The following is a timeline of the history of Brussels , Belgium.
Prehistory
Roman Period
Remains of a Gallo-Roman villa in Jette , built 2nd century CE
Middle Ages
Charles of Lorraine , traditionally considered the founder of what would become Brussels, c. 979
979 – Charles, Duke of Lower Lorraine , transfers the relics of Saint Gudula to the chapel built by Saint Gaugericus, marking the city's official founding.
1001 – Otto, Duke of Lower Lorraine , becomes Count of Uccle or Brussels.[ 4]
1012 – Saint Guy dies in Anderlecht on his return home from a pilgrimage to Jerusalem .[ 9]
1015–1020 – Oldest written record of the city is made by Olbert of Gembloux [nl ; fr ] .[ 10]
1041–1047 – The Palace of Coudenberg begins construction.[ 4]
1047 – The relics of Saint Gudula are transferred from the Church of St. Gaugericus to the Church of St. Michael by Lambert II, Count of Leuven .[ 4] [ 11]
1063–1100 – The city's first fortifications are built.
1270 – First mention of the ducal Hunting Lodge of Boitsfort [nl ] is made.[ 12]
1076–1078 – Lady Renilde, widow of Folcard, Lord of Anderlecht, establishes a chapter in Anderlecht and brings over the relics of Saint Guy .[ 11]
1095
1105 – Forest Abbey is founded.
1125 – The Amman of Brussels [nl ; fr ] is first attested.[ 4]
1129 – The Lindekemale Mill is first attested.
1135 – The city's seal is first attested, depicting the Archangel Michael robed, with outstretched wings, a halo, and the Latin inscription Sigillum Sancti Michaëlis .[ 13]
1142 or 1147 – The Battle of Ransbeek [fr ] takes place.
1150 – St. Peter's Hospital [nl ; fr ] is established as a leper colony , run by a community of lay brothers and sisters, outside the city's walls.[ 14]
1152 – St. Nicholas' Church [nl ; fr ] is first attested.[ 13]
1174 – The Grand-Place/Grote Markt is first attested as the Forum inferior or Nedermerckt .[ 15]
1183 – The Duchy of Brabant is formed after the merger of the Counties of Uccle or Brussels and Leuven and the Landgraviate of Brabant .
1187–1260 – Gerard of Brussels , a geometer and philosopher , authors Liber de motu .
1190 – Richard I of England passes through the city.[ 4]
1195 – St. John's Clinic is established.
1196 – La Cambre Abbey is founded by Benedictine noble Gisèle [fr ] .
1209 – The Lordship of Carloo [nl ; fr ] is first attested.[ 1]
1213
The Grand Royal and Noble Oath of the Crossbowmen of Our Lady of Sablon is established.[ 16] [ 17]
9 August: The Meyboom is planted for the first time.[ 13]
1225 – The current Church of St. Michael and St. Gudula begins construction.[ 4] [ 18]
1229 – 10 June: Henry I, Duke of Brabant , issues a charter of rights [nl ] for the city.[ 19]
1250
1252 – The Beguinage of Anderlecht [nl ; fr ] is founded.
1253 – Karreveld Castle is first attested.
Seal of the magistrate of Brussels, featuring Saint Michael , 1257
Execution of the Jews accused of host desecration in Brussels, 22 May 1370
1370 – 22 May: The Sacrament of Miracle occurs, killing 6–20, followed by the expulsion of the city's remaining Jewish population.
1380 – Geert Pipenpoy becomes the city's first mayor .
1381 – The Grand Royal Oath of St. George of the Crossbowmen of Brussels and the Royal Grand Oath of the Archers of St. Sebastian are established by the Duchess of Brabant.[ 37] [ 38] [ 39] [ 17]
1383 – The original Halle Gate is built.
1365 – The Brewers' Guild [nl ] is recognised.[ 40] [ 41]
1388
1394 – Anderlecht and Forest become part of the Coop of Brussels.[ 4]
Gilles van Hamme, alderman of Brussels in 1389 and 1399
Margaret of York praying in front of the Church of St. Gudula , c. 1468
16th century
Execution of Jan van Essen and Hendrik Vos in Brussels, 1 July 1523
1523
1526 – 20 October: A fire destroys three houses in the Rue des Six Jetons /Zespenningenstraat .[ 32]
1528 – 15 September: Lambrecht Thorn [nl ] , a collaborator of Jan van Essen and Hendrik Vos, dies in captivity.
1536 – The original King's House is built on the Grand-Place for the Duke of Brabant .
1539 – 3 January: The Supreme Charity [fr ] is established in response to Charles V's 7 October 1531 edict, which banned begging and centralised town welfare revenue to combat pauperism .[ 60]
1543 – Brussels lace is explicitly mentioned for the first time in a list of presents given to Princess Mary for New Year's.[ 61]
1544 – Andreas Vesalius moves into a large estate in Hellestraetken , near today's Rue des Minimes/Minimenstraat [fr ] .
