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  • I'd like to tell you about a country that lies next to the north sea.

  • A country which I seem to be very much attached,

  • even if i'm looking down on it, quite literally.

  • It's one of the world's most densely populated countries.

  • If this is not evident from the air,

  • what is apparent though

  • is an abundance of green.

  • Why don't you come and join me on this flight ?

  • This country is called Belgium

  • and it's very old.

  • The earliest trace of human presence found here,

  • a primitive stone tool,

  • dates back to prehistory,

  • eight hundred thousand years ago.

  • The belgians,

  • that's how the roman emperor and general,

  • Julius Caesar,

  • refer to the northern inhabitants of Gaule.

  • After he conquered that territory,

  • but not without resistance,

  • he started to build trade routes.

  • These roman roads are still evident to this day,

  • such as the one that leads to Tongeren,

  • the town of the legendary Ambiorix, who fought the Romans.

  • Thanks to the roads, the Romans built

  • international trade was able to flourish.

  • Later on, the belgians became conquerors themselves.

  • From Bouillon,

  • there was crusades against the Islamites

  • who had conquered Jerusalem.

  • Villages sprang up.

  • From the tenth century on,

  • some of these villages grew into beautiful cities

  • with impressive church spires,

  • such as Tournai and Malines.

  • Liège,

  • the largest city in the south of the country,

  • developed along the river Meuse.

  • Namur was built where the Sambre and Meuse meet.

  • The fact that cities often developed along rivers was not a coincidence.

  • Thanks to shipping,

  • they had become trade routes.

  • The port cities of antwerpen and Ghent

  • developed along the banks of the river Scheldt.

  • In the early middle ages,

  • Bruges which was one of the most important cities in the world.

  • And in the nineteenth century

  • Liege, was nicknamed the « fiery city »,

  • thanks to its industrial activity,

  • mainly in the steel and glass industries,

  • which flourished at the time.

  • Belgium clearly has a very religious past.

  • Evidentiary the numerous church spires,

  • as well as the number of abbeys.

  • These were not use just for praying though.

  • Beer and wonderful cheeses was made there and they still are.

  • But the abbeys were much more.

  • They were also thriving centers of knowledge and literature.

  • Some abbeys did not survive the french revolution

  • and were razed to the ground.

  • Belgium has a staggering number of castles,

  • most of which are sparkling gems,

  • that can only be viewed properly from the air.

  • I'm now flying over the castle of Gaasbeek

  • with its magnificent italian gardens.

  • Castles were built in a variety of different period's style.

  • They can be renaissance palaces, medieval forts,

  • and in most cases they remain in excellent condition,

  • but not all of the time.

  • Now, if you thought chateaux only to be found along the Loire,

  • you should definitely visit belgium.

  • In the wonderful rolling countryside of Brabant,

  • along the linguistic border,

  • a remarkable monument can be found at Waterloo.

  • A lion on top of an artificial hill,

  • marks the spot where, in eighteen fifteen,

  • a coalition of european troops beat Napoleon's armée.

  • The vanquished French Emperor was exiled to the island of Saint Helena.

  • War was so simple, at those day.

  • The Dutch King, William the first,

  • who ruled the country at the time,

  • had the monument erected in honor of his son,

  • the Prince of Orange,

  • who was wounded during the battle.

  • Brussels,

  • fifteen years on,

  • in eighteen thirty, following an operetta

  • inspired revolution against dutch rule,

  • the state of Belgium was established.

  • It was to be a constitutional monarchy,

  • with a king as head of state.

  • The country is divided up into two main linguistic communities,

  • one dutch and one french.

  • But german is also spoken in a very small region.

  • In the second half of the twentieth century,

  • the state structure was overhauled

  • and belgium was given the federal government.

  • Belgium second king,

  • leopold the second, wanted to make his mark

  • on the country's history with splendid buildings

  • most of which can be found in brussels.

  • They date back to his time

  • and they rival of those in any other major european city.

  • He designed grounds of the castle of Laeken.

  • He had beautiful greenhouses erected.

  • and started an impressive collection of exotic plants.

  • The « Canal du Centre » in Hainaut

  • boasts four little locks for shipping

  • incredible nineteenth-century constructions

  • which UNESCO displaced on the world heritage list.

  • The polders of West Flanders

  • played a major role in world history

  • for it is there that hundreds of thousands of soldiers died in the trenches

  • during the first world war.

  • The charming city of Ypres was flattened

  • as were the surrounding villages

  • For the first time in history

  • poisonous gas

  • known as « yperite »

  • was used in the battle.

  • The rivers that I'm crossing right now,

  • the Yser,

  • featured prominently in the last throes of the war.

  • The belgian king Albert the first had the locks of the river Yser by Nieuport open.

  • Gradually the area where the germans had taken a position was flooded.

  • This marked the beginning of the end of the war.

  • There are museums dotted around the whole of this region

  • and sections of the trenches such as the so-called « Trench of Death »

  • been preserved

  • for future generations.

