Guillaume de Bette
Guillaume de Bette, 1st Marquess of Lede (c.1600– 23 June 1658), Baron of Péronne, Lord of Impe, Knight of Santiago, was a military commander and diplomat from the Spanish Netherlands.
Life[]
Bette was born at Lede around the beginning of the 17th century, the son of John de Bette, Lord of Lede and Joanna, lady of Bergen. He married Anna Marie de Hornes-Bassignies , daughter of Gerald de Hornes, 1st Count of Bassignies (1560-1612), Royal Chamberlain and Governor of Mechelen. They had five children and he was succeeded as Marquess of Lede by Ambrosius his eldest son. His cousin Françoise de Bette was the 26th abbess of Forest Abbey.[1]
Entering upon a military career, he became colonel of an infantry regiment in the Army of Flanders,[2] and acted as military governor of Maastricht during the 1632 siege.[3][4] On 3 August 1633 his barony, Lede, was raised to a marquisate in recognition of his service to the Spanish Monarchy.[5] Between 1635 and 1640, he was governor of the Duchy of Limburg and the Overmaas. In 1636 he conquered the County of Valkenburg. From 1640 until 1646 he was Stadtholder of Upper Guelders.
In 1655 he travelled to the Commonwealth of England on behalf of Philip IV of Spain in a vain attempt to head off Oliver Cromwell's Anglo-Spanish War. He died on 23 June 1658 as a result of wounds received during the Siege of Dunkirk.[6]
Commemoration[]
In Lede he gifted the main altar in the parish church, which still stands. The Marquess is also remembered in the village by a pair of 4-meter tall processional giants, Markies de Bette and Markiezin Anne-Marie de Hornes, created in honour of Bette and his wife in 1950.[7] In 1952 there was a wedding ceremony for the giants.[8] In 2013 Lede named a street "Willem de Bettelaan" in his honour.[9]
Descendants[]
Guillaume de Bette was the grandfather of Jean François de Bette, 3rd Marquess of Lede and Felipe-Emmanuel de Bette.
References[]
- ^ Ursmer Berlière et al., Monasticon Belge, vol. 4 (Liège, 1964), p. 211.
- ^ Luc Duerloo, Wapenboek van de Belgische adel (1992), s.v. Bette.
- ^ Jean-Baptiste Christyn, Les délices des Pays-Bas, vol. 2 (Paris, 1786), p. 67.
- ^ Pierre Ubachs and Ingrid Evers, Tweeduizend jaar Maastricht (Zutphen, 2006), pp. 121-122.
- ^ Jaime de Salazar, "La nobleza de los antiguos Países Bajos en la Grandeza de España", in Liber amicorum Raphaël de Smedt. 3. Historia, edited by Jacques Paviot (Leuven, 2001), p. 229.
- ^ Henri Guillaume, "Bette (Guillaume)", Biographie Nationale de Belgique, vol. 2 (Brussels, 1868), 377-378.
- ^ "Markies Willem Bette (Lede) - Leca - Landelijk Expertisecentrum voor Cultuur van Alledag". www.lecavzw.be. Retrieved 8 June 2017.
- ^ "Onze Reuzen". www.harmonielede.be. Retrieved 8 June 2017.
- ^ filip. "Webnieuws Erpe-Mere & Lede - Markies Willem de Bette krijgt eigen straatnaam". www.webnieuwserpemerelede.be. Retrieved 8 June 2017.
- 1658 deaths
- Belgian nobility
- Military personnel of the Eighty Years' War
- Ambassadors of the Habsburg Netherlands
- Military personnel of the Franco-Spanish War (1635–1659)
- European nobility stubs