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FLEMISH LITERATURE . The older Flemish writers are dealt with in the article on DUTCH LITERATURE; after the separation of Belgium, however, from theSee also: Netherlands in 183o there was a See also: great revival of Flemish literature
.
The immediate result of the revolution was a reaction against everything associated with Dutch, and a disposition to regard the French language as the speech of liberty and independence
.
The provisional See also: government of 183o suppressed the official use of the Flemish language, which was relegated to the See also: rank of a See also: patois
.
For some years before 183o See also: Jan Frans Willems 1 (1793–1846) had been advocating the claims of the Flemish language
.
He had done his best to allay the irritation between See also: Holland and Belgium and to prevent a separation
.
As archivist of
See also: Antwerp he made use of his opportunities by writing a See also: history of Flemish letters
.
After the revolution his Dutch sympathies had made it necessary for him to live in seclusion, but in 1835 he settled at See also: Ghent, and devoted himself to the cultivation of Flemish
.
He edited old Flemish See also: classics, Reinaert de Vos (1836), the rhyming See also: Chronicles of Jan See also: van Heelu and Jan le Clerc, &c., and gathered round him a See also: band of Flemish enthusiasts, the chevalier Philipp Blommaert (1809–1871), Karel Lodewijk Ledeganck (1805-1847), Fr, Hens (1805–1874), F
.
A
.
Snellaert (1809–1872), Prudens van Duyse (1804–1859), and others
.
Blommaert, who was See also: born at Ghent on the 27th of See also: August 1809, founded in 1834 in his native See also: town the Nederduitsche letleroefeningen, a review for the new writers, and it was speedily followed by other Flemish See also: organs, and by See also: literary See also: societies for the promotion of Flemish
.
In 1851 a central organization for the Flemish propaganda was provided by a society, named after the See also: father of the See also: movement, the " Willemsfonds." The Catholic Flemings founded in 1874 a See also: rival " Davidsfonds," called after the energetic J
.
B
.
See also: David (1801–1866), professor at the university of See also: Louvain, and the author of a Flemish history of Belgium (Vaderlandsche histori-e, Louvain, 1842-1866)
.
As a result of this propaganda the Flemish language was placed on an equality with French in See also: law, and in administration, in 1873 and 1878, and in the See also: schools in x883
.
Finally in 1886 a Flemish See also: Academy was established by royal authority at Ghent, where a course in Flemish literature had been established as early as 1854
.
The claims put forward by the Flemish school were justified by the appearance (1837) of In't IVonderjaar 1566 (In the Wonder-
1 See Max Rooses, Keus van
.
Dichl- en Prozawerken van J
.
F
.
Willows, and his Rrievcn in the publications of the \Villcrosfonds (Ghent, 1872-187.0ful See also: year) of Hendrik See also: Conscience (q.v.), who roused See also: national See also: enthusiasm by describing the heroic struggles of the Flemings against the Spaniards
.
Conscience was eventually to make his greatest successes in the description of contemporary Flemish See also: life, but his See also: historical romances and his popular history of See also: Flanders helped to give a popular basis to a movement which had been started by professors and scholars
.
The first poet of the new school was Ledeganck, the best known of whose poems are those on the " three See also: sister cities " of Bruges, Ghent and Antwerp (Die drie zustersteden, vaderlandsche trilogie, Ghent, 1846), in which he makes an impassioned protest against the adoption of French ideas, See also: manners and language, and the neglect of Flemish tradition
.
The See also: book speedily took its place as a Flemish classic
.
Ledeganck, who was a magistrate, also translated the FrenchSee also: code into Flemish
.
Jan Theodoor van Rijswijck (1811–1849), after serving as a volunteer in the See also: campaign of 183o, settled down as a clerk in Antwerp, and became one of the hottest champions of the Flemish movement
.
He wrote a series of See also: political and satirical songs, admirably suited to his public
.
The romantic and sentimental poet, Jan van Beers (q.v.), was typically Flemish in his sincere and moral outlook on life
.
Prudens van Duyse, whose most ambitious See also: work was the epic Artavelde (1859), is perhaps best remembered by a collection (1844) of poems for See also: children
.
See also: Peter Frans Van Kerckhoven (188–1857), a native of Antwerp, wrote novels, poems, dramas, and a work on the Flemish revival (De Vlaemsche Beweging, 1847)
.
