Paul-Émile Janson
Paul-Émile Janson | |
---|---|
Prime Minister of Belgium | |
In office 23 November 1937 – 15 May 1938 | |
Monarch | Leopold III |
Preceded by | Paul van Zeeland |
Succeeded by | Paul-Henri Spaak |
Personal details | |
Born | Brussels, Belgium | 30 May 1872
Died | 3 March 1944 Buchenwald concentration camp, Germany | (aged 71)
Political party | Liberal Party |
Alma mater | Free University of Brussels |
Paul-Émile (Paul Emil) Janson (30 May 1872 – 3 March 1944) was a francophone Belgian liberal politician and the prime minister from 1937 to 1938. During the German occupation, he was arrested as a political prisoner and died in a German concentration camp in 1944.
Biography
[edit]Born in Brussels, Janson was the son of liberal statesman Paul Janson (died 1913).[1] He studied law at the Free University of Brussels (now split into the Université Libre de Bruxelles and the Vrije Universiteit Brussel), practised as a lawyer, and also taught at the university.
Political career
[edit]Janson was elected as a liberal to the Belgian Chamber of Representatives in 1910. He was not re-elected in 1912, but he was again elected in 1914. He held various minister posts including War (1920), Justice (1927–1931; 1932–1934; 1939, 1940) and minister without portfolio (1940–1944). He was made an honorary Minister of State in 1931.
He served as the 30th Prime Minister of Belgium in 1937–1938. In the early part of the Second World War, Janson served as Foreign minister, and as minister without portfolio, in the government of Hubert Pierlot. He remained in France when the government in exile moved to London. In 1943 he was detained by the occupying German forces and incarcerated in the Buchenwald concentration camp. He died there in 1944.[2][3]
His sister Marie Janson was the first woman to be elected to the Chamber of Representatives in 1921 and the mother of Paul-Henri Spaak, Janson's nephew and the man who directly succeeded him as Prime Minister in 1938.
Honours
[edit]- Minister of state, by Royal Decree.
- Commander in the Order of Leopold.[4]
Commemoration
[edit]- A street in Ixelles is named Rue Paul Emile Janson in his honour.
- The Université Libre de Bruxelles has an auditorium named after him.
- a subway (metro) station in Charleroi is named after him.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Bulletin de la Classe des lettres et des sciences morales 1973 "Paul Janson ne connaissait pas le flamand, ce qui, disait-il, lui causait du regret"
- ^ Betty Garfinkels Belgique, terre d'accueil: problème du réfugié : 1933–1940 1974 "Mieux que tout autre, Paul-Emile Janson mettait en pratique ce qu'il disait. Conciliateur et tolérant, il était aussi le pacificateur du clan Janson qui se réunissait régulièrement dans la propriété de Chooz. Son humour, que tant de personnes appréciaient lors des séances de la Chambre, vida bien des différends entre sœurs et alliés, entre enfants et parents. ll ne lui resta guère de temppour voyager. ... Et cependant, là encore, il réunissait autour de lui ses compagnons d'infortune qu'il réconfortait. Le 3 mars 1944, il s'éteignit dans les bras d'Albert François."
- ^ Bulletin de la Classe des lettres et des sciences morales 1973 "Le 27 janvier 1944, en compagnie de Soudan, il était, dans un convoi de wagons à bestiaux, envoyé à Buchenwald. ... Le 3 mars 1944, dans les bras de son compagnon de captivité Albert François, ancien sénateur socialiste, il mourait .."
- ^ RD 15.11.1921
Sources
[edit]- D'Ydewalle, Ch., Silhouettes politiques : Paul-Emile Janson, in : Revue Générale, LXII, 1929, p. 86–90.
- Miroir, A., in : Parisel, W., Histoire de La Loge Les Vrais amis de l'Union et du Progrès Réunis 1892–1980, Brussel, 1980, p. 283–285.
- Stengers, J., Paul-Emile Janson, in : Académie Royale de Belgique, Bulletin de la Commission des Lettres et des Sciences Morales et Politiques, 5e série, LIX, 1973–1976, p. 202–281.
External links
[edit]- Paul-Emile Janson at Liberaal Archief
- Paul-Emile Janson[permanent dead link] at the Prime Minister's Office
- 1872 births
- 1944 deaths
- Ministers of state of Belgium
- Belgian people who died in Buchenwald concentration camp
- Free University of Brussels (1834–1969) alumni
- Politicians who died in Nazi concentration camps
- Prime ministers of Belgium
- Belgian civilians killed in World War II
- Members of the Belgian government in exile
- Politicians from Brussels
- Ministers of defence of Belgium