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Brussels
Brussels (French: Bruxelles, Dutch: Brussel, German: Brüssel) is the
capital of Belgium, the French community of Belgium, the Flemish
community and of the European Union.
Brussels is, first of all, a city located in the center of Belgium and
is its capital, but it sometimes also refers to the largest municipality
of the Brussels-Capital Region. This municipality inside Brussels is
correctly named The City of Brussels (French: Bruxelles-Ville or Ville
de Bruxelles, Dutch: Stad Brussel), which is one of 19 municipalities
that make up the Brussels-Capital Region (see also: Municipalities of
the Brussels-Capital Region). The municipality has a population of about
140,000 while the Brussels-Capital Region has more than a million
inhabitants. 50°50′37″N, 4°21′27″E. [1]
The Brussels-Capital Region is a region of Belgium in its own right,
alongside Wallonia and the Flemish Region. Geographically, it is an
enclave in the Flemish Region. Regions are one component of Belgium's
complex institutions, the three communities being "the" other component:
the Brussels inhabitants must deal with either the French (speaking)
community or the Flemish Community for matters such as culture and
education.
Brussels is also the capital of both the French Community of Belgium
(Communauté française Wallonie-Bruxelles in French) and of Flanders; all
Flemish capital institutions are established here: Flemish Parliament,
Flemish government and its administration.
Two of the three main institutions of the European Union - the European
Commission and the Council of the European Union - have their
headquarters in Brussels: the Commission in the Berlaymont building and
the Council in the Justus Lipsius building facing it. The third main
institution of the European Union, the European Parliament, also has a
parliamentary chamber in Brussels in which its committee meet and some
of its plenary sessions are held (the other plenary sessions are held in
Strasbourg, and its administrative headquarters are in Luxembourg).
Brussels is also the political seat of NATO, the North Atlantic Treaty
Organisation, the Western European Union (WEU) and EUROCONTROL, the
European Organisation for the Safety of Air Navigation
Due to this, some countries have three ambassadors present in Brussels:
the normal bi-lateral ambassador, the EU-ambassador, and finally the
NATO-ambassador.
The "language frontier" divides Belgium into a northern, Dutch-speaking
region, and a southern, French-speaking region. Although the real
language frontier and the official one are largely identical, there are
bilingual pockets on both sides with, in certain cases, no specific
linguistic rights for the population speaking the other language. The
Brussels-Capital Region is officially bilingual, while the majority of
its residents speak French (see the linguistic history of Brussels in
this article: linguistic situation section).
The highest building in Brussels is the South Tower (150 m); the most
famous probably the Atomium, which is a remnant from the Expo '58.
History
In 977 AD, the German emperor Otto II gave the duchy of Lower
Lotharingia, the empire's western frontier to Charles, the banished son
of King Louis IV of France. Mention was already made of Brussels at the
time. However, the founding of Brussels is usually known to happen when
a small castle was built by Charles around 979 on an island (called
Saint-Gery island) encompassed by the Senne river. At the end of the
tenth century, the county of Brussels was taken over by Lambert I of
Leuven. Under Lambert II of Leuven, a new castrum and the first city
walls were built. The small town became in the 12th century an important
stop on the commercial road from Bruges to Cologne. The Counts of Leuven
became Dukes of Brabant at about this time also (1183/1184). From 1357
to 1379, a new city enclosure was constructed as the former one was
already proving to be too small: it is now known as the inner ring or
pentagon. In the 15th century, by means of the wedding of heiress
Margaret III of Flanders with Philip the Bold, Duke of Burgundy, a new
Duke of Brabant emerged from the House of Valois (namely Antoine, their
son), with another line of descent from the Habsburgs (Maximilian of
Austria, later Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor, was Philip's father).
In 1695 Brussels was attacked by the barbarian general Villeroy of King
Louis XIV of France. A bombardment destroyed the city's heart: more than
4000 houses were put to flame, including the medieval buildings at the
Grand Place, except for the famous city hall, which miraculously
survived.
In 1830, the Belgian revolution took place in Brussels after a
presentation of Auber's opera La Muette de Portici at La Monnaie
theatre. On July 21, 1831, Léopold I, the first King of the Belgians,
ascended the throne, undertaking the destruction of the city walls and
the construction of many buildings. Under Léopold II, the city underwent
many more changes: the Senne was culverted (as it brought diseases), the
North-South Junction was built, and the Tervuren Avenue was laid out.
From May 10, 1940, Brussels was bombed by the German army. Most of the
damage was done however in 1944-1945. The Heysel Stadium disaster took
place in Brussels on May 29, 1985. The Brussels Capital Region was
founded on June 18, 1989.
in 1996 Brussels gained an interesting importance for Somalian community
in Belgium. The spiritual leader of Muslim Somalians in Europe, namely
Al Siddik al Har'am, died in a car accident in Brussels. The plot became
a spiritual site for mourners. Now every year Somalians gather there on
7th of August and commemorate the accident.
Linguistic situation
The original languages of the Brussels area are Brabantic dialects of
Dutch. A curiosity is "Marollien", a Brussels dialect heavily influenced
by Walloon which was spoken in a central section of the city. Both Dutch
and French have been in use for most of the city's history as official
languages and were used by the upper classes.
During the 19th and the 20th century, as literacy progressed, dialects
started to lose ground to standardized languages. In Brussels, most of
the population adopted French rather than Dutch as its language of
culture, since at the time, it was more prestigious and consequently
considered more useful. Today, the Brussels dialects are on the verge of
extinction, although some try to revive them (see links).
Nowadays, the Brussels Capital Region is officially bilingual
French-Dutch. There are no official statistics on the first language of
its population. However, according to a 2001 study by Rudi Janssens, a
sociolinguist at the VUB, 8,5% of the Brussels population are native
Dutch-speakers and 10 à 20% have both Dutch and French as a mother
tongue. The same research shows that almost half of the population are
native French-speakers. Allophones, who speak neither Dutch nor French
at home, are a rapidly growing segment of the population. In reality,
Brussels has become a multilingual city, rather than a bilingual one.
It should be noted that due to the growth of the city of Brussels, the
periphery, which is part of Dutch-speaking Flanders, attracts an
important French-speaking population. In some of the municipalities
immediately bordering the Brussels Capital Region, the majority of the
population has become French-speaking, sometimes numbering over 70%.
Some argue that these new inhabitants should adapt to their Flemish
environment, others suggest the expansion of the Brussels Capital Region
and its bilingual statute. According to the stance taken in the debate,
the existing linguistic rights in the Brussels periphery are either
interpreted as a help to facilitate the adaptation process, or as
perpetual linguistic rights for francophones.
Wikipedia.org
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