Antwerp produced a realistic novelist in Jan Lambrecht See also: Damien Sleeckx (1818–r9o1)
.
An inspector of schools by profession, he was an indefatigable journalist and literary critic
.
He was one of the founders in 1844 of the Vlaemsch Belgie, the first daily paper in the Flemish See also: interest
.
His See also: works include a long See also: list of plays, among them Jan See also: Steen (1852), a See also: comedy; See also: Gretry, which gained a national prize in 1861; De Vissfhers van Blankenberg (1863); and the patriotic drama of Zannekin (1865)
.
ITis talent as a novelist was diametrically opposed to the idealism of Conscience
.
He was precise, sober and concrete in his methods, relying for his effect on the accumulation of carefully observed detail
.
He was particularly successful in describing the life of the See also: shipping quarter of his native town
.
Among his novels are: In':Schipperskwartier (1856), See also: Dirk See also: Meyer (r86o), Tybaerts en KC (1867), Kunst en Liefde (" See also: Art and Love," 1876), and Vesdlius in Spanje (1895)
.
His See also: complete works were collected in 17 vols
.
(1877-1884)
.
Jan Renier Snieders (1812–1888) wrote novels dealing with See also: North See also: Brabant; his See also: brother, August Snieders (b
.
1825), began by writing historical novels in the manner of Conscience, but his later novels are satires on contemporary society
.
A more See also: original talent was displayed by Anton Bergmann (1835–1874), who, under the pseudonym of " Tony," wrote Ernest Staas, Advocat, which gained the quinquennial prize of literature in 1874
.
In the same year appeared the Novellen of the sisters Rosalie (1834-1875) and Virginie Loveling (b
.
1836)
.
These See also: simple and touching stories were followed by a second collection in 1876
.
The sisters had published a See also: volume of poems in 1870
.
Virginie Loveling's gifts of See also: fine and exact observation soon placed her in the front rank of Flemish novelists
.
Her political sketches, In ooze Vlaamsche gewesten (1877), were published under the name of "W . G . E . Walter." Sophie (1885), Een dure Eed (1892), and HetSee also: Land der Verbeelding (1896) are among the more famous of her later works
.
Reimond Styns (b
.
185o) and Isidoor Teirlinck (b
.
1851) produced in collaboration one very popular novel, Arm Vlaanderen (1884), and some others, and have since written separately
.
Cyril Buysse, a See also: nephew of Mme Loveling, is a See also: disciple of Zola
.
Het Recht van den Sterkste (" The Right of the Strongest," 1893) is a picture of vagabond life in Flanders; Schoppenboer (" The Knave of Spades," 1898) deals with brutalized peasant life; and Sursum corda (1895) describes the narrowness and religiosity of See also: village life
.
In See also: poetry See also: Julius de Geyter (b
.
1830), author of a rhymed See also: translation of Reinaert (1874), an epic poem on See also: Charles V
.
(1888), &c., produced a social epic in three parts, Drie menu-
See also: hen van in
de wieg tot in het graf (" Three Men from the Cradle to the See also: Grave," 1861), in which he propounded See also: radical and humanitarian views, The songs of Julius Vuylsteke (1836—1903) are full of liberal and patriotic ardour; but his later life was devoted to politics rather than literature
.
He had been the leading spirit of a students' association at Ghent for the See also: propagation of " flamingatzt " views, and the " Willemsfonds" owed much of its success to his energetic co-operation
.
His Ilit het studenten leven appeared in 1868, and his poems were collected in 1881
.
The poems of Mme van Ackere (1803-1884), nee Maria Doolaeghe, were modelled an Dutch originals
.
JoannaCourtmans (1811—1890), nee Berchxnans, owed her fame rather to her tales than her poems; she was above all a moralist, and her fifty tales are sermons on See also: economy and the See also: practical virtues
.
Other poets were See also: Emmanuel Hiel (q.v.), author of comedies, See also: opera libretti and some admirable songs; the See also: abbe Guido Gezelle (1830—1899), who wrote religious and patriotic poems in the dialect of rWest Flanders; Lodewijk de See also: Koninck (b.1838), who attempted a great epic subject in Mensehdon Verlost(1872); J
.
M..Dautzenberg (1808—1869), author of a volume of charming Volksliederen
.