1549 – 1 April: A grand tournament is held on Haerenheydeveldt [fr ] to mark the visit of Prince Philip during his tour of the Netherlands following his investiture.[ 62]
1550 – The Granvelle Palace is built.[ 63] [ 64]
1554 – Margaretha von Waldeck , allegedly the inspiration for Snow White , died in the city, with chronicles suggesting she may have been poisoned with arsenic .[ 65]
1555 – 25 October: Charles V abdicates in the Aula Magna of the Palace of Coudenberg .[ 4]
1559 – 12 April: Philip the Prudent establishes the Royal Library of the Low Countries , using the Library of the Dukes of Burgundy [nl ; fr ] as its core collection.[ 66] [ 67]
1561 – 12 October: The city's port and the Willebroek Canal are opened.[ 68]
1564
1565 – 11 November: The wedding of Alexander Farnese, Duke of Parma , and Maria of Portugal, Hereditary Princess of Parma , takes place.[ 69]
1566
The Duke of Alba presiding over the Council of Troubles in Brussels, 1567
Execution of the Counts of Egmont and Horn in Brussels, 5 June 1568
Joyous Entry of William the Silent into Brussels, 24 September 1577
1577
1579
1580
1585 – 10 March: The city is besieged [nl ; fr ] by the Army of Flanders .[ 75] [ 76]
1587 – 20 July: During a mystery play performed by the Brethren of the Common Life, a lodge collapses, killing the author Petrus Fabri and alderman Eustachius Pipenpoy, and injuring several spectators.[ 47]
1589 – October: The city grants the Augustinians a tax exemption in exchange for holding mass at the Town Hall for three months each year and serving as firemen when needed.[ 77]
1590 – 31 March: The city decides to construct the Simpelhuys , a complex featuring residential blocks, kitchens, a bakery, and sixty dedicated cells for individuals with mental health needs.[ 78]
1594
30 January: The Joyous Entry of Archduke Ernest of Austria into the city takes place.[ 79]
21 December: Anna Utenhoven , arrested with Anna and Catharina Rampaerts, is found guilty of heresy and buried alive on the Haerenheydeveldt , becoming the last person executed for heresy in the Low Countries.
1595
1598 – The Royal Guild of St. Sebastian of Schaerbeek is founded as a branch of the Royal Grand Oath of the Archers of St. Sebastian.[ 38]
1599
17th century
View of Brussels, c. 1610
Ommegang of Brussels at the Sablon/Zavel , 31 May 1615
1619
The original Manneken Pis statue is commissioned.
12 July: A riot breaks out after the city imposes a tax on wine and beer (the gigot ).[ 4]
1622 – The funeral of Archduke Albert VII takes place.
1623
1624 – The Brotherhood of St. Joseph is established.[ 85]
1625
The Palace of Coudenberg , Jan Brueghel the Younger , c. 1627
1631 – The Brotherhoods of St. Eligius and St. Guido are established for the coachmen of the Court under the protection of the Infanta Isabella.[ 87] [ 88] [ 89]
1634 – In a sparsely populated area at the end of the Rue de Laeken/Lakensestraat [fr ] , a house is constructed to isolate and care for plague sufferers.[ 13]
1638 – 12 May: The Royal Brotherhood of the Holy Name of Mary is established.[ 90]
1646
1648 – The Confraternity of St. Dorothea [nl ] is established.
1654 – The Barony of Jette is formed.[ 91]
1657 – De Wijngaard theatre company is established, possibly out of 't Mariacranske.[ 92]
1659 – The Barony of Jette is elevated to a county .[ 91]
1668
7 June: The city enacts an ordinance to combat the Black Death and appoints a Plague Master to oversee the care of the sick.[ 93]
27 July: To prevent the spread of the Black Death, the city restricts movement to evenings, bans gatherings, and prohibits the sale of certain foods, while confiscating and destroying grain, flour, and meat.[ 93]
1669 – 13 October: The St. Landry Chapel [nl ; fr ] is consecrated.[ 94]
1670 – 7 January: A posthumous mass is held in honour of the victims of the Black Death.[ 93]
1672 – The Fort of Monterey [nl ; fr ] is built.
1675 – The Royal Military and Mathematics Academy of Brussels is established.[ 95]
1677 – Evere is incorporated into the Principality of Hornes after its lord, Eugene Maximilian of Hornes , is elevated to the rank of prince by King Charles II of Spain .
1682 – 24 January: The Opéra du Quai au Foin opens as the first public theatre in the city.
1686 – 3 September: The Palace of Thurn and Taxis on the Sablon hosts a grand banquet to celebrate the Holy League's victory in the Siege of Buda . Fireworks light up the Sablon, attracting a curious crowd.[ 13]
1690 – 11–12 October: A fire breaks out in La Louve/De Wolvin [fr ] guildhall on the Grand-Place.
1691 – The Apostolines [nl ] settle in Bavendal [nl ; fr ] .
View of Brussels , Jan Baptist Bonnecroy , c. 1665
1695 – 13–15 August: The city is bombarded by the French, destroying a third of its buildings, including the Grand-Place.
The Grand-Place/Grote Markt in flames during the bombardment of Brussels , 13–15 August 1695
18th century
Siege of Brussels , Louis-Nicolas van Blarenberghe , 1746
The Palace of Laeken , then named Schonenberg, built in 1784
Brussels Park and the Palace of the Council of Brabant , Aurèle-Augustin Simons, 1789
The magistrates of Brussels offer the city's surrender to the Austrian army, 2 December 1790
19th century
20th century
21st century
Evolution of the Brussels map
16th century
17th century
18th century
~1700
~1711
1740
~1745
1777
19th century
20th century
See also
References
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: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link )
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Published in the 19th century
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"Brussels" . Coghlan's Illustrated Guide to the Rhine (18th ed.). London: Trubner & Co. 1863.
Stranger's Guide to Brussels and its environs (6th ed.), Kiessling & Co., 1876
W. Pembroke Fetridge (1885), "Brussels to Antwerp" , Harper's hand-book for travellers in Europe and the east , New York: Harper & Brothers
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