, Hervé (ed.), Hommages à la Wallonie [mélanges offerts à Maurice Arnould et Pierre Ruelle] (in French), Brussels: éditions de l'ULB, pp. 431–447
  4. ^ Louis de Haynin wrote un 1628 Belgium is a great country between France, Germany and the North Sea (...) This country is divided in two regions, Flanders and Wallonia (...) Wallonia is divided in (the following provinces...) Tournesis Flandre wallonne; Haynaut, Comte de Namur, Principauté de Liège Walloon Brabant. Louis de Haynin, Histoire générale des guerres de Savoie, de Bohême, du Palatinat et des Pays-Bas 1616-1627 par le seigneur Du Cornet, Gentilhomme belgeois, avec une introduction et des notes par A.L.P. de Robaulx de Soumoy, Bruxelles, 1868, Firstly published in 1628), pp. 6-7.French La Belge selon qu'elle est, pour le présent, est un grand pays entre la France, l'Allemagne, et la mer Océane […] Elle se my-partit ordinairement en deux régions presque esgalles, c'est à scavoir en belge wallonne et belge allemande ou flamande, selon aucuns. La Wallonne a pour provinces l'Artois, Lille Douay et Orchies autrement dite Flandre gauloise ou walonne: Cambresis, Tournesis, Haynaut et l'Estat de Valencennes, Namur, Lothier ou Brabant wallon, Luxembourgues et Prince-Bishopric of Liège.
  5. ^ Luc Hance, Edouard Poty, François-Xavier Devuyst Tournaisian in Geologica Belgica (2006) 9/1-2: 47-53
  6. ^ Norman, David B. (1985). "To Study a Dinosaur". The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Dinosaurs: An Original and Compelling Insight into Life in the Dinosaur Kingdom. New York: Crescent Books. pp. 24–33. ISBN 0-517-468905.
  7. ^ Dynamisme wallon review of the Union wallonne des entreprises, special issue, december 2007
  8. ^ The origin of the geological terms are indicated by the editor Most beautiful rocks of Wallonia
  9. ^ Peter N.Stearns, The Revolutionnary Period of the Industrial Revolution: Industrial and Population Displacement in Belgium 1830-1880, in Journal of History, Vol. 1, no. 2 (Winter, 1967), pp. 119-148, p. 120.
  10. ^ Or more accurately Between-Sambre-and-Meuse see the bibliography (in severallanguages) Production et Travail du Fer en Gaule du Nord et en Rhénanie à l’époque romaine: le rôle des établissements ruraux
  11. ^ Peter N.Stearns, The Revolutionnary Period of the Industrial Revolution: pp. 129-130.
  12. ^ Awty, Brian G. The Development and Dissemination of the Walloon Method of Ironworking in Technology and Culture - Volume 48, Number 4, October 2007, pp. 783-803 The Development and Dissemination of the Walloon Method of Ironworking
  13. ^ Peter N.Stearns, Opus citatus, p.130
  14. ^ French la méthode indirecte (...) fait subir au minerai deux opérations : la première qui consiste à fondre le minerai de fer pour obtenir de la fonte de fer, produit incomplet chargé d’impuretés et très cassant, la seconde où la fonte refroidie et cassée en lingots est poussée au rouge dans « la forge » pour la « décarburer » partiellement, puis affinée dans « l’affinerie », où à l’aide d’un gros « marteau » mu par l'eau, on la « cingle » pour en chasser les scories (les «  sornes »), avec pour résultat de transformer la fonte en fer, ou en acier, selon le degré d’affinage obtenu Naissance de l'industrie du fer
  15. ^ HUGUENOTS-WALLOONS-EUROPE-L Archives
  16. ^ Naissance de l'industrie du fer See also Robert Halleux, Anne-Catherine Bernès, Luc Étienne, L'évolution des sciences et des techniques en Wallonie, in Atouts et références d’une région, Institut Destrée, Charleroi, 1995 Atouts et références d’une région
  17. ^ ¨Peter N.Stearns, opus citatus, p. 131
  18. ^ Michel Quévit, Les causes du déclin wallon, EVO, Bruxelles, 1978, passim
  19. ^ Philippe Destatte, L'identité wallonne, Institut Destrée, Charleroi, 1997, p.51
  20. ^ Philippe Destatte, Some Questions regarding the Birth of federalist Demands in Wallonia in L'idéefédéréaliste dans les Etats-Nations, Presses universitaires européennes et Institut Destrée, Bruxelles, 1999, pages, 13-35. ISBN 2-87035-010-4
  21. ^ Yves Quairiaux (2006 (664 pages)). L'Image du Flamand en Wallonie (in French). Labor, Brussels. p. 30. {{cite book}}: Check date values in: |date= (help) ISBN 2-8040-2174-2