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

  1. 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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