1909-2009 - 5 Generations

Logo Lanners-Threinen 1910        Lanners 2009

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Emigrants

The Vienna Congress which rescheduled the European political map after the French Revolution and the defeat of Napoleon curtailed Luxembourg and left a miniscule country with a poor soil, bare of any natural resources until the development of the steel industry in the 1890ies. It is therefore not surprising that a substantial part of the population tried to improve its living condition by leaving its home country. France was a close and easily accessible host area, but it was the emigration towards the United States that took dramatic proportions in the years between 1850 and 1890. All families were touched, and so was the Lanners family.

The table below sums up the emigration status at end 2009 as the author could know it. Most of the European family members have apparently been found. This is not so for the United States according to the entries of the name found on the Net and on the social networks like Facebook.

Emigration is not a closed episode, but it continues on a smaller scale in a globalized world with increased mobility. Career opportunities might have replaced sheer economic need as a main motivation factor.

Destination Emigrants Descendants
Belgium 12 781
France 19 302
Germany 5 433
United States 29
3497
Switzerland 2 17
Total : 67
5030

Note: Situation as of 1.2.2010 The numbers for Germany do not account for later emigration to Belgium and the USA.

Last Updated on Thursday, 18 February 2010 21:11