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GENERAL
Ghent (Home)
Introducing
Ghent
History
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Medieval Ghent
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The Mystic Lamb
USEFUL INFO
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The port of Ghent
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University Ghent
1814
TREATY OF GHENT between the US and Britain
What was it about ?
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rcheological research
has proved that there was human settlement in Ghent during prehistoric
times. Only later, in the Roman period, the nucleus of a city began to
grow near the confluence of the two rivers Scheldt and Leie. (The
flemish name 'Gent' is probably derived from the Celtic 'Ganda', which meant
confluence). It was around the year 630 that Ghent continued to grow when
the Abbey of Saint Peter (later Abbey of Saint Bavo) was founded.
Later, a
second abbey was founded on the so-called 'Blandijnberg'. It was around
these two religious centers that a residential nucleus came into existence.
This early city was important enough to create a 'portus' with commercial
activity. Charlemagne gave it a fleet for protection against the Vikings. In
both 851 and 879 the Vikings attacked and plundered the city. Shortly
afterwards a first wooden fortification was built for better protection. It
stood on the spot where now the impressive 'Castle of the Count' can be
visited.

rom
the 11th until the 12th century Gent rose to become an important trade
center, especially because of the production of cloth based on the
import of English wool. In 1178 Count Philip of Alsace granted Gent its
first privileges. The same Count also transformed the wooden fortification
into the impressive stone Castle of the Counts.
In the 13th century the city was governed by an oligarchy of patricians who,
continuously, defended their own (mercantile) interests against the Count
and the corporations. During the Hundred Years' War the count of Flanders
chose the side of the French king. Gent, however, depended heavily on the
import of English wool. Therefore, the people of Gent asked Jacob van
Artevelde, a corporation frontman, to try and preserve the
trade-relations with England. Through diplomatic actions he succeeded and
managed to avoid an open conflict with the French King. Jacob was killed by
his own people in 1345 but his son Fillip van Artevelde continued the
opposition against the Count of Flanders Lodewijk van Male.
 n
the 15th century, Gent was under stricter rule of the Dukes of Burgundy
(who had obtained the County of Flanders through marriage policy). The city
managed to regain its important privileges under the young Duchess of
Burgundy, Mary. Her marriage with Maximilian of Austria moved the Low
Countries into the House of Habsburg. The grandchild of Mary and Maximillian
was born in Gent in the year 1500 : CHARLES V. Although a native of
the city of Gent, CHARLES V punished his hometown severely when the citizens
refused to pay more war-taxes.
nder the rule of
Philip II of Spain (son of Charles V) Gent suffered like most other
cities of Flanders and the low countries under the continuous religious
troubles between Protestants and Catholics. Lots of people left the
impoverished Flanders and settled in England and Germany. It was only under
the Archdukes Albert and Isabella that Gent could flourish once more. Later,
the economic situation improved thanks to the construction of the canal
between the Gent harbor and the city of Ostende. War, however, was never far
away, especially when Louis XIV of France repeatedly tried to conquer
Flanders. The Austrian period of the 18th century again brought peace and
prosperity. New industries were developed (sugar refineries and cotton
mills).

n
1795 the former Austrian Netherlands were annexed to France. As from 1800
the cotton industry started to flourish. A citizen of Gent, Lieven
Bauwens, had smuggled the plans for a cotton mill out of England. Gent
turned into one of the most important industrial centers of the French
Empire. After the battle of Waterloo and the defeat of Napoleon, the French
Netherlands were united with Holland into the United Kingdom of the
Netherlands. King William I founded the Gent University in 1817 and had the
canal Gent-Terneuzen constructed. Gent continued to grow as an industrial
center.
he number of
inhabitants tripled in the 19th century. The miserable working and housing
conditions of the working-class resulted in the creation of the first
Belgian trade union in Gent. Gent also played an important part in the
Flemish movement in Belgium. In 1886 the Royal Academy of Language and
Literature was founded. In 1930 the Gent University became a
Dutch-language university. Now, Gent has a population of about 250.000
inhabitants. It is the capital of the Belgian province of East-Flanders.
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