Alexandre Dechet
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Alexandre Dechet Jenneval | |
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Background information | |
Birth name | Hyppolyte Louis-Alexandre Dechet |
Also known as | Jenneval |
Born | Lyon, French First Empire | 20 January 1801
Died | 18 October 1830 Lier, Belgium | (aged 29)
Occupation(s) | Poet |
(Hyppolyte) Louis Alexandre Dechet (alternatively, spelled Dechez; Lyon, 20 January 1801 - Lier, 18 October 1830) was a French actor and is regarded the author of the lyrics of the Brabançonne, the Belgian national anthem. His pseudonym was Jenneval, possibly named after the drama Jenneval, ou le Barnevelt français (1769) of Louis Sébastien Mercier.
Dechet worked in Ajaccio, Marseille and in 1826 at the Paris Odéon. Via Lille he finally came to Brussels, where he played at La Monnaie. In 1828 he returned to Paris in order to work at the Comédie Française, but returned to Brussels immediately after the July Revolution in 1830. He there served with the city guard which was responsible for maintaining law and order.
Dechet is said to have written the text of the Brabançonne during the first revolutionary gatherings at the café "L'Aigle d'Or" in the Brussels Greepstraat in August 1830, shortly after the performance of the opera La Muette de Portici, which triggered the Belgian revolution.
During the Belgian Revolution Dechet became a volunteer in the revolutionary army and joined the corps of Frenchman . He died during a combat against the Dutch near Lier.
On Martyrs' Square in Brussels, a column honouring Dechet is to be found, which was created by the sculptor and inaugurated in 1897.
Gallery[]
Jenneval declaiming his Brabançonne for the first time
Monument Jenneval in Brussels
External links[]
- Historical background of the Brabançonne by the Compagnie Royale des Francs Arquebusiers (in French)
- 1801 births
- 1830 deaths
- People from Lyon
- French male stage actors
- French poets
- People of the Belgian Revolution
- Troupe of the Comédie-Française
- 19th-century French male actors
- French expatriates in Belgium
- French male poets
- 19th-century poets
- 19th-century male writers
- National anthem writers