Английская Википедия:Flemish Canon
The Flemish Canon is a list of key developments in the history of the Flemish Region of Belgium, as exemplified by particularly striking people, places, events or artefacts, drawn up by a committee of nine experts appointed by the regional government of Flanders.[1] Although this was widely perceived to be a politically motivated attempt to boost a sense of distinctively 'Flemish' identity, the committee responsible for drawing up the 'canon' insisted that their work was free of political considerations.[2]
There have been suggestions that the Flemish canon, which follows similar initiatives such as the Danish Culture Canon and the Canon of the Netherlands, will be a useful guideline for teaching history in schools and preparing new immigrants for citizenship.[3]
Published on 9 May 2023, the 60 events considered essential to an understanding of Flemish history are:
- The end of the Last Glacial Period
- Neanderthal settlement in the Valley of the Meuse
- Linear Pottery culture: the first agriculturalists in the region
- Hallstatt culture as exemplified by archaeological finds at Kemmelberg
- Incorporation into the Roman Empire, exemplified by the city of Tongeren
- The Frankish Empire of Charlemagne
- The oldest written traces of the Dutch language, exemplified by the verse Hebban olla vogala
- Agricultural innovation in the High Middle Ages, exemplified by the windmill at Wormhout
- Bruges as a medieval commercial metropolis
- The depiction of the region on the maps of Muhammad al-Idrisi
- Beguinages
- Medieval vernacular literature, exemplified by the stories of Reynard the Fox
- Social revolutions in the cities of Flanders and Brabant, exemplified by the Battle of the Golden Spurs (1302)
- Medieval iconography, exemplified by the Ghent Altarpiece
- The rise of the Burgundian State, exemplified in the Battle of Gavere (1453)
- Processions and Ommegangen, exemplified by the Ros Beiaard Dendermonde
- Polyphonic music, exemplified by the 16th-century Mechelen Choirbook
- Renaissance humanism, exemplified by Erasmus
- Europeans in the New World, exemplified by Pedro de Gante
- Renaissance art, exemplified by Peter Bruegel the Elder's Dull Gret
- The Iconoclastic Fury of 1566
- Early-modern science, exemplified by Simon Stevin
- The witch craze, exemplified by Cathelyne Van den Bulcke (executed 1590)
- Baroque art, exemplified by Rubens's Adoration of the Magi (1624)
- The 1695 Bombardment of Brussels
- The European Enlightenment, exemplified by Empress Maria Theresa (1717–1780)
- The industrial revolution
- The Napoleonic Code of 1804
- The Belgian Revolution of 1830
- The first Belgian railways (1835)
- The growth of a Flemish consciousness, exemplified by Hendrik Conscience's novel De Leeuw van Vlaenderen (1838)
- The potato blight of 1845–1847
- The opening of the Scheldt to navigation (1863), allowing the development of the Port of Antwerp
- The 19th-century social question, exemplified by Emilie Claeys
- Artistic innovation, exemplified by James Ensor's Christ's Entry into Brussels (1889)
- The struggle for universal suffrage, exemplified by the deaths of six protesters in Leuven on 18 April 1902
- Women's education, exemplified by Marie-Elisabeth Belpaire
- The Flemish Movement
- The Tour of Flanders
- Colonization of the Congo Basin, exemplified by Paul Panda Farnana
- World War I
- The Limburg coal mines
- The Young Christian Workers founded by Joseph Cardijn
- 20th-century cookbooks
- The Yser Towers
- World War II
- The deportation of Jews from Belgium during the Holocaust, exemplified by the Dossin Barracks
- The development of the Welfare State
- Post-War town and country planning
- Television as a mass medium
- Artistic innovation, exemplified by the poetry of Hugo Claus
- The sexual revolution
- French-language culture in Flanders, exemplified by Jacques Brel
- The drawing of a linguistic border within Belgium
- Economic growth in the 1960s
- Pop festivals
- European integration
- LGBT rights
- The standardisation of Belgian Dutch
- 21st-century multiculturalism
References
External links
- ↑ Tom Christiaens, Finally, the “Flemish Canon” Has Been Launched, The Low Countries, 9 May 2023.
- ↑ Colin Clapson, Flemish Canon of key people and events is launched, VRT News, 9 May 2023.
- ↑ Helen Lyons, Flanders publishes official canon recognising its history and culture, The Bulletin, 12 May 2023.