Flanders had been a
pars pro toto for the Low Countries until the 17th century.
Flemish () is derived from the name of the
County of Flanders (), in the early Middle Ages the most influential county in the
Low Countries, and the economic powerhouse of Northern Europe. It became in the 14th century the residence of the
Burgundian dukes, establishing further its cultural dominance. Due to its cultural importance, "Flemish" became in certain languages a
pars pro toto for the Low Countries and the Dutch language. This was certainly the case in France, since the Flemish are the first Dutch speaking people for them to encounter. In French-Dutch dictionaries of the 16th century, "Dutch" is almost always translated as
Flameng.
Fleming is also the name used for immigrants from the Low Countries, most of them from Flanders, who came to Scotland over a 600 year period, between the eleventh and seventeenth centuries. The name is still a common Scottish surnames and Clan Fleming is also an officially recognized clan by the
Lord Lyon King of Arms. The Flemish came to Scotland in several waves. The earliest Flemish settlers in Britain came with
William the Conqueror in 1066 with the
Norman Conquest. The Flemish were closely allied with the Normans, because William’s wife was the daughter of a Count of Flanders. A calque of
Vlaams as a reference to the language and the region of the Low Countries was also in use in Spain. In the 16th century, when Spain inherited the
Habsburg Netherlands, the whole area of the Low Countries was indicated as
Flandes, and the inhabitants of
Flandes were called
Flamencos. For example, the
Eighty Years' War between the rebellious
Dutch Republic and the Spanish Empire was called
Las guerras de Flandes and the Spanish army that was based in the Low Countries was named the
Army of Flanders (). The name
Vlaanderen is formed from a stem
flām-, meaning "flooded area" (cf.
Norwegian flaum ‘flood’,
English dialectal
fleam ‘millstream; trench or gully in a meadow that drains it’), with a suffix
-ðr- attached. The
Old Dutch form is
flāmisk, which becomes
vlamesc,
vlaemsch in
Middle Dutch and
Vlaams in
Modern Dutch. Flemish is now exclusively used to describe the majority of Dutch dialects found in
Flanders, and a reference to the region where they are spoken, corresponding with the Dutch language region of Belgium. This use is also a
pars pro toto, since the region includes not only the historic county of Flanders where the Dutch dialect
(West) Flemish is spoken, but also
Limburg and the historic region of
Brabant, where respectively the Dutch dialects
Limburgish and
Brabantian are spoken. Calques of
Vlaams in other languages, in most cases referencing to this region, its people and the language:
Holland In many languages including English, (a
calque of) "Holland" is a common
pars pro toto for the
Netherlands as a whole. Even the Dutch use this sometimes, although this may be resented outside the two modern provinces that make up historical Holland. Strictly speaking,
Holland is only the central-western region of the country comprising two of the twelve provinces. They are
North Holland and
South Holland. Holland has, particularly for outsiders, long become a
pars pro toto name for the whole nation, similar to the use of
Russia for the (former)
Soviet Union, or
England for the
United Kingdom. The use is sometimes discouraged. For example, the "Holland" entry in the
style guide of
The Guardian and
The Observer newspapers states: "Do not use when you mean the Netherlands (of which it is a region), with the exception of the
Dutch football team, which is conventionally known as Holland". In 2019, the Dutch government announced that it would only communicate and advertise under its real name "the Netherlands" in the future, and stop describing itself as Holland. They stated: “It has been agreed that the Netherlands, the official name of our country, should preferably be used.” From 2019 onwards, the
nation's football team will solely be called the Netherlands in any official setting. is currently used as a pars pro toto for the
Netherlands.From the 17th century onwards, the
County of Holland was the most powerful region in the current Netherlands. The
counts of Holland were also counts of
Hainaut,
Friesland and
Zeeland from the 13th to the 15th centuries. Holland remained most powerful during the period of the
Dutch Republic, dominating foreign trade, and hence most of the Dutch traders encountered by foreigners were from Holland, which explains why the Netherlands is often called Holland overseas. After the demise of the Dutch Republic under Napoleon, that country became known as the
Kingdom of Holland (1806–1810). This is the only time in history that "Holland" became an official designation of the entire Dutch territory. Around the same time, the former countship of Holland was dissolved and split up into two provinces, later known as
North Holland and
South Holland, because one Holland province by itself was considered too dominant in area, population and wealth compared to the other provinces. Today the two provinces making up Holland, including the cities of