  • Another image typical of this region are the military cemeteries

  • with white tombstones,

  • the best-known being « Tyne Cot Cemetery »

  • in Passendale.

  • During the second world war too

  • tough battles was fought on belgians soil.

  • Right at the very end of this war,

  • germans tried to turn the tide and launched that ardennes offensive.

  • In the battle of Bastogne,

  • the allied forces managed to bring the german offensive to a standstill

  • however,

  • for more than one hundred thousand casualties on both side.

  • As a token of gratitude to the americans who lost tens of thousands of troops there,

  • Belgium had a war memorial build in Bastogne.

  • nineteen fifty-eight,

  • the second world war seem to have been forgotten

  • Brussels held an unprecedented welfare

  • which unique monument was erected

  • the « Atonium »,

  • reflecting mankind's optimistic view

  • of future development.

  • The south of the country, thanked its prosperity to heavy industry,

  • chiefly the coal industry, in region surrounding Charleroi.

  • For a long time,

  • the steel industry was a pillar of the economy in Wallonia,

  • although economic activities in that area are now taking a different direction.

  • What is striking,

  • certainly when the country is view from above,

  • is the impressive infrastructure.

  • Belgium boasts an incredibly dense network of motorways and railways.

  • The government is making every effort to divert freight traffic to canals

  • as much as possible,

  • for be easier eminently well placed to establish perfect links with ports,

  • including foreign ports.

  • The port of Antwerpen is a world ranking fort.

  • ranked fifth in world.

  • and an important artery is the belgian economy.

  • Container transport has been increasing for years,

  • and docks and mooring places

  • are still being added to this day.

  • In the major port of Zeebrugge

  • growing number of cars are being loaded and downloaded.

  • Belgium's unique lock-lifts process thousands of ships every year.

  • With the high-speed train though

  • you can get to paris or london in next to no time.

  • And the number of passengers of the national airport of Zaventem

  • continues to grow,

  • year-on-year.

  • As I've said,

  • this is a small and densely populated country,

  • with an extensive road network

  • and lots of industry.

  • yet there's still a good deal left over

  • for nature and agriculture,

  • and opinion polls show

  • that people want to keep it that way.

  • In many places,

  • this agricultural activity produces attractive landscapes.

  • Typical are the small hardly shaped plots of land.

  • Often this land pattern hark back to the middle ages.

  • Perhaps with the very reason that nature and green area are threatened

  • by economic activity,

  • concerned about the environment has grown enormously.

  • In recent years,

  • the government has invested

  • more and more in green areas,

  • so the belgium is now being given more protective nature reserves.

  • Many having been lost in the recent past.

  • Every belgian is born

  • with a brick in his stomach, the saying goes,

  • and all the raw material for building

  • can be found just under the surface.

  • Heavy industry is mainly to be found above the surface,

  • for example this steel giant to the Ghent region.

  • This is good news for the car assembly sector.

  • Every year major manufacturers produce some one million cars.

  • It's not only Zaventem that handles

  • increasing numbers of passengers,

  • regional airports are also gaining ground.

  • From the air,

  • it's mainly the large businesses that are visible.

  • But this country contain numerous

  • small and medium sized enterprises for its prosperity

  • as these are where a majority of employees find job

  • And what they all these people get out to during the weekend ?

  • Well, if it's sunny, it seems that they all head for the coast,

  • even though it's only sixty five kilometers long.

  • Apparently,

  • it's not just the caribbean that attracts cruise ships.

  • The southeast of the country also does its bid to draw the tourists.

  • It is hardly young belgians

  • who hasn't enjoyed a camping holiday in the Ardennes.

  • At the risk of repeating myself

  • I'm flying above some wind turbines

  • more evidence of growing environmental awareness.

  • Since belgium has eighteen universities

  • and some fifty colleges of higher education,

  • they must be quite a few bright sparks who are looking at how the environment

  • can be reconciled with the economy, among other things.

  • The historical town of Leuven host the country's oldest university

  • dating back as it does to the fifteenth century.

  • Since belgium has no fewer than eight university hospitals

  • universities and medicine go hand-in-hand.

  • Brussels is not only the capital of this country

  • but also of the whole of Europe, in a way.

  • So this is where the EU's largest decision-making body is based.

  • That is if this was not enough NATO also has its headquarters in brussels.

  • Belgians like to go cycling at the weekend.

  • And even if they don't actively participate,

  • they like to watch cycle rallies,

  • which are never far away.

  • From early spring to late autumn,

  • there are cycling races virtually every week.

  • And they can watch the main ones, live on television.

  • small wonder

  • that belgians has produced so many exciting champions.

  • We're now about to land.

  • I've tried to give you a detailed description of this intriguing country

  • but of course

  • I've had to leave a lot out.

  • A word of advice before we part.

  • When you visit you might notice that

  • Belgians can be brought the critical of their own country,

  • but all in all,

  • they'd like living here,

  • because believe me,

  • in the main,

  • they know how to enjoy life.

I'd like to tell you about a country that lies next to the north sea.

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    lemacl3 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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