Belgium in World War I
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Belgium Belgium, ; french: Belgique ; german: Belgien officially the Kingdom of Belgium, is a country in Northwestern Europe. The country is bordered by the Netherlands to the north, Germany to the east, Luxembourg to the southeast, France to th ...
in
World War I World War I (28 July 1914 11 November 1918), often abbreviated as WWI, was one of the deadliest global conflicts in history. Belligerents included much of Europe, the Russian Empire, the United States, and the Ottoman Empire, with fightin ...
traces Belgium's role between the German invasion in 1914, through the continued military resistance and occupation of the territory by German forces to the armistice in 1918, as well as the role it played in the international war effort through its African colony and small force on the Eastern Front.


Background


German invasion

When
World War I World War I (28 July 1914 11 November 1918), often abbreviated as WWI, was one of the deadliest global conflicts in history. Belligerents included much of Europe, the Russian Empire, the United States, and the Ottoman Empire, with fightin ...
began, Germany invaded neutral Belgium and
Luxembourg Luxembourg ( ; lb, Lëtzebuerg ; french: link=no, Luxembourg; german: link=no, Luxemburg), officially the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg, ; french: link=no, Grand-Duché de Luxembourg ; german: link=no, Großherzogtum Luxemburg is a small lan ...
as part of the
Schlieffen Plan The Schlieffen Plan (german: Schlieffen-Plan, ) is a name given after the First World War to German war plans, due to the influence of Field Marshal Alfred von Schlieffen and his thinking on an invasion of France and Belgium, which began on ...
, in an attempt to capture Paris quickly by catching the French off guard by invading through neutral countries. It was this action that technically caused the British to enter the war, as they were still bound by the 1839 agreement to protect Belgium in the event of war. On 2 August 1914, the
German government The Federal Cabinet or Federal Government (german: link=no, Bundeskabinett or ') is the chief executive body of the Federal Republic of Germany. It consists of the Federal Chancellor and cabinet ministers. The fundamentals of the cabinet's or ...
demanded that German armies be given free passage through Belgian territory, although this was refused by the
Belgian government The Federal Government of Belgium ( nl, Federale regering, french: Gouvernement fédéral, german: Föderalregierung) exercises executive power in the Kingdom of Belgium. It consists of ministers and secretary of state ("junior", or deputy-mini ...
on 3 August. King Albert I addressed his Parliament on 4 August, saying "Never since 1830 has a graver hour sounded for Belgium. The strength of our right and the need of Europe for our autonomous existence make us still hope that the dreaded events will not occur." The same day German troops invaded Belgium crossing the frontier at dawn. Liège was attacked on 4 August and fell on 7 August. It is widely claimed that the Belgian Army’s resistance during the early days of the war, with the army – around a tenth the size of the German Army – holding up the German offensive for nearly a month, gave the French and British forces time to prepare for the Marne counteroffensive later in the year. In fact, the German advance on Paris was almost exactly on schedule. The German invaders treated any resistance—such as demolition of bridges and rail lines—as illegal and subversive, shooting the offenders and burning buildings in retaliation.
Flanders Flanders (, ; Dutch: ''Vlaanderen'' ) is the Flemish-speaking northern portion of Belgium and one of the communities, regions and language areas of Belgium. However, there are several overlapping definitions, including ones related to cultu ...
was the main base of the
British Army The British Army is the principal land warfare force of the United Kingdom, a part of the British Armed Forces along with the Royal Navy and the Royal Air Force. , the British Army comprises 79,380 regular full-time personnel, 4,090 Gurk ...
and it saw some of the greatest loss of life on both sides of the Western Front.


