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==Languages==
==Languages==
[[Image:Languages spoken at home in the Brussels Capital Region (2006).svg|thumb|Languages spoken at home (Capital Region, 2006)<ref name="rudi3">{{nl}}[http://www.brusselsstudies.be/PDF/NL_51_BruS13NL.pdf ”Taalgebruik in Brussel en de plaats van het Nederlands. Enkele recente bevindingen”], Rudi Janssens, Brussels Studies, Nummer 13, [[7 January]] [[2008]] (see page 4).</ref><br />{{legend|#0084ff|French}}{{legend|#11cbd9|French & Dutch}}{{legend|#1abb45|Dutch}}{{legend|#d00000|Neither French nor Dutch}}{{legend|#7700bb|French w/ another non-Dutch language}}]]
[[Image:Languages spoken at home in the Brussels Capital Region (2006).svg|thumb|Languages spoken at home (Capital Region, 2006)<ref name="rudi3">{{nl}}[http://www.brusselsstudies.be/PDF/NL_51_BruS13NL.pdf ”Taalgebruik in Brussel en de plaats van het Nederlands. Enkele recente bevindingen”], Rudi Janssens, Brussels Studies, Nummer 13, [[7 January]] [[2008]] (see page 4).</ref><br />{{legend|#0084ff|French only}}{{legend|#11cbd9|French & Dutch}}{{legend|#7700bb|French w/ another non-Dutch language}}{{legend|#1abb45|Dutch only}}{{legend|#d00000|Neither French nor Dutch}}]]


{{see also|Francisation of Brussels}}
{{see also|Francisation of Brussels}}

Revision as of 23:45, 17 May 2008

Brussels
The Grand Place / Grote Markt
The Grand Place / Grote Markt
Nickname(s): 
Europe's capital, Comic City [1]
Map
CountryBelgium
Founded979
Founded (Region)June 18, 1989
Government
 • Municipality MayorFreddy Thielemans
Area
 • Region161.0 km2 (62.2 sq mi)
 • Municipality32.6 km2 (12.6 sq mi)
Elevation
13 m (43 ft)
Population
 (2007)
 • Region1,067,162
 • Density6,601/km2 (16,391/sq mi)
 • Metro
1,975,000
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Website
www.brussels.irisnet.be (region)
www.brucity.be (municipality)

Brussels (French: Bruxelles, IPA: [bʁysɛl] by Belgian speakers of French, and sometimes [bʁyksɛl] by non-Belgian speakers of French; Dutch: Brussel, IPA: [ˈbrɵsəɫ]; German: Brüssel, IPA: [brʏsəl]) is the largest city in Belgium, and the administrative heart of the European Union (EU). The City of Brussels in the Brussels-Capital Region is the country's capital.[2] Brussels has grown from a 10th century fortress town founded by Charlemagne's grandson into a city of over one million inhabitants[3][4].

Brussels is also capital of the Brussels-Capital Region, of Flanders and of the French Community of Belgium. It is not, however, the capital of the Walloon Region (Wallonia), whose capital is Namur.

Depending on the context, the word Brussels may mean the largest municipality of the Brussels-Capital Region officially called the City of Brussels (ca. 140,000 inhabitants), the Brussels-Capital Region (1,067,162 inhabitants as of 1 February 2008) or, the metropolitan area of Brussels (from 2,100,000 [5] to more or less 2,700,000 inhabitants[6]).

Brussels is often considered the de facto capital of the European Union, and hosts key EU institutions such as the Commission, Parliament and the Council. Hence, many other pan-European organisations are also headquartered in the city. NATO is also based in Brussels.

Etymology

The name Brussels comes from the old Dutch Bruocsella, which means marsh (bruoc) and home (sella) or "home in the marsh".

History

Middle Ages

The origin of the settlement that was to become Brussels lies in Saint Gaugericus' construction of a chapel on an island in the river Senne around 580.[7]

The official founding of Brussels is usually situated around 979, because Duke Charles transferred the relics of Saint Gudula from Moorsel to the Saint Gaugericus chapel in Brussels, located on what would be called Saint Gaugericus Island. The Holy Roman Emperor Otto II gave the duchy of Lower Lotharingia to Charles, the banished son of King Louis IV of France in 977, who would construct the first permanent fortification in the city, doing so on that same island.

