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An interesting alternative outcome to the situation created by the Belgian Revolution was the partition of Southern Netherlands. Proposals in this sense were made in 1830-31, the Talleyrand Plan (quadruple partition between Netherlands, France, a British protectorate, and Prussia) and the Talleyrand-Wellington Plan (partition between Netherlands and France).

However, IMO both proposals had serious flaws, namely the creation of a British protectorate in the 'free state of Antwerp', which would force the unwilling British to resume continental committments, or to give all of Wallonia to France, which would be easily more than the other great powers would stand, given the fresh memories of the Napoleonic Wars.

Having considered that, I propose that a third ATL partition plan does arise that combines ideas from both OTL ones, is approved by the great powers, and implemented. According to it:

- the Netherlands keeps the provinces of West Flanders, East Flanders, Antwerp, and Limburg;

- France gets Hainaut, Brabant, as well as the western parts of the provinces of Liege and Namur, west of the river Meuse;

- Prussia gets the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg, as well as the eastern parts of the provinces of Liege and Namur, east of the Meuse river.

A possible PoD might be a more decisive reaction of the Dutch defeats the Belgian revolt, France intervenes to support the Belgian revolutionaries, Prussia intervenes as well to support the Netherlands, and a three-way partition becomes the natural solution to avoid a major war.
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