
The three partitions of Luxembourg reduced Luxembourg's area substantially, to the advantage of the three surrounding countries.
There have been three 'Partitions of Luxembourg' since
1659. Together, the three
partitions reduced the territory of
Luxembourg from 10,700 km² to the present-day area of 2,586 km² over a period of 240 years. The remainder forms parts of modern day
Belgium,
France, and
Germany.
All three countries bordering Luxembourg have, at one point or another, either demanded or effected the complete
annexation of Luxembourg, but all such attempts have failed. Conversely, there have been historical movements to reverse Luxembourg's loss of territory, but none of these came to fruition, and Luxembourgian
revanchism is only a fringe opinion today.
First Partition
The first partition of Luxembourg occurred in
1659, when the
Duchy of Luxembourg was in
personal union with the
Kingdom of Spain. During the
Franco-Spanish War, France and
England had captured much of the
Spanish Netherlands. Under the
Treaty of the Pyrenees, France received from Luxembourg the fortresses of
Stenay,
Thionville, and
Montmédy, and the surrounding territory.
The area taken by France from the Duchy of Luxembourg totalled 1,060 km² (409 sq. miles).
[1] This area accounted for approximately one-tenth of area of the Duchy of Luxembourg at the time.
Second Partition
In
1795, during the
French Revolutionary Wars, Luxembourg was annexed into France as part of the
département of
Forêts. Upon the defeat of
Napoleon, under the
1814 Treaty of Paris, Luxembourg was liberated from French rule, but its final status was to be determined at the
Congress of Vienna the following year. There, it was agreed that Luxembourg would be elevated to a
Grand Duchy, and that the
House of Orange would receive all of the
Low Countries, including Luxembourg. However,
Prussia, which had received the whole of the
Rhineland and
Westphalia during the war, requested the fortress of
Bitburg, which would serve to form part of the
German Confederation's western border fortifications. As the rest of Luxembourg was changing hands anyway, the Dutch did not attempt to argue this point.
The Second Partition reduced Luxembourg's territory by 2,280 km² (880 sq. miles), or 24% of Luxembourg's contemporary area. Along with Bitburg, Prussia gained the towns of
Neuerburg,
Sankt Vith,
Schleiden, and
Waxweiler. Altogether, the lands had a population of 50,000.
1 Today, these lands belong to both Germany and Belgium; the district of
Eupen-Malmedy was ceded by Germany to Belgium in
1919 under the
Treaty of Versailles.
Third Partition
The largest loss of land occurred in
1839, under the
Treaty of London. At the outbreak of the
Belgian Revolution, most Luxembourgers joined the Belgian rebels, and took control of most of the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg; the only town that did not fall into Belgian hands was the
capital, largest city, and most important fortress:
Luxembourg City.
[2] The
London Conference's first proposal was that the whole of Luxembourg would remain in personal union with the Netherlands, but this was rejected by Belgium's
King Leopold I. In July 1831, the
Great Powers relented, and the Conference instead decreed that the status of Luxembourg would be decided later; the Netherlands, which had assented to the Conference's decision, invaded Belgium to force the Belgians to accept limitation of its territory.
2 After the withdrawal of this force, the London Conference made its third suggestion, that Luxembourg be divided between the two, with most of the land going to Belgium, but with Luxembourg City remaining under Dutch control. Leopold agreed, and the treaty was signed on the
15 November 1831.
[3] Although the Dutch
King William I rejected this suggestion at first, after the stand-off had dragged on for several years, he gave way, and agreed to partition in 1839.
2
In the Third Partition, Luxembourg lost all of its western territories, including the towns of
Arlon,
Aubange,
Bastogne,
Durbuy,
Marche-en-Famenne,
Neufchâteau, and
Virton. They (along with the
Duchy of Bouillon) later formed the Belgian
Luxembourg province, which is now a
Walloon province and the largest in
Belgium. The territory ceded to Belgium was 4,730 km² (1,827 sq. miles), or 65% of the territory of the Grand Duchy at the time. The population of this territory was 175,000: half of Luxembourg's total population.
[4]
Footnotes
1. The Two Luxembourg Fausto Gardini
2. Fyffe (1895), ch. XVI
3. The Neutrality of Belgium, , Alexander, Fuehr, Funk and Wagnalls, 1915,
4. Calmes (1989), p. 316
References
★
The Making of a Nation From 1815 to the Present Day, , Christian, Calmes, Saint-Paul, 1989,
★
A History of Modern Europe, 1792-1878, , Charles Alan, Fyffe, , 1895,