1555 map of the city

The county of Brussels was attributed to Lambert I of Leuven, count of Leuven around 1000. In 1047, his son Lambert II of Leuven founded the Saint Gudula chapter.

Because of its location on the shores of the Senne on an important trade route between Bruges and Ghent, and Cologne, Brussels grew quite quickly; it became a commercial centre that rapidly extended towards the upper town (St. Michael and Gudula Cathedral, Coudenberg, Zavel area...), where there was a smaller risk of floods. As it grew to a population of around 30,000, the surrounding marshes were drained to allow for further expansion. The Counts of Leuven became Dukes of Brabant at about this time (1183/1184). In the 11th century, the city got its first walls.[8]

After the construction of the first walls of Brussels in the early 13th century, Brussels grew significantly. In order to let the city expand, a second set of walls was erected between 1356 and 1383. Today, traces of it can still be seen, mostly because the "small ring", a series of roadways in downtown Brussels bounding the historic city centre, follows its former course.

In the fifteenth 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, married Mary of Burgundy, who was born in Brussels).

Brabant had lost its independence, but Brussels became the Princely Capital of the prosperous Low Countries, and flourished.

Renaissance

Grand Place after the 1695 bombardment by the French army

Charles V, heir of the Low Countries since 1506, though (as he was only 6 years old) governed by his aunt Margaret of Austria until 1515, was declared King of the unified Spain, in 1516, in the Cathedral of Saint Gudule in Brussels.

Upon the death of his grandfather, Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor in 1519, Charles V became the new archduke of the Austrian Empire and thus the Holy Roman Emperor of the Empire "on which the sun does not set". It was in the Palace complex at Coudenberg that Charles V abdicated in 1555. This impressive palace, famous all over Europe, had greatly expanded since it had first become the seat of the Dukes of Brabant, but it was destroyed by fire in 1731. All that remains is an archaeological site.

In 1695, French troops sent by King Louis XIV bombarded Brussels with artillery. Together with the resulting fire, it was most destructive event in the entire history of Brussels. The Grand Place was destroyed, along with 4000 buildings, a third of those in the city. The reconstruction of the city centre, effected during subsequent years, profoundly changed the appearance of the city and left numerous traces still visible today.

Revolution

Episode of the Belgian Revolution of 1830, Wappers (1834)

In 1830, the Belgian revolution took place in Brussels after a performance of Auber's opera La Muette de Portici at De Munt or La Monnaie theatre. On July 21, 1831, Leopold I, the first King of the Belgians, ascended the throne, undertaking the destruction of the city walls and the construction of many buildings. Following independence, the city underwent many more changes. The Senne had become a serious health hazard, and from 1867 to 1871 its entire urban area was completely covered over. This allowed urban renewal and the construction of modern buildings and boulevards which are characteristic of downtown Brussels today.

Modern history

The city has hosted various fairs and conferences, including the fifth Solvay Conference in 1927 and two world fairs - the 1935 world fair and the Expo '58.

Beginning on May 10 1940, Brussels was bombed by the German army; however, most of the war damage to the city took place in 1944–1945. The North-South Junction was built, completed in 1952. The first Brussels premetro was finished in 1969, and the first line of the Brussels Metro was opened in 1976. The Heysel Stadium disaster took place in Brussels on May 29 1985. The Brussels Capital Region was founded on June 18, 1989.

The Grand Place is the main market square in Brussels. It is one of UNESCO's World Heritage Sites. The construction of the Brussels Town Hall in the middle was initiated in 1402.

Geography

Climate

Climate data for Brussels
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Source: MSN Weather [9]

Political centre

Capital of Belgium

The Royal Palace of Brussels

Although some believe, wrongly, that the capital of Belgium is the entire Brussels-Capital Region, article 194 of the Belgian Constitution lays down that the capital of Belgium is the City of Brussels municipality.[10] Arguments that article 194's use of lower case for "ville de Bruxelles" and "stad Brussel" makes a subtle difference and means that greater Brussels being represented as the capital cannot be legally defended.

