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Liège (province)

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Liège

Province of eastern Belgium, including the French- and German-speaking communities of the Walloon region, bordered by Germany to the east, the Netherlands to the north, and the provinces of Limbourg, Flemish and Walloon Brabant, Namur, and Luxembourg to the west; area 3,900 sq km/1,506 sq mi; population (1997 est) 1,014,900. Its capital is the city of Liège. Other major towns include Verviers, Huv, Eupen, Spa, and Stavelot.

Physical

The high plateau of the Ardennes rises in the southeast. The highest point of the province, and of Belgium, is the Botrange (694 m/2,277 ft). The fertile Hesbaye plateau is rich in phosphate and lime. The region is drained by the Meuse, Amblève, Ourthe, and Vesdre rivers.

Economy

The centre of the Belgian wool industry is found in Verviers. Other major industries include steel, chemical and allied products, and sugar-beet refining. Agricultural production includes grains and sugar beet, and horse, cattle and pig breeding.

History

For nearly a millennium, Liège was the centre of an independent bishopric, the prince-bishops collaborating closely with the Habsburg rulers in the Netherlands. In 1795, Liège was annexed by France. In 1815 it was given to Holland, and it became a province of Belgium in 1830. The inhabitants are mainly Walloons. In 1920 the districts of Eupen and Malmedy were ceded to Belgium by Germany and incorporated into the province of Liège, forming what is now the centre of the German-speaking community in Belgium.


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