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Flemish Region in Belgium and Europe.svg; Francia 814.svg; Free City of Kraków 1815.svg; French Community in Belgium and Europe.svg; Frisian languages in Europe.svg; Further European Union Enlargement to Eastern Partnership.svg; German-Speaking Community in Belgium and Europe.svg; German Confederation 1815.svg; Grand Duchy of Baden 1815.svg
This image is a derivative work of the following images: File:Blank_map_of_Europe.svg licensed with Cc-by-sa-2.5 2012-02-21T16:27:27Z Alphathon 680x520 (614699 Bytes) Updated Metadata and the boarders/coastlines along the western coast of the Black Sea; 2011-09-19T22:57:58Z Alphathon 680x520 (603759 Bytes) Added North/Northern Cyprus
The Provisional Government of Belgium or the General Government of Belgium governed the Southern Netherlands from February 1814 to September 1815, when the Southern Netherlands was definitively incorporated into the United Kingdom of the Netherlands. The official documents at that time were in French, in which it was labeled as 'Gouvernement ...
Download QR code; In other projects ... Map of Europe 1815 after the Congress of Vienna. Great Powers in CAPITAL LETTERS. ... Image title: This is a map Europe 1815 ...
Kingdom of France – 1815: Kingdom of France – 1839: French Third Republic – 1914: French Third Republic – 1939: French State (Vichy France) – 1942: Provisional Government of the French Republic – 1945-1949: French Fourth Republic – 1946-1957
On October 4, 2010, De Wever (N-VA) left the negotiations. His exit put Di Rupo's Plan B for Belgium, i.e. a partition of Belgium along the borderline of the French Community, under a new light and many, particularly in the French-speaking part of the country, started to speak openly about its concrete implementation.
Map of the Flahaut plan, proposed by France in 1830. The Flahaut partition plan for Belgium was a proposal developed in 1830 at the London Conference of 1830 by the French diplomat Charles de Flahaut, to partition Belgium. The proposal was immediately rejected by the French Foreign Ministry upon Charles Maurice de Talleyrand's insistence. [1] [2]
During the Franco-Spanish War, France and England had captured much of the Spanish Netherlands. Under the Treaty of the Pyrenees, France received from Luxembourg the fortresses of Stenay, Thionville, and Montmédy, and the surrounding territory. The area taken by France from the Duchy of Luxembourg totalled 1,060 km 2 (410 sq mi). [1]