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Belgium Travel Guide - Overview
Belgium always
had a lot more going for it than the faceless political and bureaucratic
buildings that litter the outskirts of its capital,
Brussels, would have you believe. A
string of engaging historic cities such as Bruges, Ghent, Liège,
Namur (and Brussels itself) offer impressive
architecture, lively nightlife,
first-rate cuisine and numerous other
attractions for visitors. Today, the anachronistic images of ‘boring
Belgium' have been well and truly banished, as more and more people
discover its very individual charms for themselves.
There is reinvented Antwerp, a
hotbed of fashion and slick modern
design, along with the more bucolic charms of the beautiful mountainous
Ardennes region to the east, and the delightfully picturesque
Meuse Valley as well as the sweeping
sand of the coastline resorts of the
western seaboard. Belgium is also a land whose specialities include
ubiquitous beers, delicate
chocolates,
moules frites and Belgian waffles.
Easy to both access and to travel around, pocket-sized Belgium is
divided into the Flemish north (Flemish-speaking)
and the Walloon south (French-speaking).
Brussels, the capital, is the heart of both the country and the European
Union, as well as the headquarters of NATO.
Belgium's democracy is of the typically
stable, cautiously progressive, western-European liberal type. The
principal domestic problem is continuing tension between the Flemish-speaking
north and the French-speaking south of the country. However, throughout
the years, Belgium has evolved towards an
efficient federal system. Five reforms have been necessary to
achieve this (in 1970, 1980, 1988-89, 1993 and 2001). In 2005, Belgium
celebrated 25 years of federalism and for the first time ever, article
one of the Belgian Constitution stated that 'Belgium is a federal state
made out of communities and regions
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