Gabriel Brühl
Gabriel Brühl | |
---|---|
Born | 1691 |
Died | September 10, 1743 Ubach over Worms, Habsburg Netherlands | (aged 51–52)
Criminal status | Executed |
Criminal penalty | 1743: Death by hanging |
Gabriel Brühl (died 1743) was a well-known robber in the then Duchy of Limburg, whose criminal career started in the 1720s and ended with his being hanged in 1743.[1]
Brühl was a remote ancestor of the Belgian detective writer Georges Simenon, who used "Brühl" as one of his many pen names.
References[]
- ^ Anton Blok, De Bokkenrijders, roversbenden en geheime genootschappen in de Landen van Overmaas (1730-1774). (Prometheus, Amsterdam. 1991)
Categories:
- 1691 births
- 1743 deaths
- 18th-century criminals
- 18th-century Dutch criminals
- Belgian people convicted of robbery
- People executed by the Netherlands by hanging
- People from Landgraaf
- People of the Austrian Netherlands
- Crime biography stubs