Category
page 1Landforms of Wallonia

Ardennes
The Ardennes, also known as the Ardennes Forest or Forest of Ardennes, is a region of extensive forests, rough terrain, rolling hills and ridges primarily in Belgium and Luxembourg, extending into Germany and France.

Eifel
thumb|400px|Eifel scenery
thumb|400px|View of the Laacher See, one of the lakes in the Volcanic Eifel

Hesbaye
thumb|right|Blooming fruit trees at Kerniel, a typical Hesbayean village in the municipality of Borgloon.
thumb|300px|right|The natural regions of Belgium.
The Hesbaye (French, ), or Haspengouw (Dutch and Limburgish, ), is a traditional cultural and geophysical region in eastern Belgium. It is a loamy plateau region which forms a watershed between the Meuse and Scheldt drainage basins. It has been one of the main agricultural regions in what is now Belgium since before Roman times, and specifically named in records since the Middle Ages, when it was an important Frankish pagus or gau, called H

Condroz
thumb|350px|The natural regions of Belgium
thumb|350px|Sub-regions of the Condroz

Famenne
thumb|350px|The natural regions of Belgium

Land of Herve
area in Wallonie
Fagne
area on the border of Belgium and France
Calestienne
thumb|350px|The natural regions of Belgium