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・ Brussels tram route 19
・ Brussels tram route 23
・ Brussels tram route 24
・ Brussels tram route 3
・ Brussels tram route 39
・ Brussels tram route 4
・ Brussels tram route 44
・ Brussels tram route 51
・ Brussels tram route 55
・ Brussels tram route 7
・ Brussels tram route 81
・ Brussels tram route 82
・ Brussels' Comic Book Route
・ Brussels, Illinois
・ Brussels, Ontario
Brussels, Wisconsin
・ Brussels-Congress railway station
・ Brussels-Halle-Vilvoorde
・ Brussels-Luxembourg railway station
・ Brussels-North railway station
・ Brussels-South railway station
・ Brussels-West station
・ Brussels–Charleroi Canal
・ Brussels–Scheldt Maritime Canal
・ Brussey
・ Brussieu
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・ Brusson, Aosta Valley
・ Brusson, Marne
・ Bruss–Duerinckx theorem


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Brussels, Wisconsin : ウィキペディア英語版
Brussels, Wisconsin

Brussels is a town in Door County, Wisconsin, United States. The population was 1,112 at the 2000 census. The unincorporated communities of Brussels and Kolberg are located in the town. The unincorporated community of Rosiere is also located partially in the town.
==History==
Brussels, a civil town in Door County was created on November 12, 1858.
The largest Belgian-American settlement in the United States is located in portions of Brown, Kewaunee, and Door counties in Wisconsin, adjacent to the waters of Green Bay. Walloons settled the region in the 1850s and their descendants still constitute a high proportion of the population. A variety of elements attests to the Belgian-American presence: place names (Brussels, Namur, Rosiere, Luxemburg), the Walloon language, surnames, foods (booyah, trippe, and jutt), the Kerrniss harvest festival, and especially architecture. Many of the original wooden structures of the Belgian Americans were destroyed in a firestorm that swept across southern Door County in October 1871. A few stone houses made of local dolomite survived. More common are 1880s red brick houses, distinguished by modest size and gable-end, bull's-eye windows. Some houses have detached summer kitchens with bake ovens appended to the rear. And the Belgians, many of them devout Catholics, also erected small roadside votive chapels like those in their homeland. (source: Wisconsin Historical Society)

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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