Verviers | |
Picture-Width: | 250px |
Picture-Legend: | Palais de Justice (courthouse) |
Map: | Verviers Liège Belgium Map.svg |
Map-Legend: | Location of Verviers in the province of Liège |
Arms: | Héraldique Ville be Verviers.svg |
Flag: | Verviers Belgium.svg |
Arrondissement: | Verviers |
Nis: | 63079 |
Pyramid-Date: | 1 January 2006 |
0–19: | 25.89 |
20–64: | 56.99 |
65: | 17.11 |
Foreigners: | 9.46 |
Foreigners-Date: | 1 July 2005 |
Mayor: | Muriel Targnion (PS) |
Majority: | PS-MR-Nouveau Verviers |
Postal-Codes: | 4800, 4801, 4802 |
Telephone-Area: | 087 |
Web: | www.verviers.be |
Coordinates: | 50.5833°N 56°W |
Verviers (in French pronounced as /vɛʁvje/; Walloon: Vervî) is a city and municipality of Wallonia located in the province of Liège, Belgium.
The municipality consists of the following districts: Ensival, Heusy, Lambermont, Petit-Rechain, Stembert, and Verviers. It is also the center of an agglomeration that includes Dison and Pepinster, making it the second biggest in the province and an important regional center, located roughly halfway between Liège and the German border.
Water has played an important role in the town's economy, notably in the development first of its textile and later its tourist industries. As a result, many fountains have been built in Verviers, leading it to be named Wallonia's "Water Capital".[1] The seats of the two Walloon public institutions for water distribution and water treatment are located in the town.[2]
Various flint and bone fragments, as well as Roman coins, were found in this area, attesting to the early settlements in the region. In the 4th century, the Romans had to deal with a constant push of Germanic tribes coming from the east. Successful at first at containing them, they finally had to concede defeat, allowing Clovis's Salian Franks to occupy the region at the end of the 5th century. The Verviers area was covered with forests and became a hunting ground for the Merovingian kings, who maintained a vicus in neighbouring Theux. It was also slowly Christianized by the monks of the nearby Abbey of Stavelot.
Late in the 10th century, Charles the Simple ceded the Marquisate of Franchimont to Notker of Liège, one of Notker's final steps in consolidating the Prince-Bishopric of Liège. Liège took direct control of the marquisate in 1014, an act which was confirmed by emperor Frederick Barbarossa and by Pope Adrian IV in 1155.
The first mention of a textile industry in this area dates from the 15th century. One century later, the cloth industry took the place of the older metallurgical works, thanks in part to the Eighty Years War raging in the neighbouring Netherlands. The size of the town, however, remained relatively modest. It was only in 1651 that the expansion of the fulleries led to Verviers being recognized as one of the prince-bishopric's bonnes villes (main cities).
The end of the 18th century was troubled by the French Revolution. The annexation of Liège to France in 1795 caused a steep economic decline and unprecedented poverty. The city's fortunes rose again after the Battle of Waterloo (1815). Verviers was at the eastern end of the sillon industriel, the industrial backbone of Wallonia. Industrialist William Cockerill used British know-how to start a new era in Verviers' textile industry. Roads were paved, gas lighting was installed, and the city doubled in size thanks to the Industrial Revolution. After World War I, Verviers could share with Bradford the title of "Wool Capital of the World".
On the night of 14-15 July, the Vesdre burst its banks and caused massive water damage. There was an exceptionally extreme rainfall that night and the dam of the reservoir at Eupen was opened. The human and material damage was incalculable. People spoke of greater damage than during World War II.
Verviers was home to a thriving wool and textile industry that was renowned for its quality and contributed greatly to the growth of the town. However, as of the 1950s, the local factories could not face international competition and started closing one after the other which prompted the economic decline of the town. The economy has been slowly recovering since the mid-1990s but remains fragile. Several commercial complexes have opened in recent years in an attempt to revitalize the most affected areas.
Tertiary educational institutions include:[3]
Secondary schools include:[4]
Verviers has a significant Muslim population, with the proportion estimated to be approximately 25% as of 2020. Much of Verviers' Muslim community is impoverished, suffers from resentment, causing those disillusioned to become attracted to Islamic extremism as seen notably during the 2015 Verviers police raid on Islamists.[5] [6] [7]
The migrant communities also suffer from significant unemployment, and is of mainly Turkish and Moroccan origin. Verviers also has Kurdish, Congolese, Chechen, Somali and Sub-Saharan African communities.[8] Like its sister city of Roubaix in France, and Bradford in Britain, with similarly high Muslim populations, migrants from Africa and Asia moved in the 1960s to Verviers to work in industrial mills, and has suffered from subsequent poverty after its manufacturing was outsourced overseas.[9] Many migrants live in the Hodimont section of the town, where there are several Turkish restaurants, African shops, halal butcheries, and mosques.[10]
Group of origin | Year | ||
---|---|---|---|
2023[11] | |||
Number | % | ||
Belgians with Belgian background | 30,135 | 54.64% | |
Belgians with foreign background | 18,286 | 33.15% | |
Neighboring country | 1,430 | 2.59% | |
EU27 (excluding neighboring country) | 3,602 | 6.53% | |
Outside EU 27 | 13,254 | 24.03% | |
Non-Belgians | 6,735 | 12.21% | |
Neighboring country | 570 | 1.03% | |
EU27 (excluding neighboring country) | 1,694 | 3.07% | |
Outside EU 27 | 4,471 | 8.11% | |
Total | 55,156 | 100% |