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You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > Benelux Political Geography > Antwerp, city, Belgium
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Antwerp, city, Belgium, Benelux Political Geography

Related Category: Benelux Political Geography

Antwerp, Du. Antwerpen, Fr. Anvers, city (1991 pop. 467,518), capital of Antwerp prov., N Belgium, on the Scheldt River. It is one of the busiest ports in Europe; a commercial, industrial, and financial center; and a rail junction. The city is linked with industrial E Belgium (especially LiEge) by the Albert Canal and has a large transit trade to and from Germany (especially the Ruhr district). Manufactures of Antwerp and its surrounding region include refined petroleum, petrochemicals, dyes, photographic supplies, motor vehicles, leather goods, and processed food. In addition, the city is a major international center of the diamond industry, has large shipyards, and is the seat of the world's first stock exchange (founded 1460).

The artistic fame of Antwerp dates from the rule (15th cent.) of Philip the Good of Burgundy, who founded an academy of painting. The painters Quentin Massys and Peter Paul Rubens resided in the city, and Anthony Van Dyck was born there. Many of their works are in the museums and churches of Antwerp. Christophe Plantin made (16th cent.) the city a center of printing; his house is a museum.

Among Antwerp's many splendid structures are the large Gothic Cathedral of Notre Dame (14th–16th cent.), with a spire c.400 ft (122 m) high; the churches of St. James (containing the tomb of Rubens) and St. Paul (both 16th cent.); the Renaissance-style city hall (mid-16th cent.); Rubens's house (now a museum); and old guildhalls lining the Groote Markt [marketplace]. Antwerp also has a zoological garden and a noted school of music.

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The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia Copyright © 2009, Columbia University Press.
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Topics that might be of interest to you:

Albert Canal
Amsterdam, city, Netherlands
Antwerp, province, Belgium
Belgium
Bergen op Zoom
Brabant, duchy of
Bruges
Hoboken, former city, Belgium
Flanders
Ghent
Holland, former county, Holy Roman Empire; former province, the Netherlands
LiEge, city, Belgium
Quentin Massys
Meuse, river, France, Belgium, and the Netherlands
Netherlands, Austrian and Spanish
Philip the Good
Christophe Plantin
Rotterdam, city, Netherlands
Peter Paul Rubens
Scheldt
Sir Anthony Van Dyck
Vlissingen
Walcheren

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Places > Britain, Ireland, France, and the Low Countries


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