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Encyclopedia > Flemish literature

Flemish Literature is literature from Flanders. The older Flemish writers are dealt with in the article on Dutch literature; after the separation of Belgium, however, from the Netherlands in 1830 there was a 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 government of 1830 suppressed the official use of the Flemish language, which was relegated to the rank of a patois. For some years before 1830 Jan Frans Willems (1793-1846) had been advocating the claims of the Flemish language. He had done his best to allay the irritation between Holland and Belgium and to prevent a separation. As archivist of Antwerp he made use of his opportunities by writing a 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 Ghent, and devoted himself to the cultivation of Flemish. He edited old Flemish classics, Reinaert de Vos (1836), the rhyming Chronicles of Jan van Heelu and Jan le Clerc, etc., and gathered round him a band of Flemish enthusiasts, the chevalier Philipp Blommaert (1809-1871), Karel Lodewijk Ledeganck (1805-1847), Fr, Rens (1805-1874), F. A. Snellaert (1809-1872), Prudens van Duyse (1804-1859), and others. ... This article is about the Belgian region Flanders and the eponymous historical region of the Low Countries. ... Flemings (Dutch: Vlamingen) are inhabitants of Flanders in the widest sense of the term, i. ... This article needs to be cleaned up to conform to a higher standard of quality. ... The term Flemish language can designate: the official language of Flanders, which is Dutch with only very small variations; any of the regional dialects of Dutch spoken in Belgium; these are more different from Dutch than the official language of Flanders; one of these dialects, the West Flemish. ... Patois, although without a formal definition in linguistics, can be used to describe a language considered as nonstandard. ... Jan Frans Willems (March 11, 1793 - June 24, 1846), Flemish writer. ... Holland is a region in the central-western part of the Netherlands. ... The Cathedral of our Lady (Onze-Lieve-Vrouwekathedraal, Antwerp) in the Handschoenmarkt, in the old quarter of Antwerp is the largest cathedral in the Low Countries and home to a number of triptychs by Renaissance Belgian painter Rubens. ... Ghent (once Gaunt in English, Gent in Dutch, Gand in French) is a municipality located in Flanders, one of the three regions of Belgium, and in the Flemish province of East Flanders, of which it is the capital. ...


Blommaert, who was born at Ghent on the 27th of August 1809, founded in 1834 in his native town the Nederduitsche letleroefeningen, a review for the new writers, and it was speedily followed by other Flemish organs, and by literary societies for the promotion of Flemish. In 1851 a central organization for the Flemish propaganda was provided by a society, named after the father of the movement, the Willemsfonds. The Catholic Flemings founded in 1874 a rival Davidsfonds, called after the energetic J. B. David (1801-1866), professor at the university of Louvain, and the author of a Flemish history of Belgian (Vaderlandsche historie, Louvain, 1842-1866). As a result of this propaganda the Flemish language was placed on an equality with French in law, and in administration, in 1873 and 1878, and in the schools in 1883. Finally in 1886 a Flemish Academy was established by royal authority at Ghent, where a course in Flemish literature had been established as early as 1854. Leuven in 2004 Leuven (Louvain in French, Löwen in German) is a municipality located in the Belgian province of Flemish Brabant, of which it is the capital. ...


The claims put forward by the Flemish school were justified by the appearance (1837) of In 't Vonderjaer 1566 (In the Wonderful year) of Hendrik Conscience, who roused national 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 life, but his historical romances and his popular history of Flanders helped to give a popular basis to a movement which had been started by professors and scholars. Hendrik Conscience (born December 3, 1812 in Antwerp – died September 10, 1883 in Antwerp) was a Flemish writer. ...


The first poet of the new school was Ledeganck, the best known of whose poems are those on the three 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, manners and language, and the neglect of Flemish tradition. The book speedily took its place as a Flemish classic. Ledeganck, who was a magistrate, also translated the French code into Flemish. Jan Theodoor van Rijswijck (1811-1849), after serving as a volunteer in the campaign of 1830, settled down as a clerk in Antwerp, and became one of the hottest champions of the Flemish movement. He wrote a series of political and satirical songs, admirably suited to his public. The romantic and sentimental poet, Jan van Beers, was typically Flemish in his sincere and moral outlook on life. Prudens van Duyse, whose most ambitious work was the epic Artavelde (1859), is perhaps best remembered by a collection (1844) of poems for children. Peter Frans Van Kerckhoven (1818-1857), a native of Antwerp, wrote novels, poems, dramas, and a work on the Flemish revival (De Vlaemsche Beweging, 1847). Sometimes referred to as the Venice of the North, Bruges has many waterways that run through the city. ... The Cathedral of our Lady (Onze-Lieve-Vrouwekathedraal, Antwerp) in the Handschoenmarkt, in the old quarter of Antwerp is the largest cathedral in the Low Countries and home to a number of triptychs by Renaissance Belgian painter Rubens. ... Jan van Beers (February 22, 1821 - November 14, 1888), Belgian poet, usually called the elder to distinguish him from his son, Jan van Beers, the well-known painter, was born at Antwerp. ...