The best of Dautzenberg's work is contained in the See also: posthumous volume of 1869, published by his son=in-law, Frans de Cott (1834-1878), who was himself a See also: song-writer, and translated songs from Burns, from See also: Jasmin and from the See also: German
.
The Makamen en Ghazelen (1866), adapted from Ruckert's version of Hariri, and other volumes by " Jan Ferguut " (J
.
A. van Droogenbroeck, b
.
1835) show a growing preoccupation with See also: form, and with the work of Theodoor Antheunis (b
.
1840), they prepare the way for the ingenious and careful workmanship of the younger school of poets, of whom Charles Polydore de Mont is the See also: leader
.
He was born at Wambeke in Brabant in 1857, and became professor in the academy of the fine arts at Antwerp
.
He introduced something of the ideas and methods of See also: con-temporary French writers into Flemish verse; and explained his theories in 1898 in an Inleiding tot de Poezie
.
Among Pol de Mont's numerous volumes of verse dating from 1877 onwards are Claribella (1893), and See also: Iris (1894), which contains amongst other things a curious " Mt de Legende van Jeschoea-See also: ben-Josief," a version of the gospel See also: story from a Jewish peasant
.
Mention should also be made of the • history of Ghent (Gent van den vroegsten Tijd tot heden, 1882-1889) of Frans de See also: Potter (b
.
1834), and of the art criticisms of Max Rooses (b
.
1839), curator of the See also: Plantin museum at Antwerp, and of Julius Sabbe (b
.
1846)
.
See See also: Ida van Duringsfeld, Von der Schelde bis zur See also: Maas
.
See also: Des ggeistige Leben der Vlamingen (See also: Leipzig, 3 vols., 1861), J
.
Stecher, Histoire de la litterature neerlandaise en Belgique (1886) ; Geschiedenis der Vlaamsche Letterkunde van het jaar 183o tot heden (1899), by Theodoor Coopman and L
.
Scharpe; A. de Koninck, Bibliographie nationale (3 vols., 1886—1897); and Histoire politique et littiraire du mouvement flamand (1894), by See also: Paul Hamelius
.
The Vlaamsche Bibliographie, issued by the Flemish Academy of Ghent, by Frans de Potter, contains a list of publications between 183o and 189o; and there is a See also: good See also: deal of information in the excellent Biographisch woordenboeck der Noord- en Zuid - Nederlandsche Letterkunde (18r)
of Dr W
.
J
.
A . Huberts and others . (E . G.FLENSBURG (Danish, Flensburg), a seaport of See also: Germany, in
the Prussian province of See also: Schleswig-Holstein, at the See also: head of the Flensburg See also: Fjord, 20 M
.
N.W. from Schleswig, at the junction of the See also: main See also: line See also: Altona-Vamdrup (See also: Denmark), with branches to See also: Kiel and See also: Glucksburg
.
Pop
.
(1905) 48,922
.
The See also: principal public buildings are the Nikolai Kirche (built 1390, restored 1894), with a See also: spire 295 ft. high; the Marienkirche, also a See also: medieval See also: church, with a lofty tower; the law courts; the theatre and the
See also: exchange
.
There are two gymnasia, schools of marine See also: engineering, navigation, See also: wood-See also: carving and See also: agriculture
.
The cemetery contains the remains of the Danish soldiers who See also: fell at the See also: battle of Idstedt (25th of See also: July 1850), but the See also: colossal See also: Lion monument, erected by the Danes to commemorate their victory, was removed to Berlin in 1864
.
Flensburg is a busy centre of See also: trade and industry, and is the most important town in what was formerly the duchy of Schleswig
.
It possesses excellent wharves, does a large-import trade in See also: coal, and has See also: shipbuilding yards, breweries, distilleries, See also: cloth and paper factories, See also: glass-works, copper-works,
See also: soap-works and See also: rice mills
.
Its former extensive trade with the West Indies has lately suffered owing to the enormous develops ment of the NorthSee also: Sea ports, but it is still largely engaged in the See also: Greenland See also: whale and the See also: oyster See also: fisheries
.
Flensburg was probably founded in the 12th century
.
It attained municipal privileges in 1284, was frequently pillaged by the Swedes after 1643, and in 1848 became the capital, under Danish See also: rule, of Schleswig
.
See•Holdt, Flensburg (richer and jetzt (1884)
.
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