However, although the City of Brussels is the official capital, the funds allowed by the federation and region for the representative role of the capital are divided among the 19 municipalities, and some national institutions are sited in the other 18 municipalities. Thus, while de jure only the City of Brussels is entitled to the title of capital city of Belgium, de facto the entire Region plays this role.

City of Brussels

The City of Brussels is one of the municipalities of the Brussels-Capital Region (the largest) and is the official capital of Belgium.

Somewhat in the way that the City of London is different from London, the City of Brussels is different from Brussels. However, the expansion of the City of Brussels was frozen at a later stage than the City of London. As a result, in addition to the old centre of Brussels, the towns of Haren, Laeken and Neder-Over-Heembeek, as well as Avenue Louise/Louizalaan (a main shopping street, similar in design to the Parisian Champs Elysées) and the Bois de la Cambre/Terkamerenbos (the largest park in Brussels) are included within the limits of the City.

Flanders and the French community

The Brussels-Capital Region is one of the three federated regions of Belgium, alongside Wallonia and the Flemish Region. Geographically and linguistically, it is a (bilingual) enclave in the (unilingual) 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 de Belgique in French) and of Flanders (Vlaanderen); all Flemish capital institutions are established here: Flemish Parliament, Flemish government and its administration.

International centre

Brussels has become a significant centre for international institutions, notably those of the European Union. The city also plays host to the headquarters of the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) is based in the city along with 1000 other international organisations and 2000 international corporations. Brussels is third in the number of international conferences it hosts[11] also becoming one of the largest convention centres in the world.[12] The presence of the EU and the other international bodies has led to there being more ambassadors and journalists in Brussels than Washington D.C..[13] International schools have also been established to serve this presence.[12]

European Union

The European Commission in the Berlaymont building

Brussels is considered as the de facto 'capital of the European Union' due to its history of hosting the EU's institutions, even though the EU has not declared any official capital city. The city plays host to the official seats of the European Commission (in the Berlaymont building) and the Council of the European Union (in the Justus Lipsius building facing it).[14][15] Furthermore three quarters of the work of the European Parliament takes place in the city at its Brussels hemicycle (its official seat is Strasbourg).[16]

Brussels began to host institutions in 1957, with the executives of the EEC and Euratom which were originally shared with Luxembourg but quickly met in Brussels for practical reasons. In 1965 Brussels gained the right to host the merged Commission and Council, with some concessions to Luxembourg, and over the following years the Parliament established an increasing presence in Brussels, although was required to maintain its presence in Strasbourg by the treaties.[14][15] Between 2002 and 2004, the European Council also fixed its seat in the city.[17]

Today the presence has increased considerably with the Commission alone occupying 865,000m² within the "European Quarter" in the east of the city. The concentration and density has caused concern that the presence of the institutions has caused a "ghetto effect" in that part of the city.[18] However the presence has contributed significantly to the importance of Brussels as an international centre.[13]

Culture

Architecture

File:Atomium 20-08-07.jpg
The Atomium in Heysel Park

The architecture in Brussels is diverse, and spans from the mediaeval constructions on the Grand Place to postmodern buildings of for instance the EU institutions.

Main attractions include the Grand Place, since 1988 a UNESCO World Heritage Site, with the Gothic town hall in the old centre, the St. Michael and Gudula Cathedral and the Laken Castle with its large greenhouses. Another famous landmark is the Royal Palace.

The Atomium is a symbolic 103-metre (338 ft) metre tall structure that was built for the 1958 World’s Fair. It consists of nine steel spheres connected by tubes, and forms a model of an iron crystal. The architect A. Waterkeyn devoted the building to science. Next to the Atomium is the Mini-Europe park with 1:25 scale maquettes of famous buildings from across Europe.

The Manneken Pis, a 60 centimeters high bronze figure in the city, is a famous tourist attraction.

