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Antwerp (Antwerpen) - History |
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How
old is Antwerp ?
In 1356 the city was annexed to the County of Flanders and lost very many privileges, partly to Bruges’ advantage. Fifty years later the political and economic tide turned again and the run-up to the Golden Age began, when Antwerp became a metropolis of world class at every level : a kind of sixteenth-century Manhattan. It was this centre of trade and culture which Florentijn Lodovico Guicciardini described as ‘the loveliest city in the world’. The most famous names from that age are : the painters Quinten Metsys and Bruegel, the printer Plantijn, the humanists and scientists Lipsius, Mercator, Dodoens and Ortelius. However,
in the second half of that century the city was the focus of the
politico-religious struggle between the Protestant North and Catholic
Spain and as such it was stricken by a series of calamitous events: the
iconoclasm (1566), the Spanish Fury (1576) and finally the Fall of
Antwerp (1585). After the Fall the city again came under the rule of
Philip II and the Northern Netherlands closed off the Scheldt. From an
economic point of view this was a disaster. To make matters worse, it
was not only the Protestants who fled the city but also the commercial
and intellectual elite. Of the city’s 100.000 inhabitants in 1570,
by 1590 no more than about 40.000 remained. There
is little of cheer to recount about Antwerp between 1650 and the
nineteenth century. The Scheldt remained closed to traffic and the
metropolis became a provincial town. Under Austrian rule (1715-1792)
Joseph II tried to free the river by military force, but the plan
misfired. In 1795, under French occupation, it succeeded but this time
the ships encountered an English blockade. This was hardly surprising
since Napoleon regarded the Port of Antwerp as ‘a pistol pointed
at the heart of England’. Whilst it is true that Antwerp owes the
beginnings of a modern port to that French period (1792-1815), at the
same time the city’s cultural heritage fell prey to art plundering
and destruction on a scale rarely seen before. There were even plans to
pull down the Cathedral. After the fall of Napoleon at Waterloo (1815), there followed a short-lived reunification with the Northern Netherlands and an equally short period of prosperity which ended with the Belgian Revolution (1830) and once again the closure of the Scheldt. It was reopened, this time definitively, in 1863. Then Antwerp’s third great hey-day could begin. Apart from interruptions during the two world wars, Antwerp has experienced steady economic growth in the twentieth century. This gave rise to a new cultural high point and international prestige in 1993 when Antwerp was nominated Cultural Capital of Europe : the recognition of historical and modern-day riches in which you too can share.
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