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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › La_LouvièreLa Louvière - Wikipedia

    Within fifty years, the territory that was not much more than a place name had become one of the most important cities in Wallonia. La Louvière was recognized as an independent city in 1869. Today, La Louvière is still the fifth largest city in Wallonia, after Charleroi, Liège, Namur, and Mons. Sights

  2. Worker housing for the former Bois-du-Luc coal mine in La Louvière, Belg. La Louvière, town, Hainaut province, southwestern Belgium, on the Central Canal, about 11 miles (17 km) east of Mons. It has been a centre of coal mining since the 14th century. La Louvière is also a major centre of steel manufacturing and produces sheet metal ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Share your best memories of Wallonia by tagging us on social media. Fifth Walloon town by its size, La Louvière takes pride in its industrial past: make the most of the canal, its folkloric traditions and its carnivals.

  4. Today, exceptional pieces are shown side by side by more common ones, witnesses of the economic and social importance of ceramics in La Louvière at the time. Vhello, the node network in Hainaut This node network allows cyclists to design a bespoke itinerary, thanks to markets featuring the number of the intersection and which direction to take (all numbered too).

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  6. Capital of the Centre region, La Louvière, also named the Wolves city, is sure to delight those curious about history, culture and folkloric traditions. Let’s talk about its rich industrial past: the Canal du Centre, its hundred-year-old boat lift, the mining site of Bois du Luc. The last two sites are protected by UNESCO.

  7. Feb 16, 2021 · On the eight floor there’s a small, newly renovated museum about inland navigation in Belgium. 3. Canal du Centre. Source: Takashi Images / shutterstock. Canal Du Centre. More on the actual waterway, which is just over 20 kilometres and links the Meuse with the Scheldt.

  8. Mar 22, 2018 · Marcelle and Yvette, two young girls from La Louvière (a city 50 km outside of Brussels, halfway between Mons and Charleroi), discover just that as they struggle through the interminable years of the Second World War. Living alongside their brothers and their parents, they grow up, bit by bit, to become women working to preserve their world ...

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