Back to Luxembourg

Feierwon Media LLC

Nearly 20,000 U.S. citizens (including the hosts of this podcast) are also citizens of an unexpected place: the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg. Descendants of immigrants who left Luxembourg in the 19th century, this community of Luxembourgish-American Luxembourgers is sizable... and growing. From the Moselle to the Mississippi, we explore what makes Luxembourg, well, Luxembourg and what's happening in Lëtzebuergesch America. Every two weeks, learn more about this small, surprising country and the people who call it home, no matter where in the world they might be.

Episodes

  1. 11/12/2025

    Two Flags and a Bunch of Books

    Send us a text A tiny country with two big symbols: we unpack why Luxembourg flies both a light-blue tricolor and a fierce red lion, and what each one really means. From medieval heraldry to river traffic on the Moselle, we trace how a civil ensign survived in a landlocked state and why the tricolor still fronts embassies while balconies and tattoos favor the lion. Along the way, we talk about color shades, Dutch influence, coat-of-arms logic, and the careful line a modern constitutional monarchy walks between dynastic memory and democratic identity. We also open our bookshelves and get honest about the challenge of reading Luxembourg’s history in English. Emile Haag’s The Rise of Luxembourg stands as the rare, beautifully designed benchmark—even if the English edition is hard to find—while the French original remains available. For deeper dives in French or German, Gilbert Trausch’s landmark works and Michel Polfer’s concise surveys deliver clarity and credible sourcing. If you’re starting out in English, we flag approachable titles like Luxembourg America and The Clogshaped Duchy, with clear caveats about dryness, missing citations, and production quality. We share tips to dodge AI-generated “history” books and point to regional reads that make the borderland world come alive: Graham Robb’s The Discovery of France for everyday life and technology’s impact, and Simon Winder’s Lotharingia for a witty, sweeping portrait of the zone between French and German spheres—Luxembourg included. By the end, you’ll see why the tricolor and the red lion aren’t rivals but a matched set: one speaks for the state, the other for the people. Find our complete reading list and links on our site, then tell us which flag you’d fly at home. If you enjoyed the show, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a quick review to help others discover Back to Luxembourg.

    20 min

Ratings & Reviews

4.8
out of 5
4 Ratings

About

Nearly 20,000 U.S. citizens (including the hosts of this podcast) are also citizens of an unexpected place: the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg. Descendants of immigrants who left Luxembourg in the 19th century, this community of Luxembourgish-American Luxembourgers is sizable... and growing. From the Moselle to the Mississippi, we explore what makes Luxembourg, well, Luxembourg and what's happening in Lëtzebuergesch America. Every two weeks, learn more about this small, surprising country and the people who call it home, no matter where in the world they might be.