Amsterdam,
The Hague and
Rotterdam, remain politically, economically and demographically dominant – 37% of the
Dutch population live there. In most other Dutch provinces, particularly in the south including
Flanders (Belgium), the word
Hollander is commonly used in either colloquial or
pejorative sense to refer to the perceived superiority or supposed arrogance of people from the
Randstad – the main
conurbation of Holland proper and of the Netherlands. In 2009, members of the
First Chamber drew attention to the fact that in Dutch passports, for some EU-languages a translation meaning "Kingdom of Holland" was used, as opposed to "Kingdom of the Netherlands". As replacements for the
Estonian Hollandi Kuningriik,
Hungarian Holland Királyság,
Romanian Regatul Olandei and
Slovak Holandské kráľovstvo, the parliamentarians proposed
Madalmaade Kuningriik,
Németalföldi Királyság,
Regatul Țărilor de Jos and
Nizozemské Kráľovstvo, respectively. Their reasoning was that "if in addition to Holland a recognisable translation of the Netherlands does exist in a foreign language, it should be regarded as the best translation" and that "the Kingdom of the Netherlands has a right to use the translation it thinks best, certainly on official documents". Although the government initially refused to change the text except for the Estonian, recent Dutch passports feature the translation proposed by the First Chamber members. Calques derived from
Holland to refer to the Dutch language in other languages: Toponyms: •
County of Holland: former county in the Netherlands, dissolved in the provinces North and South Holland •
South Holland (Zuid-Holland): province in the Netherlands •
North Holland (Noord-Holland): province in the Netherlands •
Holland: region, former county in the Netherlands consisting of the provinces Noord- en Zuid-Holland •
Kingdom of Holland: puppet state set up by
Napoleon who took the name of the leading province for the whole country (1806–1810) •
New Holland (
Nova Hollandia): historical name for mainland
Australia (1644–1824) •
New Holland: Dutch colony in
Brazil (1630–1654) •
Holland, Michigan •
Hollandia (city): between 1910 and 1949 the capital of a district of the same name in
West New Guinea, now
Jayapura Brabant located in the heart of the old
Lower Lorraine . This would later influence the
Belgian flag created in 1830. As the Low Country's prime duchy, with the only and oldest scientific centre (the
University of Leuven),
Brabant has served as a
pars pro toto for the whole of the Low Countries, for example in the writings of
Desiderius Erasmus in the early 16th century. Perhaps of influence for this pars pro toto usage is the Brabantian holding of the ducal title of
Lower Lorraine. In 1190, after the death of
Godfrey III,
Henry I became Duke of Lower Lorraine, where the Low Countries have their political origin. By that time the title had lost most of its territorial authority. According to protocol, all his successors were thereafter called Dukes of Brabant and Lower Lorraine (often called Duke of Lothier). Brabant symbolism served again a role as national symbols during the formation of Belgium. The
national anthem of Belgium is called the
Brabançonne (English: "the Brabantian"), and the Belgium flag has taken its colors from the Brabant coat of arms: black, yellow and red. This was influenced by the
Brabant Revolution (, ), sometimes referred to as the "Belgian Revolution of 1789–90" in older writing, that was an armed
insurrection that occurred in the
Austrian Netherlands (modern-day
Belgium) between October 1789 and December 1790. The revolution led to the brief overthrow of
Habsburg rule and the proclamation of a short-lived polity, the
United Belgian States. Some historians have seen it as a key moment in
the formation of a Belgian nation-state, and an influence on the
Belgian Revolution of 1830.
Seventeen and Seven Provinces Holland, Flanders and 15 other counties, duchies and bishoprics in the Low Countries were united as the
Seventeen Provinces in a
personal union during the 16th century, covered by the
Pragmatic Sanction of 1549 of
Holy Roman Emperor Charles V, which freed the provinces from their archaic feudal obligations. In 1566,
Philip II of Spain, heir of Charles V, sent an army of Spanish mercenaries to suppress political upheavals to the Seventeen Provinces. A number of southern provinces (
Hainaut,
Artois,
Walloon Flanders,
Namur,
Luxembourg and
Limburg) united in the
Union of Arras (1579), and begun negotiations for a peace treaty with Spain. In response, nine northern provinces united in the
Union of Utrecht (1579) against Spain. After the
Flanders and the
Brabant where reconquered by Spain, the remaining seven provinces (
Frisia,
Gelre,
Holland,
Overijssel,
Groningen,
Utrecht and
Zeeland) signed 2 years later the declaration of independence of the
Seven United Provinces. Since then, several ships of the
Royal Netherlands Navy have bared that name. ==Names derived from (Gallic-)Germanic tribes==