Roermond (Chamber of Representatives constituency)
Roermond was a constituency used to elect members of the Belgian Chamber of Representatives between the first Belgian parliamentary election in 1831,[1] and the transfer of Roermond to the Kingdom of the Netherlands in 1839, under the stipulations of the Treaty of London.
Representatives
Election | Representative (Party) |
Representative (Party) |
Representative (Party) | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1831 | Théodore Olislagers de Sipernau (Catholic) |
Antoine Ernst (Liberal) |
Henri de Brouckère (Liberal) | |||
1833 | Nicolas de Longrée (Catholic) |
Louis Beerenbroeck (Catholic) |
Jean Scheyven (Catholic) | |||
1837 | 2 seats |
gollark: Pedals are uncool.
gollark: So if you have a set of electric cars with small batteries - enough to travel within a city and near it - available for rent, and you don't suffer too much overhead from having to rent them out, that could conceivably be a good method of transport.
gollark: Electric cars are expensive *partly* because they need batteries for hundred-mile journeys, even though most actually won't be this long. And cars are kind of inefficient because most of the time they're left idling.
gollark: Personally, I think that local public transport and short-range intra-city electric cars would be worth considering.
gollark: Batteries' energy density isn't that great right now, sadly.
References
- Recueil des décrets du congrès national de la Belgique, vol. 2 (Brussels, H. Remy, 1831), pp. 224-225. On Google Books
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