List of people from Brussels

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a list of notable people from Brussels.

Patroness of Brussels[]

Political leaders in Brussels[]

The Belgian Monarchs[]

The Belgian Monarchs reside in Brussels, the capital of Belgium. They were all born in Brussels (except for Leopold I).

  • Leopold I (1790–1865), the first King of the Belgians
  • Leopold II (1835–1909), the second King of the Belgians
  • Albert I (1875–1934), the third King of the Belgians
  • Leopold III (1901–1983), the fourth King of the Belgians
  • Baudouin (1930–1993), the fifth King of the Belgians
  • Albert II (born 1934; abdicated 2013), the sixth King of the Belgians
  • Philippe (born 1960), the seventh King of the Belgians

Minister-Presidents of Brussels[]

Governors of Brussels[]

  • (1995–1998)
  • (1998) (resigned)
  • (1998)

Mayors of Brussels[]

Born in Brussels[]

Following notable people were born in the area today known as the Brussels-Capital Region.

Royals[]

Politicians[]

  • Paul Deschanel (1855–1922), president of France (1920)
  • Antoine Duquesne (1941–2010), Belgian MP and Senator, Member of the European Parliament
  • Pierre Harmel (1911–2009), Prime Minister of Belgium (1965–1966)
  • Marie Janson (1873–1960), politician
  • Paul-Emile Janson (1872–1944), Prime Minister of Belgium (1937–1938)
  • Philippe Lamberts (born 1963), politician
  • Adolphe Max (1869–1939), politician and Mayor of Brussels from 1909 until 1939
  • Annemie Neyts (born 1944), politician, former president of the Liberal International, president of the European Liberal Democrat and Reform Party
  • Charles-Ferdinand Nothomb (born 1936), politician
  • Étienne Pinte, French MP and mayor of Versailles
  • Paul-Henri Spaak (1899–1972), Prime Minister of Belgium (1938–1939, 1946 and 1947–1949), President of the United Nations General Assembly (1946–1957), Secretary-General of NATO (1957–1961)
  • Emile Vandervelde (1866–1938), President from 1900 of the Second International

Artists[]

Cinema[]

  • Chantal Akerman (born 1950), filmmaker and director
  • Patrick Bauchau (born 1938), actor
  • Gérard Corbiau (born 1941), film director
  • Thierry De Mey (born 1956), film director and composer
  • Jacques Feyder (1885–1948), screenwriter and international film director, one of the founders of poetic realism in French cinema
  • Fernand Gravey (1904–1970), also known as Fernand Gravet, film actor
  • Audrey Hepburn (1929–1993), Anglo-Dutch actress, fashion model, and humanitarian
  • Helena Noguerra (born 1969), actress, singer and television presenter
  • Raymond Rouleau (1904–1981), actor and film director
  • Jean-Claude Van Damme (born 1960), actor, nicknamed "The Muscles from Brussels"
  • Jaco Van Dormael (born 1957 in Ixelles), film director
  • Alexandra Vandernoot (born 1965), actress
  • Agnès Varda (born 1928), French film director

Performance / dance[]

Music[]

  • Stromae (Paul van Haver) (born 1985) musician
  • Plastic Bertrand (Roger Jouret) (born 1958), rock musician
  • Jacques Brel (1929–1978), singer-songwriter and actor
  • Jean-Luc De Meyer (born 1963), musician, lead singer of Front 242
  • Lara Fabian (born Lara Crokaert, 1970), singer
  • Richard Jonckheere (born 1965), musician, member of Front 242
  • Magali Luyten (born 1978), singer
  • Victor-Charles Mahillon (1841–1924), musician and writer on musical topics
  • Brian Molko (born 1972), songwriter, lead vocalist and guitarist of the band Placebo
  • Pierre Rapsat (1948–2002), singer and musician
  • The Singing Nun (Jeanine Deckers) (1933–1985), member of a Dominican Convent, famous for her song "Dominique"
  • Edna Stern (born 1977), pianist
  • Toots Thielemans (1922–2016), jazz musician
  • Tonia (born Arlette Antoine Dominicus, 1947), singer
  • Régine Zylberberg (born 1929), pioneer of the modern nightclub

Painting / sculpture / architecture[]

Fashion[]

Literature / cartoon[]

Scientists[]

Intellectuals / religion[]

  • Victor Amédée Jacques Marie Coremans (1802–1872), archivist, journalist, and historian
  • Pieter Crockaert (1470–1514), philosopher and theologian of the Southern Netherlands
  • Henri La Fontaine (1854–1943), lawyer and president of the International Peace Bureau, Nobel Prize for Peace in 1913
  • Henri Kichka (1926–2020), writer and Holocaust survivor
  • Xavier de Mérode (1820–1874), prelate, archbishop and statesman of the Papal states
  • Victor Serge (1890–1947), Russian revolutionary
  • Pascal Vanderveeren (born 1946), lawyer and president of the International Criminal Bar
  • Louise van den Plas (1877–1968), suffragist, activist