German occupation 1914–18

The Germans governed the occupied areas of Belgium (over 95% of the country) while a small area around
Ypres Ypres ( , ; nl, Ieper ; vls, Yper; german: Ypern ) is a Belgian city and municipality in the province of West Flanders. Though the Dutch name is the official one, the city's French name is most commonly used in English. The municipality c ...
remained under Belgian control. An occupation authority, known as the General Government, was given control over the majority of the territory although the two provinces of East and West Flanders were given separate status as a war zone under the direct control of the German army. Elsewhere martial law prevailed. For the majority of the occupation, the German military governor was
Moritz von Bissing Moritz Ferdinand Freiherr von Bissing (30 January 1844 – 18 April 1917) was a German officer from Prussia. Life and pre-WWI army career Bissing was born at Ober Bellmannsdorf in the Province of Silesia. He was the son of Moritz von Bissing, ...
(1914–17). Beneath the governor was a network of regional and local German ''kommandanturen'' and each locality was under the ultimate control of a German officer. Many civilians fled the war zones to safer parts of Belgium. Many refugees from all over the country went to the Netherlands (which was neutral) and about 300,000 to France. Over 200,000 went to Britain, where they resettled in London and found war jobs. The British and French governments set up the War Refugees Committee (WRC) and the Secours National, to provide relief and support; there were an additional 1,500 local WRC committees in Britain. The high visibility of the refugees underscored the role of Belgium in the minds of the French and British. In the spring of 1915, German authorities started construction on the
Wire of Death The Wire of Death ( nl, Dodendraad, german: Todesdraht, french: Fil De La Mort) was a lethal electric fence created by the German military to control the Dutch–Belgian frontier after the occupation of Belgium during the First World War. Ter ...
, a lethal electric fence along the Belgian-Dutch border which would claim the lives of between 2,000 and 3,000 Belgian refugees trying to escape the occupied country. On the advice of the Belgian government in exile, civil servants remained in their posts for the duration of the conflict, carrying out the day-to-day functions of government. All political activity was suspended and Parliament shut down. While farmers and coal miners kept up their routines, many larger businesses largely shut down, as did the universities. The Germans helped set up the first solely Dutch-speaking university in Ghent. The Germans sent in managers to operate factories that were underperforming. Lack of effort was a form of passive resistance; Kossmann says that for many Belgians the war years were "a long and extremely dull vacation." Belgian workers were conscripted into forced labour projects; by 1918, the Germans had deported 120,000 Belgian workers to Germany.


The Rape of Belgium

The German Army was outraged at how Belgium had frustrated the
Schlieffen Plan The Schlieffen Plan (german: Schlieffen-Plan, ) is a name given after the First World War to German war plans, due to the influence of Field Marshal Alfred von Schlieffen and his thinking on an invasion of France and Belgium, which began on ...
to capture Paris. From top to bottom there was a firm belief that the Belgians had unleashed illegal saboteurs (called "
francs-tireurs (, French for "free shooters") were irregular military formations deployed by France during the early stages of the Franco-Prussian War (1870–71). The term was revived and used by partisans to name two major French Resistance movements set ...
") and that civilians had tortured and maltreated German soldiers. The response was a series of multiple large-scale attacks on civilians and the destruction of historic buildings and cultural centers. The German army executed between 5,500 and 6,500 French and Belgian civilians between August and November 1914, usually in near-random large-scale shootings of civilians ordered by junior German officers. Individuals suspected of partisan activities were summarily shot. Historians researching German Army records have discovered 101 "major" incidents—where ten or more civilians were killed—with a total of 4,421 executed. Historians have also discovered 383 "minor" incidents that led to the deaths of another 1,100 Belgians. Almost all were claimed by Germany to be responses to guerrilla attacks. In addition some high-profile Belgian figures, including politician
Adolphe Max Adolphe Eugène Jean Henri Max (30 December 1869 – 6 November 1939) was a Belgian liberal politician and mayor of the City of Brussels from 1909 until his death. He was also an irregular freemason, an honorary Minister of State and a membe ...
and historian
Henri Pirenne Henri Pirenne (; 23 December 1862 – 24 October 1935) was a Belgian historian. A medievalist of Walloon descent, he wrote a multivolume history of Belgium in French and became a prominent public intellectual. Pirenne made a lasting contributi ...
, were imprisoned in Germany as hostages. The German position was that widespread sabotage and guerrilla activities by Belgian civilians were wholly illegal and deserved immediate harsh
collective punishment Collective punishment is a punishment or sanction imposed on a group for acts allegedly perpetrated by a member of that group, which could be an ethnic or political group, or just the family, friends and neighbors of the perpetrator. Because ind ...
. Recent research that systematically studied German Army sources has demonstrated that they in fact encountered no irregular forces in Belgium during the first two and a half months of the invasion. The Germans were responding instead to a phantom fear they had unconsciously created themselves.


Bryce Report and international response

The British were quick to tell the world about German atrocities. Britain sponsored the " Committee on Alleged German Outrages" known as the Bryce Report. Published in May 1915, the Report provided elaborate details and first-hand accounts, including excerpts from diaries and letters found on captured German soldiers. The Report was a major factor in changing public opinion in neutral countries, especially the United States. After Britain shipped 41,000 copies to the US, the Germans responded with their own report on atrocities against German soldiers by Belgian civilians. The Bryce Report was ridiculed in the 1920s and 1930s and afterwards as highly exaggerated wartime propaganda. It relied too heavily on unproven allegations of refugees and distorted interpretations of diaries of German soldiers. Recent scholarship has not tried to validate the statements in the Bryce Report. Instead research has gone into the official German records and have confirmed that the Germans committed large-scale deliberate atrocities in Belgium.


International relief

Belgium faced a food crisis and an international response was organized by an American engineer based in London,
Herbert Hoover Herbert Clark Hoover (August 10, 1874 – October 20, 1964) was an American politician who served as the 31st president of the United States from 1929 to 1933 and a member of the Republican Party, holding office during the onset of the Gr ...
, on the request of
Émile Francqui Émile Francqui (; 25 June 1863 in Brussels – 1 November 1935 in Brussels) was a Belgian soldier, diplomat, business man and philanthropist. Career As an orphan, Émile Francqui was sent to a military school when he was just 15 years old. ...
, whose ''Comité National de Secours et d'Alimentation'' (CNSA) realized that the only way to avoid a famine in Belgium was through imports from overseas. Hoover's Commission for Relief in Belgium (CRB) received the permission of both Germany and the Allies for their activities. As chairman of the CRB, Hoover worked with Francqui to raise money and support overseas, transporting food and aid to Belgium which was then distributed by the CNSA. The CRB purchased and imported millions of tons of foodstuffs for the CN to distribute, and watched over the CN to make sure the Germans did not appropriate the food. The CRB became a veritable independent republic of relief, with its own flag, navy, factories, mills, and railroads. Private donations and government grants (78%) supplied an $11-million-a-month budget. At its peak, the American arm, the American Relief Administration (ARA) fed 10.5 million people daily. Great Britain became reluctant to support the CRB, preferring instead to emphasize Germany's obligation to supply the relief;
Winston Churchill Sir Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill (30 November 187424 January 1965) was a British statesman, soldier, and writer who served as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom twice, from 1940 to 1945 during the Second World War, and again from ...
led a military faction that considered the Belgian relief effort "a positive military disaster."


Internal politics

The prewar Catholic ministry remained in office as a government in exile with
Charles de Broqueville Charles Marie Pierre Albert, 1st Count de Broqueville (4 December 1860 – 5 September 1940) was the prime minister of Belgium, serving during World War I. Before 1914 Charles de Broqueville was born into an old noble family with its roots in ...
continuing as prime minister and also taking on the war portfolio. Viscount Julien Davignon continued as foreign minister until 1917, when de Broqueville gave up the war ministry and took over foreign affairs. The government was broadened to include all parties, as politics were suspended for the duration; of course, no elections were possible. The two main opposition leaders,
Paul Hymans Paul Louis Adrien Henri Hymans (23 March 1865 – 8 March 1941), was a Belgian politician associated with the Liberal Party. He was the second president of the League of Nations and served again as its president in 1932–1933. Life Hymans was ...
of the Liberals and
Emile Vandervelde Emile Vandervelde (25 January 1866 – 27 December 1938) was a Belgian socialist politician. Nicknamed "the boss" (''le patron''), Vandervelde was a leading figure in the Belgian Labour Party (POB–BWP) and in international socialism. Career Emi ...
of the Labour party, became ministers without portfolio in 1914. In a cabinet shakeup in May 1918, de Broqueville was excluded altogether. The government was based in the French city of
Le Havre Le Havre (, ; nrf, Lé Hâvre ) is a port city in the Seine-Maritime department in the Normandy region of northern France. It is situated on the right bank of the estuary of the river Seine on the Channel southwest of the Pays de Caux, very ...
, but communications with the people behind German lines were difficult and roundabout. The government in exile did not govern Belgium, and so its politicians instead squabbled endlessly, and plotted unrealistic foreign policy moves, such as the annexation of Luxembourg or a slice of the Netherlands after the war. Belgium was not officially one of the Allies. In turn they did not consult with Belgium, but Britain, France and Russia formally pledged in 1916 that "when the moment comes, the Belgian government will be called to participate in the peace negotiations and that they will not put an end to the hostilities unless Belgium is re-established in its political and economic independence and largely indemnified for the damage which she has undergone. They will lend their aid to Belgium to assure her commercial and financial rehabilitation."


Flemish identity

Flemish consciousness of their national identity grew through the events and experiences of war. The German occupying authorities, under Von Bissing and influenced by pre-war Pan-Germanism, viewed the Flemish as an oppressed people and launched a policy to appeal to the demands of the
Flemish Movement The Flemish Movement ( nl, Vlaamse Beweging) is an umbrella term which encompasses various political groups in the Belgium, Belgian region of Flanders and, less commonly, in French Flanders. Ideologically, it encompasses groups which have sought ...
which had emerged in the late 19th century. These measures were collectively known as the ''Flamenpolitik'' ("Flemish Policy"). From 1916, the Germans sponsored the creation of "Von Bissing University" which was the first university that taught in the Dutch language. Dutch was also introduced as the language of instruction in all state-supported schools in Flanders in 1918. The German measures split the Movement between the "activists" or "maximalists", who believed that using German support was their only chance to realize their objectives, and the "passivists" who opposed German involvement. In 1917, the Germans created the ''Raad van Vlaanderen (World War I), Raad van Vlaanderen'' ("Council of Flanders") as a quasi-autonomous government in Flanders composed of "activists". In December 1917, the council attempted to achieve Flemish independence from Belgium but the defeat of Germany in the war meant that they never achieved success. After the war, many "activists" were arrested for collaboration. Independently, among the Belgian soldiers on the Yser Front, the Flemish Frontpartij, ''Frontbeweging'' ("Front Movement") was formed from Flemish soldiers in the Belgian Army to campaign for greater use of the Dutch language in education and government, although it was not separatist. Several soldiers that were involved with the Flemish movement were sent to a penal military unit in Orne, Normandy called ''Woodchopping platoon of the Orne, woodchoppers of the Orne''.Dr. J. Goossenaertskring reikt voor het eerst Alfons De Schepperprijs uit
Geert Herman, Nieuwsblad, 7 juli 2014, article in Dutch
Peter Verplancke, VRT, 15 juli 2018, article in Dutch
/ref>Tom Simoens, CHTP-BEG - n° 23 / 2011, article in Dutc
Van arrangeren tot renseigneren. Smaad en geweld Van militairen Tegen hun oversten tijdens de eerste wereldoorlog
Kossmann concludes that the German policy of fostering separatism in Flanders was a failure because it did not win popular support.


Belgian military operations

Belgium was poorly prepared for war. Strict neutrality meant there was no coordination of any kind with anyone. It had a new, inexperienced general staff. It started compulsory service in 1909; the plan was to have an army of 340,000 men by 1926. In 1914 the old system had been abandoned and the new one was unready, lacking trained officers and sergeants, as well as modern equipment. The army had 102 machine guns and no heavy artillery. The strategy was to concentrate near Brussels and delay a German invasion as long as possible—a strategy that in the event proved highly effective as it disrupted the German timetable. For example, the German timetable required the capture of the railway center of Liège in two days; it took 11. Much of the small army was captured early on as the frontier forts surrendered. In late 1914 the King had only 60,000 soldiers left. During the war a few young men volunteered to serve, so by 1918 the total force had returned to 170,000. That was far too few to launch a major offensive. The Germans had nothing to gain from an attack, so the short Belgian front was an island of relative calm as gigantic battles raged elsewhere on the Western Front. The total of Belgian soldiers killed came to about 2.0% of its eligible young men (compared to 13.3% in France and 12.5% in Germany).


Yser Front

King Albert I of Belgium, Albert I stayed in the Yser as commander of the military to lead the army while De Broqueville government in exile, the Belgian government, under
Charles de Broqueville Charles Marie Pierre Albert, 1st Count de Broqueville (4 December 1860 – 5 September 1940) was the prime minister of Belgium, serving during World War I. Before 1914 Charles de Broqueville was born into an old noble family with its roots in ...
withdrew to
Le Havre Le Havre (, ; nrf, Lé Hâvre ) is a port city in the Seine-Maritime department in the Normandy region of northern France. It is situated on the right bank of the estuary of the river Seine on the Channel southwest of the Pays de Caux, very ...
in French Third Republic, France. Belgian soldiers fought a number of significant delaying actions in 1914 during the initial invasion. At the Battle of Liège, the Fortified Position of Liège, town's fortifications held off the invaders for over a week, buying valuable time for Allied troops to arrive in the area. Additionally, the German "Race to the Sea" was stopped dead by exhausted Belgian forces at the Battle of the Yser. The dual significance of the battle was that the Germans were unable to complete their occupation of the entire country, and the Yser area remained unoccupied. The success was a propaganda coup for Belgium.Spencer Tucker, ed., ''The European Powers in the First World War'' (1999) pp 116–8 Belgian troops continued to hold the same sector of frontline, known as the Yser Front and by now a part of the main Western Front, until 1918, a fact that provided a propaganda coup to the Belgian forces on the Western Front for the duration of the war.


Final Offensive (Autumn 1918)

By 28 September 1918, the Belgian Army had been reorganized in 12 infantry divisions. They formed part of the Belgian-French-British Army Group Flanders under command of King Albert I of Belgium and his French Chief of Staff General Jean Degoutte. They played an important part in the Fifth Battle of Ypres, in which they breached the German lines at Houthulst and conquered Passendale, Passchendaele, Langemark and Zonnebeke. After a pause between 2 and 14 October, the Belgian Army also participated in the Battle of Courtrai (1918), Battle of Courtai, in which it liberated Bruges and Ostend. Between 20 October and 11 November, it fought in the Battle of the Lys and the Escaut and reached the outskirts of Ghent by 11 November.
The Final Offensive had been very costly for the Belgian Army. It lost one-fifth of its forces in casualties, one-third of all the losses it sustained throughout the whole War.


Belgian Congo and the East Africa Campaign

German colonial empire, German presence in Africa posed no direct threat to the Belgian Congo; however, in 1914 a German gunboat sank a number of Belgian vessels on Lake Tanganyika. Congolese forces, under Belgian officers, fought German colonial forces in the Kamerun, Cameroons and seized control of the western third of German East Africa, advancing as far as Battle of Tabora, the town at Tabora. The League of Nations in 1925 made Belgium the trustee of this territory (modern Rwanda and Burundi) as the mandate of Ruanda-Urundi. Next to ''Force Publique'' troops at the African theatre of World War I, African theatre, thirty-two Congolese residents in Belgium were part of the Belgian Army and participated in the war at the Western Front (World War I), Western Front in Europe. These soldiers included Joseph Adipanga, Jean Balamba, Joseph Droeven, Paul Panda Farnana, and Albert Kudjabo.


Eastern Front

The Belgian Expeditionary Corps was a small armoured car unit; it was sent to Russia in 1915 and fought on the Eastern Front (World War I), Eastern Front. The Minerva Armored Car, Minerva armoured car was used for reconnaissance, long distance messaging and carrying out raids and small scale engagements. Sixteen Belgians were killed in action in the east.


Aftermath


Postwar settlements

King Albert I went to the Paris Peace Conference, 1919, Paris Peace Conference in April 1919, where he met with the The Big Four (World War I), Big Four and the other leaders of France, Italy, Britain and the United States. He had four strategic goals: 1) to restore and expand the Belgian economy, using cash reparations from Germany; 2) to assure Belgium's security by the creation of a new buffer state on the left bank of the Rhine; 3) to revise the obsolete treaty of 1839; and 4) to promote a 'rapprochement' between Belgium and the Grand duchy of Luxembourg. He strongly advised against a harsh, punitive treaty against Germany that would eventually provoke German revenge.Vincent Dujardin, Mark van den Wijngaert, et al. ''Léopold III'' He also considered that the dethronement of the princes of Central Europe and, in particular, the dissolution of the Austria-Hungary, Habsburg Empire would constitute a serious menace to peace and stability on the continent.Charles d'Ydewalle. ''Albert and the Belgians: Portrait of a King.'' The Allies considered Belgium to be the chief victim of the war, and it aroused enormous popular sympathy, but the King's advice played a small role in Paris. Belgium was given much less than it wanted, with a total payment of three billion German gold marks ($500 million in 1919; $ in ); the money did not stimulate the lethargic Belgian economy of the 1920s. Belgium also received a small slice of territory in the east of the country (known as Eupen-Malmedy) from Germany, which remains part of the country to this day. Its demands for a slice of Zeeland in the Netherlands (which had remained neutral during the conflict), were rejected and led to ill-will. Britain was willing to guarantee Belgian borders only if it committed to neutrality, which Albert rejected. Instead, Belgium became a junior partner with France in an occupation of part of Germany under a Franco-Belgian Accord of 1920, 1920 Treaty. As outlined in the Treaty of Versailles, Belgium was also given a League of Nations League of Nations mandate, mandate over the former German colonies in Africa of Ruanda-Urundi, Rwanda and Burundi. On the whole, Belgian diplomacy was poorly handled and ineffective. Between 1923 and 1925, Belgian and French soldiers Occupation of the Ruhr, occupied the Ruhr to force the Weimar Germany, Weimar government to maintain payment of reparations.


Commemoration

Due to the hundreds of thousands of British and Canadian casualties, the blood-red Poppy, poppies that sprang up in no man's land when fields were torn up by artillery were immortalized in the 1915 poem ''In Flanders Fields''. In the British Empire and America, poppies became a symbol of human life lost in war and were adopted as Remembrance poppy, an emblem of remembrance from 1921. The suffering of Flanders is still remembered by Flemish organizations during the yearly Ijzerbedevaart, Yser pilgrimage and Ijzerwake, "Wake of the Yser" in Diksmuide at the monument of Ijzertoren, The Yser tower. British veterans and civilians in the 1920s created a shrine of sacrifice in Belgium. The city of
Ypres Ypres ( , ; nl, Ieper ; vls, Yper; german: Ypern ) is a Belgian city and municipality in the province of West Flanders. Though the Dutch name is the official one, the city's French name is most commonly used in English. The municipality c ...
was made the symbol of all Britain was fighting for and was given an almost sacred aura. The Ypres League transformed the horrors of trench warfare into a spiritual quest in which British and Imperial troops were purified by their sacrifice. After the war Ypres became a pilgrimage destination for Britons to imagine and share the sufferings of their men and gain a spiritual benefit.Mark Connelly, "The Ypres League and the Commemoration of the Ypres Salient, 1914–1940," ''War in History'' (2009) 16#1 pp 51–76, online


Notes


Further reading

* Den Hertog, Johan. "The Commission for Relief in Belgium and the Political Diplomatic History of the First World War," ''Diplomacy and Statecraft'' (2010) 21#4 pp 593–613. * Fox, Sir Frank. ''The Agony of Belgium The Invasion of Belgium in WWI August–December 1914'' (2nd Edition Beaumont Fox, 2015)
Summary of book
;

* Horne, John N. and Alan Kramer. ''German Atrocities, 1914: A History of Denial'' (Yale University Press, 2001)
online review


* Kossmann, E. H. ''The Low Countries 1780–1940'' (1978
excerpt and text search

full text online in Dutch (use CHROME browser for automatic translation to English)
pp 517–44 * Lipkes, Jeff. ''Rehearsals: The German Army in Belgium, August 1914'' (2007
excerpt and text search
* Marks, Sally. ''Innocent Abroad: Belgium at the Paris Peace Conference of 1919'' (1991
online edition
* Palo, Michael Francis. "The diplomacy of Belgian war aims during the First World War" (PhD Dissertation, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1977). * Palo, Michael F. "Belgium's Response to the Peace Initiatives of December 1916: An Exercise in Diplomatic Self‐Determination." ''Historian'' 42.4 (1980): 583–597. * Pawly, Ronald. ''The Belgian Army in World War I'' (2009
excerpt and text search
* Proctor, T. M. "Missing in Action: Belgian Civilians and the First World War," '' Revue belge d’Histoire contemporaine'' (2005) 4:547–572. * , focused on the early months


Primary sources



* Galet, Emile Joseph. ''Albert King of the Belgians in the Great War'' (1931), detailed memoir by the military visor to the King; covers 1912 to the end of October, 1914 * Gay, George I., ed. ''Public Relations of the Commission for Relief in Belgium: Documents'' (2 vol 1929

* Gibson, Hugh. ''A Journal from Our Legation in Belgium'' (1917
online
by American diplomat * Gooch, G. P. ''Recent Revelations of European Diplomacy'' (1940), pp 333–37 summarizes published memoirs by main participants * Hoover, Herbert. ''An American Epic: Vol. I: The Relief of Belgium and Northern France, 1914–1930'' (1959
text search
* Hoover, Herbert. ''The Memoirs of Herbert Hoover: Years of Adventure, 1874–1920'' (1951) pp 152–237 * Hunt, Edward Eyre. ''War Bread: A Personal Narrative of the War and Relief in Belgium'' (New York: Holt, 1916.
online
* Brand Whitlock, Whitlock, Brand. ''Belgium: a personal narrative'' (1920)], by U.S. ambassador
online

Charlotte Kellogg, Commission for Relief in Belgium, ''Women of Belgium turning tragedy to triumph'' (1917)


External links


'Belgian Neutrality and its Reinterpretation ahead of the First World War'Articles relating to Belgium
at the International Encyclopedia of the First World War. * Wegner, Larissa
Occupation during the War (Belgium and France)
, in
1914-1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War
* Kramer, Alan
Atrocities
in
1914-1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War
* Debruyne, Emmanuel
Intimate Relations between Occupiers and Occupied (Belgium and France)
, in
1914-1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War
* Simoens, Tom
Warfare 1914–1918 (Belgium)
, in
1914-1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War
* Van Everbroeck, Christine
Flemish Movement
, in
1914-1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War
* Little, Branden
Commission for Relief in Belgium (CRB)
, in
1914-1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War
* Vrints, Antoon
Food and Nutrition (Belgium)
, in
1914-1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War
* Kesteloot, Chantal
Post-war Societies (Belgium)
, in
1914-1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War
* Majerus, Benoît
War Losses (Belgium)
, in
1914-1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War
* Debruyne, Emmanuel
Resistance (Belgium and France)
, in
1914-1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War
* De Schaepdrijver, Sophie
Making Sense of the War (Belgium)
, in
1914-1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War
* Connolly, James E.
Collaboration (Belgium and France)
, in
1914-1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War

Brussels 14–18
at Parliament of the Brussels-Capital Region, Brussels-Capital Region {{Authority control Belgium in World War I, 1914 in Belgium World War I crimes by Imperial Germany Belgium–Germany relations 1910s in Belgium