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Map showing the location of French Flanders within Nord-Pas de Calais, bisected by the Lys River. To its north is the French Westhoek and to the south is Lille Flanders.
Territorial changes due to the Treaty of the Pyrenees, including French Flanders.
The Dutch-language Sprachraum, including northern French Flanders.
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French Flanders (French: La Flandre française; Dutch: Frans-Vlaanderen) is a part of the historical Dutch-speaking region in present-day France. The region today lies in the modern-day region of Nord-Pas de Calais, the department of Nord, and roughly corresponds to the arrondissements of Lille, Douai and Dunkirk on the Belgian border.
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Geography
French Flanders is mostly flat marshlands in the coal-rich area just south of the North Sea. French Flanders consists of two regions:
- French Westhoek to the northwest, lying between the Lys River and the North Sea, roughly the same area as the Arrondissement of Dunkirk
- Lille Flanders (French: La Flandre Lilloise; Dutch: Rijsels-Vlaanderen), the French parts of Romance Flanders (historically also Walloon Flanders) to the southeast, south of the Lys and now the arrondissements of Lille and Douai
History
Once a part of ancient France since the inception of the Frankish kingdom under the Merovingian monarchs such as Clovis, who was crowned at Tournai, Flanders gradually fell under the control of the English and then Spanish. When French power returned under Louis XIV, a part of historically French Flanders was returned.
The region now called French Flanders was originally part of the feudal Countship of Flanders, then part of the Southern Netherlands, in present-day Belgium. It was separated from the countship (part of Habsburg's Burgundian inheritance) in 1659 due to the Peace of the Pyrenees, which ended the French-Spanish conflict in the Thirty Years War, and other parts of the region were added in successive treaties in 1668 and 1678. The region was ceded to the Kingdom of France, and became part of the province of Flanders and Hainaut. The bulk became part of the modern French administrative Department of Nord, although some western parts of the region, which separated in 1237 and became the Countship of Artois before the cession to the French, are now part of Pas-de-Calais.
During World War II, French Flanders referred to all of Nord-Pas de Calais which was first attached to military administration of German-occupied Belgium, then part of Belgien-Nordfrankreich under a Reichskommissar, and finally part of a theoretical Reichsgau of Flanders.
Rich in coal, and bordering the North Sea, French Flanders was fought over numerous times between the Middle Ages and World War II.
Language
The traditional language of northern French Flanders (Westhoek) is a dialect of the Dutch language known as West Flemish, specifically, a subdialect known as French Flemish, but few speakers remain. The traditional language of southern French Flanders (Romance Flanders), Picard (and its dialects, such as Ch'ti or Rouchi), it is likewise seldom spoken. Standard French has largely replaced these regional languages.
See also
- Nord (department)
- French Flemish
- Nord-Pas-de-Calais
- Greater Netherlands
- Seventeen Provinces
- Burgundian Netherlands
- Frisians
Sources and references
- Nouveau Petit Larousse Illustré, 1952.
- French Flanders
- Ethnologue Report for West Flemish
- Flemish in France
- This article incorporates information from the revision as of 2007-07-25 of the equivalent article on the French Wikipedia.
External links
Open source encyclopedia content modification information:
This page was last modified on 13 March 2010 at 18:22.
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Usage Guidelines
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article on "French Flanders", which is available in its original form here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=French_Flanders
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