Brye (Walloon: Briye) is a village of Wallonia and a district of the municipality of Fleurus, located in the province of Hainaut, arrondissement of Charleroi, Belgium. Its post code is 6222, and telephone zone code is 071.

Brye
Briye (Walloon)
Village
The church of Saint-Pierre, Brye.
The church of Saint-Pierre, Brye.
Brye is located in Belgium
Brye
Brye
Coordinates: 50°31′26.78″N 4°33′23.96″E / 50.5241056°N 4.5566556°E / 50.5241056; 4.5566556
Country Belgium
Region Wallonia
Province Hainaut
Municipality Fleurus
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)

Brye was its own municipality until the fusion of the Belgian municipalities in 1977, when it merged with Fleurus.

History

edit

On 16 June 1815 Brye and the heights nearby, along with a string of other villages, were occupied by the Prussian army commanded by Gebhard von Blücher and defended against the French Army of the North commanded by Napoleon Bonaparte at the Battle of Ligny. On the heights—the highest point of the whole position—stood the Windmill of Buss which was used by Blücher and his staff as an observation point.[a]It was here at around about 13:00 that Blücher, Wellington and their staffs held their conference. After the centre of the Prussian lines were broken by the French, a Prussians rearguard put up a stout resistance in Brye.[2]

Notes

edit
  1. ^ The windmill of Bussy, also called the windmill of Brye, was located just to the south of the cross roads of Rue Joseph Scohy, Rue de Sombreffe and Rue de Tige at 50°31′17.78″N 4°33′44.72″E / 50.5216056°N 4.5624222°E / 50.5216056; 4.5624222[1]
  1. ^ Haweis 1908, facing page 150.
  2. ^ Siborne 1848, pp. 200–202, 135–136, 247–249.

References

edit
  • Haweis, James Walter (1908), "Plan of the Battlefields of Ligny and Quatre Bras", The campaign of 1815, chiefly in Flanders, Edinburgh: William Blackwood and Sons, facing page 150
  • Siborne, William (1848), The Waterloo Campaign, 1815 (4th ed.), Westminster: A. Constable