Tuesday, April 24, 2012

The Grand Duchey of Luxembourg



The blurb from the WWW

 Luxembourg is about half the size of Delaware. The Ardennes Mountains extend from Belgium into the northern section of Luxembourg. The rolling plateau of the fertile Bon Pays is in the south. 

 Luxembourg, once part of Charlemagne's empire, became an independent state in 963, when Siegfried, count of Ardennes, became sovereign of Lucilinburhuc (“Little Fortress”). In 1060, Conrad, a descendant of Siegfried, took the title count of Luxembourg. From the 15th to the 18th century, Spain, France, and Austria held the duchy in turn. The Congress of Vienna in 1815 made it a grand duchy and gave it to William I, king of the Netherlands. In 1839, the Treaty of London ceded the western part of Luxembourg to Belgium. The eastern part, continuing in personal union with the Netherlands and a member of the German Confederation, became autonomous in 1848 and a neutral territory by decision of the London Conference of 1867, governed by its grand duke. Germany occupied the duchy in World Wars I and II. Allied troops liberated the enclave in 1944.

Luxembourg joined NATO in 1949, the Benelux Economic Union (with Belgium and the Netherlands) in 1948, and the European Economic Community (later the EU) in 1957. In 1961, Prince Jean, son and heir of Grand Duchess Charlotte, was made head of state, acting for his mother. She abdicated in 1964, and Prince Jean became grand duke. Luxembourg's parliament approved the Maastricht Accord, paving the way for the economic unity of the EU in July 1992. Crown Prince Henri was sworn in as grand duke in Oct. 2000, replacing his father, Jean, who had been head of state for 26 years.


We'll have to go back when the kids don't hate life, it'll be better then. 
And there will be pictures of them then.

Oh yeah, you are going to get boring nature shots


Eyeball tree

Warty tree

The day we visited, crazy right

Stairs down the wall

And more stairs, it's a long way from top to bottom

Bridge over troubled ravine

Climb for you life

Take me home UFO

Would the French die if it weren't a perfect garden

The Tin Man, I think this one has a heart because he moves


Just liked it
Antique and Junk Market


Lovely large church, with ghostly Aurelia
The Church Entryway
Aurelia letting loose with her own kind

Crazy man by a restaurant, I think he's hungry



Apparently soldiers have to do this all over the world

1 comment:

Unknown said...

Wow, Bethanie! What fantastic places you have to educate your children about. I love it and wish I could come and see it with you.