Édouard de Laveleye

(Redirected from Baron Edouard de Laveleye)

Baron Édouard-Émile-Albert de Laveleye (Ghent, 22 October 1854 – Brussels, 23 November 1938) was a Belgian mining engineer, financier and writer. Laveleye was the first chairman of the Belgian Football Association (1895–1924), and also the first president of the Belgian Olympic Committee (1906–23).[1]

Édouard de Laveleye
Édouard De Laveleye
1st President of the Belgian Football Association
In office
1895–1924
Succeeded byJoseph d'Oultremont
1st President of Belgian Olympic Committee
In office
1906–1923
Succeeded byHenri de Baillet-Latour
Born
Baron Édouard Emile Albert de Laveleye

(1854-10-22)22 October 1854
Ghent, Belgium
Died23 November 1938(1938-11-23) (aged 84)
CitizenshipSpanish
Occupations
  • Football executive
  • Banker
Known for1st President of the Belgian Football Association
RelativesMarguerite de Laveleye (sister)

He made several investment trips in Latin America.[a] His nephew was Victor de Laveleye, the Belgian government in exile's spokesman in London during World War II.[b]

Early life

edit

Édouard de Laveleye was born on 22 October 1854 as the son of Émile de Laveleye (1822–1892), a famed economist.[c][d] Laveleye married Florence Ethel Wheeler on 9 December 1879, in Liège.[6]

In his mid-20s, Laveleye made several investment trips in Latin America and wrote everything about his travels in his journal. In 1881, two of Laveleye's travel journals, titled Les nouveautés de New-York et le Niagara d’hiver (what's new from New York and winter Niagara) and Excursion aux nouvelles découvertes minières du Colorado (Excursion to Colorado's New Mining Discoveries), were published on 1 July 1881, together with several other journals from three authors, in Volume 42 of Le Tour du Monde, Nouveau Journal des Voyages, a weekly magazine that brings together more than 900 travel stories, French or foreign, written by more than 500 travelers including around thirty women.[7]

In August 1883, the 29-year-old Laveleye, then the Honorary Secretary of the Association of Engineers from the University of Liège, organized the reception for the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, whose summer meeting was being held in Belgium for the first time.[8] The newspapers of the time described him as "the most cordial character".[8]

Sports

edit

In the 1895–96 season, the 41-year-old Laveleye played a few matches for Léopold FC.[9] When the Union Belge des Sociétés de Sports Athlétiques (UBSSA) was established in 1895, Laveleye was elected as the first chairman of the football section, a position he held for nearly 30 years, until 1924.[10] In 1898, when Paul Hanssens resigned as President of the UBSSA, Laveleye succeeded him while also continuing as president of the football section.[10] Back then, the coach as we know him today did not yet exist, so most of the European national teams were selected by the chairman of its National Football Association rather than by a national manager. As such, Laveleye selected the line-ups of Belgium's matches between 1904 and 1909, and then again in 1913 and 1919.[11][12] He is thus credited by some as Belgium's first-ever manager.

On 22 May 1904, twenty days after Belgium's first-ever match (whose squad was elected by Laveleye), France and five other European football associations founded the Fédération Internationale de Football Association (FIFA), but the football associations of the British Home Nations unanimously rejected such a body.[13] However, in early 1905, Laveleye, with great personal efforts, dissipated the last misgivings of the English and was able to convince the representatives of The Football Association to join FIFA rather than remain independent. On 14 April 1905, The Football Association recognized the authority of FIFA.[13] This allowed FIFA to hold its first international football competition. In allying the Football Association in the French FIFA, each of the home nations joined as equal members, a legacy maintained today. For his services, he was made the first honorary member of FIFA.[13]

On 18 February 1906, in the Hotel Ravenstein in Brussels, Laveleye formed the Belgian Olympic Committee, and was elected the group's first president.[14] In this role he posted a bid for Belgium on 27 March 1912 to host the 1920 Olympics. The games were successfully awarded to Antwerp, much because of his influence and the effect World War I had on the nation. This still is the only time they have been held in Belgium.

