Charles Joseph Marie, 6th Duke d'Ursel
Charles Joseph Marie,[1] 6th Duke d'Ursel (Brussels, July 3, 1848 – Strombeek-Bever, November 15, 1903), was a Belgian politician.
Charles Joseph Marie d'Ursel | |
---|---|
President of the Senate | |
In office 1899–1903 | |
Monarch | Leopold II |
Succeeded by | Henri, Count de Merode |
Duke of Ursel | |
In office 1878–1903 | |
Succeeded by | Robert, 7th Duke d'Ursel |
Personal details | |
Political party | Catholic Party |
Family
editJoseph, Count d'Ursel was the second son of Léon, 5th Duke d'Ursel (1805–1878)[2] and his second wife, Henriette d'Harcourt. Joseph's elder brother died before inheriting the title, and Joseph became the 6th Duke of Ursel on the death of his father.
Antonine de Mun, Duchess d'Ursel
editIn 1872, Joseph married his niece, Antonine de Mun (1849–1931), daughter of the Marquess de Mun. She was a sister of Count Albert de Mun and born in Paris. In Belgium, she became a respected artist in aristocratic circles.
She studied in the atelier of Charles Joshua Chaplin and painted many portraits of family members and members of the Belgian royal family. A year before her death, she was honoured in her own right by the Belgian King: she was rewarded and became a Dame in the Order of Leopold. Recently, she was honoured with the production of an exclusive beer, the Cuvee Antonine, and the artworks on the bottle are of the duchess.[3][4]
Children
edit- Robert, 7th Duke d'Ursel (1873-1955)
- Henriette d´Ursel (1875-1934), married Count Henri de Boissieu
- Pauline d´Ursel (1880-1915)
- Wolfgang d´Ursel (1882-1914), Lieutenant of the Guides, died in battle, Budingen (18 August 1914).[5]
Career
editHe was a provincial councilor, then governor of the province of Hainaut (1878) and mayor of Hingene (1878–1903). He was Governor of Hainaut during the strikes of 1886. Impressed by these events, he became, like his brother-in-law Albert de Mun, more aware of social issues. He wrote a pamphlet in 1895, basing his ideas on Frederic Le Play.
When he reached the required age, he entered the Belgian Senate. He was the president of the Senate when he died prematurely.
Styles and honours
editStyles
edit- 1848 - 1878: Joseph, Count d´Ursel.
- 1878 - 1903: His Grace the 6th Duke of Ursel and Hoboken, Prince of Arches and Charleville, Count of the Holy Roman Empire and of Grobbendonk.
Honours
edit- Belgium: Grand Officer in the Order of Leopold.[1]
- Vatican: Knight Grand Cross in the Order of Pope Pius IX.
- Spain: Knight Grand Cross in the Order of Charles III.
- France: Commander in the Legion of Honour.
- Netherlands: Knight in the Order of the Netherlands Lion.
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b "d'URSEL et d'HOBOKEN, Hertog Charles, Joseph, Marie, Prins d'Arche et de Charleville, Graaf van het Heilig Rijk en van Grobbendonk". Ars Moriendi (in Dutch).
- ^ La noblesse belge (in French). 1895. p. 40.
- ^ "Cuvée Antonine - Kasteel d'Ursel". Archived from the original on 2017-10-01. Retrieved 2017-07-15.
- ^ http://www.hln.be/regio/nieuws-uit-bornem/kasteel-d-ursel-lanceert-eigen-bier-a3099026/.
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(help) - ^ "WOI Bornem - d'Ursel Wolfgang". www.wo1bornem.be. Archived from the original on 2018-01-12.
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