Sports[]

  • Henri Anspach (1882–1979), épée (Olympic champion) and foil fencer
  • Paul Anspach (1882–1991), épée and foil fencer, two-time Olympic champion
  • Thierry Boutsen (born 1957), Formula One driver
  • Raymond Goethals (1921–2004), (national) soccer trainer; his team Olympique Marseille won the 1993 European Cup
  • Georges Grün (born 1962), football (soccer) defender
  • Jacky Ickx (born 1945), racing driver
  • Aaron Leya Iseka (born 1997), footballer
  • Paul Loicq (1888–1953), president of the International Ice Hockey Federation
  • Vincent Kompany (born 1986), football (soccer) player
  • Axel Merckx (born 1972 in Uccle), son of Eddy Merckx, professional road bicycle racer, bronze medal Olympic road race 2004
  • Tarec Saffiedine (born 1986), martial artist
  • Philippe Thys (1890–1971), cyclist and three-time winner of the Tour de France
  • Ivo Van Damme (1954–1976), middle distance runner, silver medals at the 1976 Summer Olympics, in both the 800m and 1500m; Memorial van Damme in Brussels, one of the major track and field meets of the season, named in his honour
  • Constant Vanden Stock (1914–2008), president and player of Brussels football club R.S.C. Anderlecht
  • Franky Vercauteren (born 1956), football left winger in R.S.C. Anderlecht and R.W.D. Molenbeek, football manager in R.S.C. Anderlecht and national soccer trainer

Miscellaneous[]

  • Marc Dutroux (born 1956), serial criminal
  • Maxime Weygand (1867–1965), French military commander

Life and work in Brussels[]

Following notable people lived or worked in Brussels at least during a certain period of their life.

  • Jean Absil (1893–1974 in Brussels), composer, organist, and professor at the Brussels Conservatory
  • Nicolas Ancion (born 1971), writer, lived and worked 1994–2000 in Brussels
  • Henryk Arctowski (1871–1958), scientist and Arctic explorer, worked at the Royal Observatory of Belgium from 1903 to 1909
  • Arno (born 1949), rock artist from Ostend, lived a while in Brussels
  • Maurice Béjart (born 1927), French choreographer; founded the Ballet du XXe Siècle in 1960 and the in 1970, both in Brussels
  • Jules Bordet (1870–1961), immunologist and microbiologist; founded the Pasteur Institute in Brussels; inner of the 1919 Nobel Prize in Medicine
  • Jeroen Brouwers (born 1940), Dutch author, lived from 1964 until 1976 in Brussels
  • Pieter Brueghel the Elder (c. 1525–1569), painter
  • Jan Bucquoy (born 1945), filmmaker and director
  • Gerald Bull (1928–1990), Canadian engineer, lived and assassinated in Uccle
  • Hendrik Conscience (1812–1883), writer
  • Alexandra David-Néel (1868–1969), explorer and writer
  • Anne Teresa de Keersmaeker (born 1960), choreographer; founded the dance company in 1983 and the dance school P.A.R.T.S. in 1995 in Brussels
  • Marc Didden (born 1949) film director, made Brussels By Night (1983)
  • Desiderius Erasmus (c. 1466–1536), humanist and theologian; lived in Anderlecht (Erasmus House) from 31 May until 28 October 1521
  • M. C. Escher (1898–1972), Dutch graphic designer, lived in Uccle from 1937 to 1971
  • François-Joseph Fétis (1784–1871), musicologist, composer, critic and teacher, one of the most influential music critics of the 19th century; became director of the conservatory of Brussels and the chapelmaster of King Leopold I
  • Jan Greshoff (1888–1971), Dutch writer, lived from 1927 until 1939 in Schaerbeek on the August Reyerslaan 130
  • Ania Guédroïtz (born 1949), Belgian actress
  • Willem Frederik Hermans (1921–1995), Dutch author.
  • Victor Horta (1861–1947), architect, one of the most influential European Art Nouveau architects
  • Enver Hoxha (1908–1985), Albanian dictator, worked as secretary at the Albanian consulate in Brussels from 1934 to 1936
  • Nicholas Lens, author, composer
  • René Magritte (1898–1967), surrealist artist
  • Ian McCulloch (born 1959), singer of the English rock band Echo & the Bunnymen
  • Eddy Merckx (born 1945), considered by many to be the greatest cyclist of all-time; spent youth and adolescence in Brussels
  • Jef Mermans (1922–1996), nicknamed "The Bomber", football striker who played much of his career at R.S.C. Anderlecht
  • Eugene Nida (1914–2011), linguist, developer of the dynamic-equivalence Bible-translation theory
  • Amélie Nothomb (born 1967), novelist, writing in French
  • Emma Orczy (1865–1947), Hungarian-British novelist, spent part of her childhood in Brussels (1868 to 1873)
  • Marius Petipa (1818–1910), French ballet choreographer, lived in Brussels from 1824 to 1834 and studied at the Royal Conservatory
  • Ilya Prigogine (1917–2003), physicist and chemist; studied chemistry in Brussels and was appointed in 1959 director of the International Solvay Institute in Brussels; awarded the 1977 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
  • Adolphe Quetelet (1796–1874 in Brussels), astronomer, mathematician, statistician and sociologist; founded and directed the Brussels Observatory; inventor of the body mass index
  • Vini Reilly (Vincent Reilly, born 1953), rock musician, guitarist of the English band The Durutti Column; performed on Morrissey's first solo album in 1988
  • Jan van Ruysbroeck (also known as Jan van den Berghe), architect of the 15th century; amongst his work is the belfry of the Hotel de Ville of Brussels
  • John of Ruysbroeck (or Jan, Jean, Johannes) (c. 1293–1381), 'mystic', priest in Brussels and Groenendaal
  • Jan Zygmunt Skrzynecki (1787–1860), Polish general, high-ranking officer of the Belgian army from 1832 to 1839
  • Ernest Solvay (1838–1922), chemist, industrialist and philanthropist; founded institutes and the Solvay Business School in Brussels
  • Nicolas de Staël (born Nikolai Vladimirovich Stael von Holstein, 1914–1955), Russian-French abstract painter; lived in Uccle from 1922 to the early 1930; studied at the Académie Royale des Beaux-Arts
  • Olivier Strelli (born Nissim Israël, 1946), fashion designer
  • Pieter Coecke van Aelst (1502–1550), painter
  • Rogier van der Weyden (c. 1399–1464), painter
  • (c. 1370–1449), writer
  • Vincent van Gogh (1853–1890), Dutch painter, studied at the Académie Royale des Beaux-Arts in Brussels from 1880 to 1881
  • Paul Van Himst (born 1943), nicknamed Polle Gazon, football player, four-times winner of the Belgian Golden Shoe award, eight-times winner of the Belgian championship with R.S.C. Anderlecht
  • Bernaert van Orley (c. 1488–1541), Renaissance painter
  • Johan Verminnen (born 1951), singer-songwriter
  • George Washington (1871–1946), inventor and first commercial producer of instant coffee, grew up in Brussels
  • Henryk Wieniawski (1835–1880), violinist and composer, taught at the Royal Conservatory of Brussels from 1874 to 1877.
  • Antoine Wiertz (1806–1865), painter and sculptor
  • Jan Yoors (1922–1977), Flemish artist, studied at La Cambre from 1941 to 1942

