Noël Delfosse

Noël Joseph Auguste Delfosse (French: [dɛlfos]; 9 March 1801 – 22 February 1858) was a Belgian lawyer, industrialist and liberal politician.

Noël Delfosse
President of the Chamber of Representatives
In office
26 October 1852  25 April 1855
Preceded byPierre-Théodore Verhaegen
Succeeded byJosse Joseph de Lehaye
Personal details
Born(1801-03-09)9 March 1801
Liège, France
(now Belgium)
Died22 February 1858(1858-02-22) (aged 56)
Liège, Belgium
NationalityBelgium
Political partyLiberal Party
Alma materUniversity of Liège

Biography

Delfosse graduated as a doctor in Law at the University of Liège and started his career in Liège as an attorney.

He was selected as a liberal representative in the municipal council after the Belgian Revolution in 1830, and in 1836 to the Provincial council of the Province of Liège and in 1840 as a representative of Liège into the Belgian Chamber of Representatives, and in 1848 was elected vice-president of the chamber and remained in this office until 1852.

His decisive character and his talent as a convincing speaker, supported his political influence in the years 1848 and 1849, where he mainly tried to secure Belgium from the influences of the French movement. At that time he famously exclaimed in the chamber: La liberté française pour faire le tour du monde n'a pas besoin de passer par chez nous! (in English "French freedom to travel around the world does not need to go through our region!") From 1853 until 1855 he was the President of the Belgian Chamber of Representatives.

In 1854 and 1855, he rejected twice the offer to create a new Ministry. In December 1857 he was appointed in the government of Rogier-Frère with the title of Minister of State, which did not prevent him to speak against the measures of the government, when they seemed to him incompatible with the principles of liberalism.

gollark: The only "difficult but rewarding" stuff here is extension papers like STEP and they don't really have... teaching... for that.
gollark: Not only does it do horrible abuse of notation but it does a "left-handed Riemann sum" with fixed thing widths, and thus breaks on certain exotic functions.
gollark: I know, yes.
gollark: Ironically, the spec here contains it (not by name) but the textbook gets it slightly wrong.
gollark: Isn't Riemann integration more of a definition than a practical approximation?

See also

Sources

  • Alvin, A., in : Biographie Nationale, Brussel, Académie Royale des Sciences, des Lettres et des Beaux Arts, 1866-1986, V, 1876, kol. 413–420.
  • Mémorial de la Province de Liège 1836-1986, Liège, p. 184.
Political offices
Preceded by
Pierre-Théodore Verhaegen
President of the Chamber of Representatives
1852–1855
Succeeded by
Josse Joseph de Lehaye


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