Antwerp produced a realistic novelist in Jan Lambrecht Domien Sleeckx (1818-1901). 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 interest. His works include a long list of plays, among them Jan Steen (1852), a comedy; Gretry, which gained a national prize in 1861; Visszers van Blankenberg (1863); and the patriotic drama of Zannekin (1865). His 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 shipping quarter of his native town. Among his novels are: Ini Schipperskwartier(1856), Dirk Meyer (1860), Tybaerts en Cie (1867), Kunst en Liefde ( Art and Love, 1870), and Vesdlizes in Spanje (1895). His complete works were collected in 17 vols. (1877-1884).


Jan Renier Snieders (1812-1888) wrote novels dealing with North Brabant; his brother, August Snieders (1825-1904), began by writing historical novels in the manner of Conscience, but his later novels are satires of contemporary society. A more original talent was displayed by Anton Bergmann (1835-1874), who, under the pseudonym of Tony, wrote Ernest Staas, Advocat, which gained the quennial prize of literature in 1874. In the same year appeared the Novellen of the sisters Rosalie (1834-1875) and Virginie Loveling (1836-1923). These simple and touching stories were followed by a second collection in 1876. The sisters had published a volume of poems in 1870. Virginie Lovelings gifts of fine and exact observation soon placed her in the front rank of Flemish novelists. Her political sketches, In one Vlaamsche gewesten (1877), were published under the name of W. G. E. Walter. Sophie (1885), Ben dure Bed (1892), and Het Land der Verbeelding (1896) are among the more famous of her later works. Reimond Stijns (1850-1905) and Isidoor Teirlinck (1851-1934) produced in collaboration one very popular novel, Arm Vlaanderen (1884), and some others, and have since written separately. Cyriel Buysse, a nephew of Virginie Loveling, is a 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 village life. Rosalie Loveling (1834-03-20 - 1875-05-04) was a Flemish author of poetry, novels and essays. ... Virginie (Marie) Loveling (1836-05-17 - 1923-12-01) was a Flemish author of poetry, novels, essays and childrens stories. ... Cyriel (Cyrillus Gustave Emile) Buysse (1859-09-20 - 1932-07-25) was a flemish naturalist author and playwright. ...


In poetry Julius de Geyter (1830-1905), author of a rhymed translation of Reinaert (1874), an epic poem on Charles V. (1888), etc.. produced a social epic in three parts, Drie menschen van in de wieg tot in het graf ( Three Men from the Cradle to the Grave, 1861), in which he propounded 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 propagation of Flemish views, and the Willemsfonds owed much of its success to his energetic co-operation. His Uit het studenten leven appeared in 1868, and his poems were collected in 1881. The poems of Mme van Ackere (1803-1884), née Maria Doolaeghe, were modelled on Dutch originals. Joanna Courtmans (1811-1890), née Berchsnans, owed her fame rather to her tales than her poems; she was above all a moralist and her fifty tales are sermons on economy and the practical virtues. Other poets were Emmanuel Hiel, author of comedies, opera libretti and some admirable songs; the abbé Guido Gezelle, who wrote religious and patriotic poems in the dialect of West Flanders; Lodewijk de Koninck (1838-1924), who attempted a great epic subject in Menschdom Verlost (1872); J. M. Dautzenberg (1808-1869), author of a volume of charming Volksliederen. The best of Dautzenberg's work is contained in the posthumous volume of 1869, published by his son-in-law, Frans de Cort (1834-1878), who was himself a song-writer, and translated songs from Burns, from Jasmin and from the German. The Makamen en Ghazelen (1866), adapted from Rückert's version of Hariri, and other volumes by Jan Ferguut (J. A. van Droogenbroeck, 1835-1902) show a growing preoccupation with form, and with the work of Gentil Theodoor Antheunis (1840-1907), they prepare the way for the ingenious and careful workmanship of the younger school of poets, of whom Charles Polydore de Mont was the 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 contemporary French writers into Flemish verse; and explained his theories in 1898 in an Inleiding Lot de Pozie. Among Pol de Mont's numerous volumes of verse dating from 1877 onwards are Claribella (1893), and Iris (1894), which contains amongst other things a curious Uit de Lc~ende van Jeschoea-ben-Josief, a version of the gospel story from a Jewish peasant. Emmanuel Hiel (May, 1834 - August 27, 1899), was a Belgian-Dutch poet and prose writer. ... Guido Gezelle (1830-1899) is one of the most important poets in the Dutch language area. ... Robert Burns, preeminent Scottish poet Burns redirects here. ... Jacques Jasmin (16 March 1798 - 4 October 1864) was a Provençal poet. ... Friedrich Rückert (May 16, 1788 - January 31, 1866) was a German poet, translator, and professor of Oriental languages. ...


