Limburg History: Difference between revisions
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| link1=[[ | | link1=[[Netherlands Genealogy|Netherlands]] | ||
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'''Wiki articles describing online collectiosn are found at:'''<br> | '''Wiki articles describing online collectiosn are found at:'''<br> | ||
*[[Netherlands, Limburg Parish Register Transcripts - FamilySearch Historical Records|Netherlands, Limburg Parish Register Transcripts | *[[Netherlands, Limburg Parish Register Transcripts - FamilySearch Historical Records|Netherlands, Limburg Parish Register Transcripts - FamilySearch Historical Records]]<br> | ||
*[[Netherlands, Limburg Province Certificates of Nationality - FamilySearch Historical Records|Netherlands, Limburg Province Certificates of Nationality | *[[Netherlands, Limburg Province Certificates of Nationality - FamilySearch Historical Records|Netherlands, Limburg Province Certificates of Nationality - FamilySearch Historical Records]]<br> | ||
[[Category:Limburg Province, Netherlands]] | [[Category:Limburg Province, Netherlands]] | ||
Latest revision as of 11:49, 21 November 2023
For centuries, the strategic location of the current province made it a much-coveted region among Europe's major powers. Romans, Habsburg Spaniards, Prussians, Habsburg Austrians and French have all ruled Limburg. In 1673, Louis XIV personally commanded the siege of Maastricht by French troops. During the siege, one of his brigadiers, Charles de Batz-Castelmore d'Artagnan, perished. He subsequently became known as a major character in The Three Musketeers by Alexandre Dumas, père (1802–1870).
When the Catholic and French-speaking Belgians split away from the mainly Calvinist northern part of the Netherlands in the Belgian Revolution of 1830 - 1839, the Province of Limburg was at first almost entirely under Belgian rule. However, by the 1839 Treaty of London, the province was divided in two, with the eastern part going to the Netherlands and the western part to Belgium, a division that remains today.
Wiki articles describing online collectiosn are found at: