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Former states in the Low Countries

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United Kingdom of the Netherlands
Kingdom of the Netherlands from 1815 to 1839
Gallia Belgica
Roman province (22 BC - 5th century)
Spanish Netherlands
parts of the Netherlands held by the Spanish crown (1581-1714)
Germania Inferior
Roman province
Seventeen Provinces
Union of states in the Netherlands in the 15th and 16th centuries
Austrian Netherlands
major part of the Southern Netherlands region between 1714 and 1797
Prince-Bishopric of Liège
ecclesiastic state of the Holy Roman Empire
United Belgian States
confederation in the Southern Netherlands (1790)
Lower Lotharingia
duchy
Duchy of Jülich
duchy
Duchy of Bar
duchy
Duchy of Limburg
constitutional monarchy in Western Europe and member of the German Confederation between 1839-1866
County of Looz
historical county in the Southern Low Countries
Toxandria
Texandria (also Toxiandria; later Toxandria, Taxandria) is a region mentioned in the 4th century AD and during the Middle Ages. It was situated in the southern part of the modern Netherlands and in the northern part of present-day Belgium, an area currently known as Campine (Kempen in Dutch).
Duchy of Bouillon
duchy
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Cambrai
Catholic ecclesiastical territory in France
Principality of Stavelot-Malmedy
ecclestiastical state of the Holy Roman Empire
Margraviate of Antwerp
former country
Province of Limburg
1815-1830 part of the United Kingdom of the Netherlands and 1830-1839 part of Belgium
County of Horne
former country
list of stadtholders for the Low Countries provinces
Wikimedia list article
Landgraviate of Brabant
landgraviate of the Holy Roman Empire
Cambresis
thumb| Cambrésis (, , ) is a former pagus and county of the medieval Holy Roman Empire, which constituted the Prince-Bishopric of Cambrai from the 11th to the 18th centuries. It was annexed by the Kingdom of France in 1679. It is now regarded as one of the "natural regions" of France, and roughly equivalent to the Arrondissement of Cambrai in department Nord. The capital of Cambrésis was Cambrai. Originally ruled by a dynasty of counts, Cambrésis became a prince-bishopric in 1007, comparable to the Prince-Bishopric of Liège and the Prince-Bishopric of Utrecht. It encompassed the territory in w
Kessenich
thumb|260px|The division of Kessenich and surroundings before the 18th century. Kessenich () is a village in the Belgian province Limburg. It is a section of the municipality of Kinrooi, lying in the eastern end of the municipality.
County of Vianden
Duke of Lothier
european title of nobility
count of Boulogne
historical title in the Kingdom of France
Ename
Ename is a Belgian village in the Flemish province of East Flanders. It stands on the right side of the river Scheldt and it is part of the municipality of Oudenaarde. The territory was inhabited during Prehistoric and Roman times, and became a trade settlement during the 10th century. From the 11th century it was part of the domain of the Benedictine abbey of Saint Salvator, until its 1795 dissolution in the aftermath of the French Revolution. The remains of the Saint Salvator abbey are today part of a major heritage project in Flanders, established by the Province of East-Flanders. The Prov
County of Saint-Pol
county around the city of Saint-Pol-sur-Ternoise
Pagus Lommensis
Frankish gau, corresponding roughly to Namur province