Mention should also be made of the history of Ghent (Gent van den vroegsten Tijd tot heden, 1882-1889) of Frans de Potter (1834-1904), and of the art criticisms of Max Rooses (1839-1914), curator of the Plantin museum at Antwerp, and of Julius Sabbe (1846-1910).


Modern period

Belgian stamp honoring the writer Willem Elsschot (7 May 1882 - 31 May 1960), was a Flemish writer and poet (pseudonym of Alfons-Jozef De Ridder). ... Johan Anthierens (August 22, 1937, Machelen (Flemish Brabant) - March 20, 2000, Dilbeek, (Flemish Brabant), Flemish journalist, publicist, critic and writer. ... Herman Brusselmans (born 9th October 1957 in Hamme, Belgium) is a Flemish novelist and poet. ... Hugo Maurice Julien Claus (born April 5, 1929 in Bruges, Belgium) is a prolific Flemish novelist, poet, playwright, painter and film director. ... Pieter Aspe, (officially Pierre Aspeslag, born Brugge, 3 April 1953) is a Belgian/Flemish writer of a series of detective stories starring inspector Van In. ... Leopold Maximiliaan Felix Timmermans (July 5, 1886 – January 24, 1947) is the most translated author of Flanders. ... Paul van Ostaijen (Antwerp, February 22, 1896 - Miavoye-Anthée, March 18, 1928) was a Flemish poet and writer. ... Hubert Lampo (born in 1920 in Antwerp) is a Belgian writer, one of the founders of magic realism in Flanders. ... De komst van Joachim Stiller (The Coming of Joachim Stiller) is a novel by Belgian author Hubert Lampo, first published in 1960. ... Louis Paul Boon (15 March 1912 - 10 May 1979) was a Flemish journalist and novelist who is considered one of the major 20th century writers in the Dutch language. ... Johan Geeraard Adriaan THooft (May 9, 1956 - October 6, 1977) was a Belgian neo-romantic poet. ... Tom Lanoye (born August 27, 1958 in Sint-Niklaas) is a Fleming novelist and poet. ... Stijn Streuvels, born Franciscus (Frank) Petrus Maria Lateur, is a Belgian writer. ...

Bibliography

See Ida van Duringsfeld, Von der Schelde bis zur Mass. Des geistige Leben der Viamingen (Leipzig, 3 vols., 1861); J. Stecher, Histoire de la littérature néerlandaise en Belgique (1886); (jeschiedenis tier Vlaamsche Letterkunde van het jaar 1830 tot heden (1899), by Theodoor Coopman and L. Scharpb; A. de Koninck, Bibliographie nationale (~ vols., 1886-1897); and Histoire poétique et littéraire du mouvement flamand (1894), by Paul Hamelius. The Vlaamsche Bibliographie, issued by the Flemish Academy of Ghent, by Frans de Potter, contains a list of publications between 1830 and 1890; and there is a good deal of information in the excellent Biographisch woordenboeck der Noord- en Zuid - Nederlandscke Letterkunde (1878) of Dr W. J. A. 1-luberts and others. (E. G.)


This article incorporates text from the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica, a publication in the public domain. Supporters contend that the Eleventh Edition of the Encyclopædia Britannica (1910-1911) represents the sum of human knowledge at the beginning of the 20th century; indeed, it was advertised as such. ... The public domain comprises the body of all creative works and other knowledge—writing, artwork, music, science, inventions, and others—in which no person or organization has any proprietary interest. ...


  Results from FactBites:
 
Freer Family Genealogy Research - History of Flemish (839 words)
Flanders (French Flandre; Flemish Vlaanderen), historic principality of northern Europe that is now an extensive region embracing the provinces of East and West Flanders in Belgium, the southern portion of Zeeland Province in the Nethe rlands, and Nord Department in France.
The paintings, literature, and archi tecture of the region elevated it to a leading position in European civilization.
Flemish Language, language of historic Flanders (comprising what is now the northern part of Belgium and part of the Netherlands and France), and one of the official languages of modern Belgium, spoken by about 55 percent of the populace.
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