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History
The Foundation of Luxembourg
The name Luxembourg first appeared in 963, in a barter
between Count Sigefroid and the Saint Maximin abbey
in Trier. Sigefroid became the owner of a rock on
which he had a fortified castle built. A city grew
around this site and then a country.... so that Sigefroid
is considered the founder of Luxembourg.
Luxembourg remained a relatively independent principality
attached to the German Empire until 1354. The country
then lost its status as earldom and was elevated to
that of duchy, also and importantly acquiring the
earldom of Chiny. From the 13th century, Luxembourg
started to develop into a true principality.
From the dukes of Burgundy to the Netherlands
The dynasty of the counts of Luxembourg died out in
1437 and the flame passed on to the Hapsburgs of Spain.
Luxembourg’s acquisition by Philip the Good
of Burgundy in 1443 proved decisive in its destiny.
Incorporated in the Burgundian state and then in the
Netherlands, Luxembourg became an intermediary between
the kingdom of France and the German Empire.
The death of Charles the Bold, Philip the Good’s
son, put an end to the Burgundian era, and the principalities
of the North passed to the Austrian Hapsburgs in 1715.
They formed a confederation called the Netherlands,
to which Luxembourg belonged until 1839.
Luxembourg was incorporated into the French Republic
in 1795, and was given the name Département
des Forêts (Department of the Forests). It had
already been under French occupation during the reign
of Louis XIV, during which time Vauban fortified the
City of Luxembourg.
Luxembourg as an Independent Country
The Congress of Vienna elevated the Duchy of Luxembourg
to the rank of Grand Duchy in 1815, theoretically
making it independent, while linking it by personal
union to the Netherlands. The two were recognized
as separate countries but ruled by the same sovereign
: William I of Orange-Nassau, King of the Netherlands,
Grand Duke of Luxembourg. The 1839 Treaty of London
marked the starting point of Luxembourg’s history
as an independent country. It cut Luxembourg in two,
giving the French-speaking half to Belgium, while
the German-speaking half continued to form the Grand
Duchy.
It was from that moment on that Luxembourg’s
national identity truly came to be forged, in particular
with the appearance of its first national anthem in
1859. But Luxembourg realized it could not be self-sufficient.
So William II integrated it into a customs union with
Germany, the Zollverein in 1842.
The progress of the Grand Duchy up to World War II
The country enjoyed strong economic growth during
this period, with the discovery of mining fields and
the building of railways to carry coal (Luxembourg
forms a large coal basin with Lorraine). The rising
demand for labour led to heavy immigration.
The personal union between Luxembourg and the Netherlands
ended in 1890 with the death of the last male descendant
of the Orange-Nassau line, and the crown passed to
the Nassau-Weilburg branch, the only Nassovian line
with a male descendant. It was then that Luxembourg
finally gained its own dynasty, with Grand Duke Adolf
as the country’s first representative.
Germany’s unsuccessful attempt to annex Luxembourg
in 1914, which risked violating the neutrality the
country had enjoyed since 1867, incited Luxembourg
to gain its independence and to leave the Zollverein.
The Grand Duchy
thus entered into an economic union with Belgium in
1921, known as the Belgo-Luxembourg Economic Union
(BLEU). It subsequently adopted the Belgian franc
as the Union’s currency, while keeping the Luxembourg
franc in limited issue.
- Luxembourg at a Glance
(PDF Document)
- National Symbols
- The
Grand-Ducal Family (PDF)
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Hamm - American Cemetery
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Virtual Knowledge Center for Europe (in french only)
Copyright © 2003 Embassy
of Grand Duchy of Luxembourg and Globescope,
Inc.
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