Job Recruitment Website - Immigration policy - Ons immigrants

Ons immigrants

Belgians are mainly Flemish (about 60%) and Walloon (40%).

Walloon (French: Walloon, Walloon: Walloon), also known as Walloon, Walloon and Walloon, has about 3.5 million people, mainly living in the Walloon region of Belgium, and some of them immigrated to Sweden and the United States.

The Walloon is a branch of the Germanic people, mixed with the Celts. The so-called "Walloon" comes from the ancient Germanic language, which means "outsiders" and refers to people who spoke Celtic and Latin at that time. The valleys of Switzerland and Wales, England, all come from the same etymology.

Walloons usually speak French, but they also speak Walloon and piccard at home and in informal situations, both of which are dialects of French.

The ethnic origin of the Flemish people is basically the same as that of the Dutch people, and they are mainly formed by the combination of ancient Germanic tribes such as Fries, Franks and Saxons and Celtics. For the inhabitants of southern Holland in the Middle Ages.

Most people living in France are descendants of Gauls, and there are Italians, sarma, bretons, aquitaine (Basques), Iberians, Greeks and others in the south. Germans (such as Franks and Burgundy) who came to France at the end of the Roman Empire and mixed-race Moors, Saracens and Vikings who lived in Normandy in the 9th century.

The word "France" comes from the Frankish kingdom where Franks live. Franks are Germanic tribes, and entered Rome Gaul at the end of the Roman Empire.

There were a large number of Celtic and Germanic immigrants in some areas before the Frankish Kingdom, such as Brittany (Celtic) and Alsace and Saxon (Germanic). The languages and customs in these areas are still very different today.

It doesn't matter from a national point of view, it just looks like it.