Other landmark include the Cinquantenaire park with its triumphal arch and complex of musea, the Basilica of the Sacred Heart, Brussels Stock Exchange, the Palace of Justice and the buildings of EU institutions in the European Quarter.

Cultural facilities include Brussels Theatre, the opera house Monnaie Theater and various types of museums; e.g. Royal Museum of Fine Art on the Firearms Museum until Comic Museum. Brussels also has a large music offer. From music bars and concert halls of opera houses to techno clubs will do everything necessary.

Cinquantenaire triumphal arch

The city is in the center of Flemish town houses. Especially striking is the Art Nouveau by the Brussels architect Victor Horta was launched. In the heyday of Art Nouveau shot in Brussels suburbs new from the ground. The architecture of the quarter Schaerbeek Etterbeek Ixelles Saint-Gilles is particularly worth seeing. Another example of the Brussels Art Nouveau is in the Avenue de Tervueren 281, the Stoclet by the Viennese architect Josef Hoffmann. The modern buildings in the Quartier Leopold or Espace North complete the picture.

The city has always been a great artist scene. The famous Belgian surrealist René Magritte, for example, has learned in Brussels. The city is also a capital of the comics: In Germany, best known are Lucky Luke, Tintin, Cubitus, Gaston Lagaffe and Marsupilami. Grey walls are houses with huge pictures of Belgian comic heroes painted, Metro stations are designed by artists. In Centre Belge de la Bande Dessinée combine two artistic leitmotifs of Brussels, because this comic national museum in the former, 1906 and also built by Victor Horta designed Art Nouveau department store Waucquez accommodated.

The King Baudouin Stadium is a concert and competition facility with 50,000 seats. Here was formerly the Heysel Stadium, which in 1985 with 39 deaths and over 400 serious injuries to some of the worst disaster occurred European football. English hooligan fell on Italian football fans, and sparked a mass panic.

Arts

Brussels contains over 40 museums,[19] including the Museum of Modern Art.[20]

Gastronomy

Brussels is known for its local waffle type.

Brussels is known for its local waffle, its chocolate, its french fries and its numerous types of beers . The Brussels sprout was first cultivated in Brussels, hence its name.

The gastronomic offer includes approximately 1,800 restaurants with a European comparison in the above number of high quality bars. The Belgian cuisine is one among connoisseurs as one of the best in Europe. In addition to the traditional restaurants, there is an unmanageable number of cafes, bistros and the usual range of international fast food chains. The cafes are similar bars have been better with a beer and small dishes, coffee houses in the German understanding are the Salons de Thé. Also widespread are the so-called brasseries, usually a large number of beer and typical national restorations.

The Belgian cuisine is characterized by the combination of French cuisine with the more hearty Flemish kitchen. Culinary specialties are particularly Brussels waffles (Gaufres) and mussels (usually as "Moules frites" are served with fries). The city is a stronghold of chocolate and pralines manufacturers with traditional companies like Godiva, Neuhaus and Leonidas. The fries were invented by a Belgian and wafers as well as anywhere in Brussels on the street sold. In addition, the Belgian beer enjoys a good reputation - Hoegaarden, Leffe, Duvel, Jupiler, Stella Artois and Kriek (cherry beer) are examples.

Economy

Serving as the centre of administration for Europe, Brussels' economy is largely service-oriented. It is dominated by regional headquarters of multinationals, by European institutions, by various administrations, and by related services, though it does have a number of notable craft industries, such as the Cantillon Brewery, a lambic brewery founded in 1900.

Languages

Languages spoken at home (Capital Region, 2006)[21]
  French only
  French & Dutch
  French w/ another non-Dutch language
  Dutch only
  Neither French nor Dutch

Originally a Dutch-speaking city, Brussels is nowadays officially bilingual French-Dutch.[22][23] French is the mother tongue of the majority of the population and the lingua franca. Research in the city's archives shows that Dutch was by far the most widely used language in local administration until the French occupation (1793-1815),[24] even though French had been the language of the local governors since the Burgundian era.[25] From 1880 on, more and more Dutch-speaking people became bilingual, resulting in a rise of monolingual French-speakers after 1910. Halfway through the 20th century the number of monolingual French-speakers carried the day over bilingual people.[26]