Brussels as a safe harbor[]

Brussels was known to be a safe harbor for artists and thinkers facing political (or simply criminal) persecution. This was particularly true during the 19th century, although it was a cause of some debate, and policies were prone to change (e.g. the case of Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, who were expelled from the city in 1848).

  • Charles Baudelaire (1821–1867), French poet
  • Louis Blanc (1811–1882), French poet, French politician and historian
  • Georges Boulanger (1837–1891), French general and politician
  • Jacques-Louis David (1748–1825), French painter
  • José de San Martin (1824–1830), Argentine General and 1st President of Peru
  • Alexandre Dumas, père (1802–1870), French author, known for his historical novels
  • Friedrich Engels (1820–1895), German social scientist and political philosopher, co-author of The Communist Manifesto
  • Willem Frederik Hermans (1921–1995), Dutch writer
  • Victor Hugo (1802–1885), one of the most influential French writers of the 19th century; completed Les Misérables in Brussels
  • Joachim Lelewel (1786–1861), Polish historian and politician, associate of Karl Marx, lived in Brussels from 1833 to 1861
  • Karl Marx (1818–1883), German political philosopher, wrote The Communist Manifesto in Brussels[1]
  • Multatuli (Eduard Douwes Dekker) (1820–1887), Dutch author, wrote his masterpiece Max Havelaar in 1859 in Brussels[2]
  • Cyprian Norwid (1821–1883), Polish poet, stayed in Brussels from August 1846 to January 1847 after his expulsion from Prussia
  • Pierre-Joseph Proudhon (1809–1865), French philosopher, the first individual to call himself an "anarchist"
  • Auguste Rodin (1840–1917), French sculptor
  • Paul Verlaine (1844–1896), French poet; was joined briefly by the French poet Arthur Rimbaud

References[]

  1. ^ Edward de Maesschalck, Marx in Brussel (1845–1848), Leuven, Davidsfonds, 2005, 200 pp., ISBN 978-90-5826-332-2, and recenses on Platform Rosa blog and Vonk Archived 2011-07-16 at the Wayback Machine.
  2. ^ Johanna M. Welcker, Douwes Dekker, Eduard, in Biografisch Woordenboek van het Socialisme en de Arbeidersbeweging in Nederland, 5, pp. 45-58, 1992, of which a slightly adapted version is available on the site of the Biografisch Woordenboek van het Socialisme en de Arbeidersbeweging in Nederland.
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