At the 1913 IOC Session in Lausanne, Laveleye was co-opted onto the International Olympic Committee (IOC) in May 1913, but his seat "should not be considered permanent".[1] However, when Belgium hosted the 1920 Antwerpen Olympics, the nation became entitled to two IOC members (hence why later IOC records list Laveleye's co-option as occurring in 1919), so Laveleye remained a member until his death in November 1938, at the age of 84.[1]

Writings

edit
  • Chicago et la traversée du continent - Notes d'un voyage aux États-Unis 1880
  • Les nouveautés de New-York et le Niagara d’hiver 1881
  • Excursion aux nouvelles découvertes minières du Colorado 1881

Book quotations

edit
  1. ^ C'est en effet qu'il envisage, en tant que conseiller du banquier Fontaine de Laveleye pour ses investissements en Amérique latine, la formation de la City à laquelle s'associeront d'autres banquiers européens, comme Lord Balfour de...[2]
  2. ^ Victor Laveleye .. Il fut membre du Comité olympique belge et président de l'association belge du hockey. Petit-neveu d'Emile, neveu du baron Edouard de Laveleye. Il participa, pour la Belgique, à l'élaboration de la charte des Nations Unies à San Francisco.[3]
  3. ^ Baron (1892) Édouard-Émile-Albert de Laveleye, né Gand 22 oct. 1854, ép. Clepper-Noorwood (comté de Surrey, Angleterre), 28 août 1879.[4]
  4. ^ Notes de Voyage, par M. EDOUARD DE LAVELEYE. – M. Ed. De Laveleye, le fils du célèbre économiste et littérateur, Emile De Laveleye, a publié dans la Bibliothèque Gilon un ouvrage dont nous n'osons pas trop le féliciter. Ce ne sont que des notes, nous dira-t-on, mais il n'en reste pas moin...[5]

References

edit
  1. ^ a b c "Édouard-Émile, Baron de Laveleye". www.olympedia.org. Archived from the original on 18 January 2023. Retrieved 14 January 2024.
  2. ^ Topalov, Christian (2002). Les divisions de la ville [The City divisions] (in French). Éditions de la Maison des sciences de l'homme. p. 277. ISBN 2735116654.
  3. ^ Dutry-Soinne, Tinou (2006). Les méconnus de Londres: Journal de guerre d'une Belge, 1940-1945 - Volume 1 [The unknowns of London: War diary of a Belgian, 1940-1945 - Volume 1] (in French). Racine Lannoo. p. 189. ISBN 2873864834.
  4. ^ La Noblesse belge – Partie 2 [The Belgian Nobility – Part 2] (in French). Nabu Press. 1923. p. 97. ISBN 1272580393.
  5. ^ Warlomont, Maurice (1882). La Jeune Belgique – Volume 1 [The Young Belgium – Volume 1] (in French). Legare Street Press. p. 64. ISBN 1391948572.
  6. ^ "Mariage Edouard Emile Albert De Laveleye & Florence Ethel Wheeler". www.openarchieven.nl (in French). Archived from the original on 14 January 2024. Retrieved 14 January 2024.
  7. ^ "Le Tour du monde, nouveau journal des voyages – Deuxième semestre de l'année 1881" [Around the world, new travel journal – Second semester of the year 1881]. www.nature.com (in French). 9 August 1883. Archived from the original on 14 January 2024. Retrieved 14 January 2024.
  8. ^ a b "The Institution of Mechanical Engineers in Belgium". www.nature.com. 9 August 1883. Archived from the original on 14 January 2024. Retrieved 14 January 2024.
  9. ^ "Edouard de Laveleye". www.voetbal.com. Archived from the original on 14 January 2024. Retrieved 14 January 2024.
  10. ^ a b "The 19th Century". www.rbfa.be. Archived from the original on 22 June 2022. Retrieved 14 January 2024.
  11. ^ "Edouard De Laveleye, football manager". eu-football.info. Archived from the original on 5 February 2023. Retrieved 14 January 2024.
  12. ^ "Belgium national football team managers". eu-football.info. Archived from the original on 2 August 2023. Retrieved 14 January 2024.
  13. ^ a b c "The History of FIFA". Classic Football. FIFA. Archived from the original on 1 October 2007. Retrieved 29 July 2007.
  14. ^ Silance, Luc (1997). Les sports et le droit (in French). Larcier. p. 487. ISBN 2-8041-2573-4.[permanent dead link]
edit