2. On the Threshold of Transition: Eupen-Malmedy in 1919: Between Occupation and Annexation
3. 'Sounding Them Out': Herman Baltia and the Installation of the Eupen-Malmedy Government
4. Farce and Tragedy in Eupen-Malmedy: The Public Expression of Opinion and Its Discontents
5. 'Making Good Belgians': Political Incorporation and National Assimilation, 1920–1925
6. 'Road to Abandonment': Belgium's Approach to Eupen-Malmedy, 1925–1929
Vincent O’Connell is an independent scholar from Cork, Ireland. He has lectured in modern European history and public history at the University of Limerick, and his research on Eupen-Malmedy in the interwar period has appeared in the Journal of Belgian History and the International Journal of Regional and Local History.
This book examines the history of Belgium’s annexation of the former German territories of Eupen and Malmedy during the interwar period. Focusing on Herman Baltia’s transitory regime and Belgium’s ambivalence about the fate of its new territories, the book charts the strained relations between Baltia’s regime and Brussels, the regime’s path to dissolution, and the failed retrocession of the territory to Germany. Through close analysis of primary source material, Vincent O’Connell investigates the efforts of Baltia’s provisional government to assimilate the region’s inhabitants into Belgium. The ultimate failure of that assimilation, he argues, may be traced back not only to incessant pro-German agitation, but to flawed Belgian policy from the outset. Framed in the context of a post-Versailles Europe, the book offers an interesting case study not only of the ebbs and flows of international politics across the frontier zones of Europe in the interwar years, but of how populations react to changes in national sovereignty.