Introduction
51km (32 miles) SW of Brussels; 66km (41 miles) W of Namur; 43km (27 miles) SE of Tournai
Hainaut's provincial capital (pop. 91,000) started out as a fortified camp constructed by Julius Caesar's Roman legions. Today, it's home to SHAPE (Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe). Between those military bookends, it saw a rich and eventful history. The Roman camp, set in a landscape of rolling hills ( mons means "mount" in Latin), became a town when St. Waudru, daughter of a local nobleman, founded a convent here in the 600s. Mons was fortified in the 12th century by Count Baldwin IV of Flanders, and again by the Dutch in the early 1800s.
Its present character reflects its more recent history as a center of industrialization and coal mining. The Old Town, on and around the central Grand-Place, contains civic and religious buildings and homes that date from the 11th century onward.
more local info-
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Collégiale Ste-Waudru (Collegiate Church of St. Waudru)
Dating from 1450, this remarkable Gothic church honors the daughter of the count of Hainaut whose 7th-century convent marked the beginning of Mons...
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Maison Van Gogh (Van Gogh House)
During his days as a none-too-successful church missionary, the Dutch artist Vincent van Gogh lived in 1879 and 1880 in this miner's house in the...
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Musée des Arts Décoratifs (Museum of Decorative Arts) François Duesberg
Housed in the 19th-century former National Bank of Belgium building, this museum has a fine collection of objects dating from 1775 to 1825, including...
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- Museums
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