Jules Van Dievoet

Jules Van Dievoet (/ˈdvʊt/, 7 March 1844  2 March 1917) was a Belgian jurist and Supreme Court advocate.[1]

Jules van Dievoet was the owner of the Château du Moisnil

Jules van Dievoet

Born7 March 1844
Died2 March 1917
Brussels
Resting placeBrussels Cemetery
Nationality Kingdom of Belgium
Alma materUniversité libre de Bruxelles
OccupationLawyer, jurist
FamilyVan Dievoet family

He was the son of Augustus Van Dievoet, jurist, lawyer, historian and Latin writer.

Biography

He married Marguerite Anspach (18 September 1852  24 December 1934), daughter of Jules Anspach, burgomaster of the City of Brussels.

After studying at the Athénée de Bruxelles and studying at the Faculty of Law of the Free University of Brussels, where he obtained his doctorate in law with distinction in 1865, he was destined for the career of a lawyer.

After an internship at Louis Leclercq, he was sworn in as a lawyer on August 18, 1865. He was appointed barrister at the Court of Cassation by Royal Decree of December 31, 1880, replacing Auguste Orts, who had passed away.

He was president of the Bar of Cassation from 1900 to 1902.

Honnours

Bibliography

  • Bart Coppein and Jérôme De Brouwer, Histoire du barreau de Bruxelles / 1811–2011 / Geschiedenis van de balie van Brussel, Brussels, Bruylant, 2012, p. 88.
gollark: No, I just like higher-level languages.
gollark: Lua, Python, JavaScript, Rust and Haskell occasionally; I can sort of program a lot of them but not very well, so my answers shift semi-frequently.
gollark: Random programming projects!
gollark: Though there are still unencrypted pager messages around here, so who knows...
gollark: One would assume that important military or whatever stuff would be encrypted.

See also

References

  1. "Artistes, de père en fils". Site-LeVif-FR. 2008-11-21. Retrieved 2019-12-09.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.