During the 19th century, as literacy progressed, most dialect-speakers turned to French rather than to Dutch as their language of culture. The main reasons for this were the higher prestige of the French language at the time (even the Flemish elites had adopted French), the perception that Dutch was the language of rural and poor Flanders and the fact that the Belgian administration was solely conducted in French. The education system was almost exclusively French-speaking, which hampered the spread of the Dutch standard language and contributed to low-class image of Dutch.[27] As a result, people would often speak a Dutch dialect in private but French in public occasions. Even today, it is not uncommon to meet (older) French-speaking "Bruxellois" who are unable to express themselves in standard Dutch but who speak or at least understand the Brabantian dialect.

A linguistic curiosity is Marols (Marollien), a variant of the Dutch dialect of Brussels heavily influenced by the Walloon of Liège, which used to be spoken mostly in the Marolles/Marollen, a central section of the city. Today, all Brussels dialects are on the verge of extinction.[28]

Nowadays, the Brussels Capital Region is officially bilingual French-Dutch. There are no official linguistic statistics since the State-run decennial linguistic census has been abolished after the fixation of the Belgian language border. All studies carried out can only be estimations.

Manneken Pis is seen as a symbol of French and Dutch cohabitation in Brussels.[29]

As Brussels is the capital of a country of which 60% of the inhabitants are Dutch speakers, and the Brussels Region is completely surrounded by the Flemish region, it is logical that many Dutch speakers from the periphery come to the city for working, shopping and going out. So, although the lingua franca is French, knowledge of Dutch is considered highly desirable.[30] One of the consequences of this change of attitude towards the Dutch language is, for example, that most children in Dutch-speaking schools in Brussels do not speak Dutch at home.[31] Janssens estimates that 28.23% of the population have a good to perfect knowledge of Dutch (either as a first or as a second language). For English this is 35.4% and for French 95%, due to its role as lingua franca.[32][21]

The occasional imprecision of linguistic pairing can be quite amusing. Whilst some ancient streets have only their original Dutch name (e.g. Coudenberg), others were originally named in French and have had their later Dutch names revised. For instance the Rue du Beau Site in Ixelles/Elsene bears two bilingual nameplates, the older giving, as the Dutch version, the hastily translated Schoon-Zicht Straat and the more recent giving the more idiomatic Welgelegenstraat. Other such pairs are Regentiestraat/Regentschapstraat and Koopmansstraat/Koopliedenstraat.

Due to the city's growth beyond the limits of the Brussels Capital Region, the periphery, which is institutionally part of Dutch-speaking Flanders, has attracted a large French-speaking population. In some of the municipalities immediately bordering the Brussels Capital Region, the population became majority French-speaking during the second half of the 20th century, in a few cases currently numbering over 70%. This is one of the major sources of linguistic conflict in Belgium, particularly in the Brussels-Halle-Vilvoorde region.[33]

Education

Université Libre de Bruxelles

There are several universities in Brussels. The two main universities are the Université Libre de Bruxelles, a French-speaking university with about 20,000 students in three campuses in the city (and two others outside),[34] and the Vrije Universiteit Brussel, a Dutch-speaking university with about 10,000 students.[35] Both universities originate from a single ancestor university founded in 1834, namely the Free University of Brussels, which was split in 1970 at about the same time the Flemish and French Communities gained legislative power over the organisation of higher education.

Other universities include the Facultés Universitaires Saint Louis with 2,000 students,[36] the Royal Military Academy, a military college established in 1834 by a French colonel[37] and two drama schools founded in 1982: the Dutch-speaking Koninklijk Conservatorium and the French-speaking Conservatoire Royal.[38][39]

Still other universities have campuses in Brussels, such as the Université Catholique de Louvain that has had its medical faculty in the city since 1973.[40] In addition the Boston University Brussels campus was established in 1972 and offers masters degrees in business administration and international relations. Due to the post-war international presence in the city, there are also a number of international schools, including the International School of Brussels with 1,450 pupils between 2½ to 18,[41] the British School of Brussels, and the four European Schools serving those working in the EU institutions.[42]

