Online Encyclopedia

MONS (Flemish Bergen)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V18, Page 739 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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MONS (Flemish
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Bergen)
  , a
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town of Belgium situated on a small
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river called the Trouille in the province of Hainaut of which it is the capital . Pop . (1904), 27,072 . Mons was the capital of the ancient countdom of Hainaut, well known in
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English
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history from the
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marriage of
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Edward III. with its Countess Philippa . The town was founded by the Countess Waudru in the 8th century, whereupon Charlemagne recognized it as the capital of Hainaut, and it has retained the position ever since . It was only in the 1th century, however, that it became the fixed residence of the
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counts, who had previously occupied the castle of Hornu, leaving Mons to the abbey and the church of St Waudru . Regnier V. moved to Mons at the beginning of that century, and his only child—a daughter—Richilde, married Baldwin VI. of Flanders . The junction of the two countdoms was only temporary, and they again separated in the person of Richilde's sons . In this age Hainaut was known as " the poor
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land of a proud
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people," and it was not until the beginning of the 14th century that Mons was converted into a trading town by the establishment of a
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cloth market . At the same time the count transferred his
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principal fortress from
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Valenciennes to Mons . When the Hainaut title became merged in the duchy of
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Burgundy, Mons was a place of considerable importance on account of its being a stronghold near the French frontier . Its capture, defence and surrender by Louis of
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Nassau in 1572 was one of the striking incidents of the religious troubles .

In the

long
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wars of the 17th and 18th centuries Mons underwent several sieges, but none of the same striking character as those of Namur . Several times dismantled and refortified, Mons was finally converted into an open town in 1862 . The most remarkable
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building in the city is the
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cathedral of St Waudru, named after the first countess, which was begun in the
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middle of the 15th century, but not finished for more than a century and a
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half later . It is a
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fine specimen of later
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Gothic, and contains some good glass as well as a few pictures by
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Van Thudden . The Hotel de Ville is about the same age as the cathedral, having been commenced in 1458 and finished in 16o6 . The tower was added a century later . There is also a fine belfry with a peal of bells . Mons is now a flourishing town with a good trade in cloth, lace,
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sugar refinery, &c.; but its chief importance is derived from its proximity to the Borinage (place of
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boring),
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district containing mines of the finest
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coal in Belgium . The military
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engineering college for the Belgian army is here, and not far from Mons are the
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battle-fields of
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Malplaquet (1709) and
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Jemappes (1792) .

End of Article: MONS (Flemish Bergen)
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