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  1. "The Belgian Massacres. To the Workmen of Europe and the United States" is a minor political pamphlet written by Karl Marx in May 1869. In it, Marx responds to the violent repression of strikes which had occurred in Belgium the previous month.

  2. First published: as a leaflet, The Belgian Massacres. To the Workmen of Europe and the United States, May 1869. Marx wrote this address to the workers of Europe and the United States following the bloody events in Belgium in April 1869. On April 20, the General Council heard the report of Eugen Hins, of the Belgian Federal Council of the ...

  3. German troops, afraid of Belgian guerrilla fighters, or francs-tireurs ("free shooters"), burned homes and murdered civilians throughout eastern and central Belgium, including Aarschot (156 murdered), Andenne (211 murdered), Seilles, Tamines (383 murdered), and Dinant (674 murdered).

    • 4 August 1914-23 November 1918
    • Belgium
  4. Vor 5 Tagen · Around 6,500 civilians were killed in Belgium and northern France by the German army in the summer of 1914 under the policy of terror (schrecklichkeit). To justify and encourage their actions, a propaganda effort was weaponised against the victims.

  5. Brabant killers. The Brabant killers, also named the Nijvel Gang in Dutch-speaking media ( Dutch: De Bende van Nijvel ), and the mad killers of Brabant in French-speaking media ( French: Les Tueurs fous du Brabant ), are responsible for a series of violent attacks that mainly occurred in the Belgian province of Brabant between 1982 and 1985. [7] .

    • 31 December 1981–, 9 November 1985
    • Delhaize grocery stores, arms and other retailers, motorists, etc.
    • 28 (including a Belgian communal policeman and a gendarme)
  6. Vor 4 Tagen · In Belgium’s decadent but turbulent 1980s, a mysterious gang of criminals showed up out of the blue to commit a series of murders and violent robberies across the country. Dubbed the Brabant Killers by the press, (les Tueurs du Brabant in French, de Bende van Nijvel in Dutch), they killed 28 people, including children, and injured over 40.

  7. Synopsis. The confrontation in Charleroi, Belgium, is commonly called la grève [strike] de l'Épine. Starting in 1867, severe wage cuts resulted in numerous strikes in the coal fields of Charleroi and the Borinage. On 26 March 1868 a coalition of some 3,000 miners assembled and occupied L'Épine, the mine located in Montigny-sur-Sambre.