Transport

Brussels is connected with other European cities through e.g. the Eurostar high-speed rail network

Connections

Brussels is served by Brussels Airport, located in the nearby Flemish municipality of Zaventem, and by the much smaller so-called Brussels South Charleroi Airport, located near Charleroi (Wallonia), some 50 km (31 mi) from Brussels. Brussels is also served by direct high-speed rail links: to London by the Eurostar train via the Channel Tunnel (1hr 51 min); to Amsterdam, Paris and Cologne by the Thalys; and to Cologne and Frankfurt by the German ICE.

Public transport

The Brussels metro dates back to 1976, but underground lines known as premetro have been serviced by tramways since 1968. A comprehensive bus and tram network also covers the city. Brussels also has its own port on the Willebroek canal located in the northwest of the city.

An interticketing system means that a STIB/MIVB ticket holder can use the train or long-distance buses inside the city. The commuter services operated by De Lijn, TEC and SNCB/NMBS will in the next few years be augmented by a metropolitan RER rail network around Brussels.

Since 2003 Brussels has had a car-sharing service operated by the Bremen company Cambio in partnership with STIB/MIVB and local ridesharing company taxi stop. In 2006 shared bicycles were also introduced.

Road network

Rue de la Loi/Wetstraat is one of the city's main streets

In mediaeval times Brussels stood at the intersection of routes running north-south (the modern Hoogstraat/Rue Haute) and east-west (Gentsesteenweg/Chaussée de Gand-Grasmarkt/Rue du Marché aux Herbes-Naamsestraat/Rue de Namur). The ancient pattern of streets radiating from the Grand Place in large part remains, but has been overlaid by boulevards built over the River Zenne/Senne, over the city walls and over the railway connection between the North and South Stations.

As one expects of a capital city, Brussels is the hub of the fan of old national roads, the principal ones being clockwise the N1 (N to Breda), N2 (E to Maastricht), N3 (E to Aachen), N4 (SE to Luxembourg) N5 (S to Rheims), N6 (SW to Maubeuge), N8 (W to Koksijde) and N9 (NW to Ostend) [43]. Usually named steenwegen/chaussées, these highways normally run straight as a die, but on occasion lose themselves in a labyrinth of narrow shopping streets.

As for motorways, the town is skirted by the European route E19 (N-S) and the E40 (E-W), while the E411 leads away to the SE. Brussels has an orbital motorway, numbered R0 (R-zero) and commonly referred to as the "ring" (French: ring Dutch: grote ring). It is pear-shaped as the southern side was never built as originally conceived, owing to residents' objections.

The city centre, sometimes known as "the pentagon", is surrounded by the "Small ring" (Dutch: kleine ring, French: petite ceinture), a sequence of boulevards formally numbered R20. These were built upon the site of the second set of city walls following their demolition. Metro line 2 runs under much of these.

On the eastern side of the city, the R21 (French: grande ceinture, grote ring in Dutch) is formed by a string of boulevards that curves round from Laken (Laeken) to Ukkel (Uccle). Some premetro stations (see Brussels metro) were built on that route. A little further out, a stretch numbered R22 leads from Zaventem to Sint-Job.

Twin cities

The Sonian Forest at the outskirts of Brussels

Brussels is twinned with the following cities:

