dafydd
Banned
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- Feb 14, 2008
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This must be some kind of conspiracy, because Belgium doesn't exist.
That's strange,I live in Belgium.
This must be some kind of conspiracy, because Belgium doesn't exist.
There's always John Redwood, who was the minister for Wales, but never learnt their national anthem.
...snip...
I have no clue what it means, of course. It could be something horribly offensive to the Scots, like theBritishEnglish national anthem, and I'd be completely oblivious.
Rolfe.
God save our gracious Queen,
Long live our noble Queen,
God save the Queen:
Send her victorious,
Happy and glorious,
Long to reign over us:
God save the Queen.
O Lord, our God, arise,
Scatter her enemies,
And make them fall.
Confound their politics,
Frustrate their knavish tricks,
On Thee our hopes we fix,
God save us all.
Thy choicest gifts in store,
On her be pleased to pour;
Long may she reign:
May she defend our laws,
And ever give us cause
To sing with heart and voice
God save the Queen.
ddt said:And Abdul, everyone knows there's only one true Belgian: the King. The rest are Flemish or Walloons.![]()
Officially, Brussels is a bilingual city. In practice, most Brusselers only speak French, but a century ago it was exactly the converse (link). Whenever I'm in Brussels, I keep them to the official line - and if they don't speak Dutch, I switch to English rather than FrenchI think you'll find the 'Brusseleirs' take exception to that.
Do they have a special status in public perception in Belgium too? Here in Holland, most people have an attitude that Limburgers are "half Belgian".Or Limburgers.
That's strange,I live in Belgium.
Och, those horribly offensive lyrics! As a true Scot, I'm getting my claymore out of the thatch now.
Oh, you don't mean that old verse about "Marshall Wade", "sedition" and "rebellious Scots to crush"!? Sung once in 1745 to impress King Geordie and never since.
Well, he's my MP, and I feel entitled to ridicule him when the occasion presents itself.I knew someone would bring that one up! (I think I did, in the original thread discussing this at the time.)
We have long memories, you know!
And besides, the tune's a dirge and the words are trite, and we'd all be better off for something a bit more rousing.
Rolfe.
It could be something horribly offensive to the Scots, like theBritishEnglish national anthem
The Belgian anthem has two versions, a French one and a Dutch one. Leterme (who is Flemish) was interviewed in French, so he probably wanted to sing the French version but obviously ****ed up.How the hell do you **** that up?
Many people have butchered the lyrics to the Star Spangled Banner over the years, but I have yet to see even the ditziest of pop stars accidentally start singing "Oh Canada" instead.
No one ever really thinks or talks about them.Just to confound things further: following on from Brusselers and Limburgers -- what about the people of the Eupen / Malmedy area? What do they consider themselves/are they considered as by others?
Just to confound things further: following on from Brusselers and Limburgers -- what about the people of the Eupen / Malmedy area? What do they consider themselves / are they considered as by others? If I have things rightly (chiefly recalling stuff heard in childhood stamp-collecting days), this small patch of Belgium was part of Germany till post-World War 1; annexed to Belgium as part of the Versailles Treaty sortings-out.
Have we English decided that God Save the Queen is our national anthem, or are we still flip-flopping between that and Land of Hope and Glory, occasionally throwing in Jerusalem when we get bored?
Just to confound things further: following on from Brusselers and Limburgers -- what about the people of the Eupen / Malmedy area? What do they consider themselves / are they considered as by others? If I have things rightly (chiefly recalling stuff heard in childhood stamp-collecting days), this small patch of Belgium was part of Germany till post-World War 1; annexed to Belgium as part of the Versailles Treaty sortings-out.
I guess Peephole has the most succinct answer.
Regionally, they're part of Wallonia. Culturally, they're part of the German-speaking community.
Belgium has two administrative divisions. First, a regional (geographical) division in three (Flanders, Brussels, Wallonia). Secondly, a cultural division in language communities (Dutch, French, German), which is responsible for, e.g., education and cultural things.
So the roads, the water, electricity etc. in Eupen are done by the Walloon region (or the Liege province); the schools and the theaters are done by the German community.
Yep, a 10-million people country needs 7 governments.