See also

References

  1. ^ City Data. "Brussels". Retrieved 2008-01-10.
  2. ^ Welcome to Brussels
  3. ^ Brussels.org - History of Brussels
  4. ^ Brussels: The "Capital of Europe"
  5. ^ Earth Info, earth-info.nga.mil webpage:[1]
  6. ^ "Belgique". Populationdata.net.
  7. ^ Brussels History
  8. ^ Template:NlZo ontstond Brussel Vlaamse Gemeenschapscommissie - Commission of the Flemish Community in Brussels
  9. ^ "MSN Weather". {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |accessmonthday= ignored (help)
  10. ^ http://www.fed-parl.be/gwuk0015.htm#E11E15
  11. ^ Brussels, an international city and European capital Université Libre de Bruxelles
  12. ^ a b Brussels: home to international organisations diplomatie.be
  13. ^ a b E!Sharp magazine, Jan-Feb 2007 issue: Article "A tale of two cities".
  14. ^ a b European Navigator Seat of the European Commission
  15. ^ a b European Commission publication: Europe in Brussels 2007
  16. ^ Wheatley, Paul (2006-10-02). "The two-seat parliament farce must end". Café Babel. Retrieved 2007-07-16. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  17. ^ Stark, Christine. "Evolution of the European Council: The implications of a permanent seat" (PDF). Dragoman.org. Retrieved 2007-07-12. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  18. ^ Vucheva, Elitsa (2007-09-05). "EU quarter in Brussels set to grow". EU Observer. Retrieved 2007-09-27. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  19. ^ Museum
  20. ^ Museum of Modern Art in Brussels. Museum Moderne Kunst Brussel. Musée d'art moderne Bruxelles
  21. ^ a b Template:Nl”Taalgebruik in Brussel en de plaats van het Nederlands. Enkele recente bevindingen”, Rudi Janssens, Brussels Studies, Nummer 13, 7 January 2008 (see page 4).
  22. ^ Template:Nl"Brussel historisch", Hoofdstedelijke Aangelegenheden, Ministerie van de Vlaamse Gemeenschap
  23. ^ Template:Fr"Histoire de la langue", Université Libre de Bruxelles (ULB)
  24. ^ Template:Nl"De mythe van de vroege verfransing", Taalgebruik te Brussel van de 12de eeuw tot 1794, Paul De Ridder
  25. ^ Linguistic Usages in Brussels before 1794, [2] last accessed 14 February 2007
  26. ^ Template:Nl"Thuis in gescheiden werelden" — De migratoire en sociale aspecten van verfransing te Brussel in het midden van de 19e eeuw", BTNG-RBHC, XXI, 1990, 3-4, pp. 383-412, Machteld de Metsenaere, Eerst aanwezend assistent en docent Vrije Universiteit Brussel
  27. ^ Template:Nl"Taal- en onderwijspolitiek te Brussel (1878-1914)", Harry van Velthoven, p261-443, Taal en Sociale Integratie 4, Brussel, VUB, 1981
  28. ^ Template:Nlde Vriendt, Sera: Taal in stad en land - Brussels, Uitgeverij Terra - Lannoo, 2004, ISBN 90-209-5857-7
  29. ^ "Manneken-Pis schrijft slecht Nederlands" (in Dutch). Het Nieuwsblad. 2007-08-25.
  30. ^ L’accompagnement des demandeurs d’emploi à Bruxelles
  31. ^ the official VGC figures for February, 2006
  32. ^ Template:Fr"Welcome supplante Welkom à Bruxelles", Le Soir, 8 January 2008
  33. ^ Template:Fr"Bruxelles dans l'oeil du cyclone", France 2, 14 November 2007
  34. ^ "Presentation of the Université libre de Bruxelles". Université Libre de Bruxelles. Retrieved 2007-12-09.
  35. ^ "About the University : Culture and History". Vrije Universiteit Brussel. Retrieved 2007-12-09.
  36. ^ "Institution: Historique". Facultés Universitaires Saint Louis. Retrieved 2007-12-09.
  37. ^ "What makes the RMA so special?". Belgian Royal Military Academy. Retrieved 2007-12-09.
  38. ^ "Petite histoire du Conservatoire royal de Bruxelles". Conservatoire Royal. Retrieved 2007-12-09.
  39. ^ "Koninklijk Conservatorium Brussel". Koninklijk Conservatorium. Retrieved 2007-12-09.
  40. ^ "L'histoire de l'UCL à Bruxelles". Université Catholique de Louvain. Retrieved 2007-12-09.
  41. ^ "ISB Profile". International School of Brussels. Retrieved 2007-12-09.
  42. ^ "Background". Schola Europaea. Retrieved 2007-12-09.
  43. ^ Belgian N roads


50°51′N 4°21′E / 50.850°N 4.350°E / 50.850; 4.350

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