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Jacques Coghen

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Count
Jacques Coghen
Portrait by Louis Huard
Personal details
Born
Jacques-André Coghen
NationalityBelgian
Political partyLiberal
Other political
affiliations
Unionist, Catholic
RelationsGreat-great-great grandfather of King Philippe of Belgium
Residence(s)Brussels and Uccle
OccupationBanker, merchant
CabinetFinance Minister

Count Jacques Andres Coghen (31 October 1791 in Brussels – 15 May 1858 in Brussels) was the second Minister of Finance of the Kingdom of Belgium (1831-1832), and a direct ancestor of the current King, Philippe of Belgium.[citation needed]

A founding father of Belgium, Coghen was a merchant, financier, and politician of the Liberal Party.[1] He was elevated to the rank of count in 1837.[2]

Ancestry

Before the family Coghen moved to Brussels, they were living from the early 14th century in the city of Diest as merchants and financial stewards. Some of them held official positions in that city such as mayor. During the Protestant Rebellion of the mid-16th century they supported the cause of William of Orange, the leader of that rebellion in the Low Countries, because the city of Diest was one of the four cities of the family of William of Orange (the other three being Breda, Duisburg and Orange).[3]

Coghen was the son of Joseph Coghen (1749-1820), an apothecary, and his wife, Isabelle Stielemans, who was a native of Brussels.[citation needed]

His paternal grandfather, Jan Baptist Coghen (1717-1773) was born, was married, and died in Brussels.[citation needed]

His paternal grandmother, Catharina Theresia Huwaerts (1710-1749), was also born and died in Brussels, and her parents, Marie Therese van Cutsem (1668-1726/1727) and Joose Huwaerts (d. 1742), as well as their parents, were also from old Dutch families in the Brussels area (including such families as Ghysels, Walravens, de Broijer, Haeck, de Proost, and de Leenheer).[citation needed]

His mother was descended from several ancient Belgian families,[citation needed] from Brussels and Diest, whose ancestors in the sixteenth century appear to have been butchers and merchants, and who in the early seventeenth century included magistrates of the old county of Campine (Kempen in Dutch).[4]

Early life and business

Coghen was born on 31 October 1791.[citation needed]

He was married, on 17 May 1821, to Caroline Rittweger. The Rittweger family was from Altenkunstadt in Bavaria but moved to Brussels at the end of the 18th century when they were officials in the Postal Office of the Austrian Empire. François Rittweger, the father of Caroline, was a Brussels politician, director of several financial companies and financial advisor to the Belgian King Leopold I.[5] He was freemason in the lodge "Les Amis Philanthropes". Jacques Coghen was also a freemason in the lodge "L'Espérance" in Brussels where he met other freemasons who would become leaders of the Belgian Revolution, namely Jean Barbanson (1797-1883), Eugène Defacqz (1797-1871), en Alexandre Gendebien (1789-1869).[6]

The Coghen's had five children - Isabelle (1822-1891), Barbara (1823-1883), Henriette (1825-1880), Joseph-Frantz (1827-1888) and Marie (1832-1870).[7]

Before the Belgian Revolution broke out, Coghen was a respected merchant and banker in Brussels;[citation needed] he was Chairman of the Commercial Court and a member of the Advisory Chamber of Commerce.[2] In 1824, he co-founded, with Francois Rittweger, AG Life, the life insurance company, and in 1830, AG Fire, both of which later became part of the €45 billion Fortis,[8] "the oldest and most important insurance company in Belgium",[9] until its collapse in 2008.

He helped to start a glass factory cooperative company, Verreries de Mariemont, in 1829.[10] Also in 1829, he bought Wolvendael, a 1763 castle near Uccle, from duke Charles-Louis-Auguste de Looz-Corswarem.[citation needed]

Public life

Dutch Troops had scarcely retreated from the capital of Belgium, when the Provisional Government, on 28 September 1830, named Coghen deputy head of the new Federal Finance commission, until the first meeting of the Congress national.[2] Between October 1830 and February 1831, Coghen served on this new Conseil des Commissaires ("Congress of Commissioners") for the new nation's banking.[11] For a short time in the fall of 1830, the new finance commission only had two employees, Coghen and an assistant attorney.[11]

In the first elections for the municipal council in October 1830, Coghen was elected as one of the representatives; he was re-elected in 1836, and served until 1840. At this time, it was his determination not to remain a member of the board, which was caused by the opposition in the assembly regarding the project to rebuild the Palace of Justice in Brussels. The Leopold district project was sponsored by financial companies, particularly by the Civil society for the expansion and beautification of Brussels, of which Coghen was one of the founders.[2]

Coghen also served on the National Congress; he had felt obliged to accept the offer that was made to him. In 1831, he joined the House of Representatives as member from the district of Brussels, and was re-elected in 1833, in 1837, and in 1841. He was defeated in 1845, when the struggle became more intense between the two parties that divided the country, but he was sent in 1848, by the voters in the same district, to the Senate, where he remained a member until his death. He also was one of the vice-presidents of the Senate when he died.[2]

Coghen joined the cabinet of the first Muelenaere Government that was formed by king Leopold I on 24 July 1831. He held the finance portfolio until 20 October 1832. He went through a difficult period marked by the Ten Days' Campaign, a failed attempt to suppress the Belgian revolution by the Dutch king William I between 1 August and 12 August 1831. As Minister of Finance he negotiated and signed on 19 December 1831 an important loan with the London banker Nathan Rotschild that saved the newly born Belgian state from collapse.[12]

He later reorganized some utilities.[2]

On 20 October 1832, the Muelenaere Government fell, and the King called the first Rogier government; thus "Coghen was replaced as the minister of Finances by Auguste Duvivier."[11]

Return to business and later career

After 1832, he returned to private life, when he devoted himself with ardor to some major financial, industrial and commercial enterprises. He became a director and shareholder of the Verreries de Mariemont, in 1835.[10] He was a director of the Société générale de Belgique General Society of Belgium,[2] arguably the most important company that has ever existed in Belgium, which has since been merged into the Suez-Tractebel group. The company had owned very large estates, some of which were sold off to members of the Board. The company invested in banks, coal mining, and utilities. In 1841, he was recorded as having been first appointed an administrateur (member of the board of directors) of the General Society of Belgium, with his title as ancien ministre de finances (former finance minister).[13]

He was also a member of the Board of the Central School of Commerce and Industry.[14]

He had purchased a castle, Wolvendael in Uccle, and land in the Sonian Forest.[15] He made some improvements to the castle, adding three bays.[citation needed]

In 1851, Coghen returned to public life, this time the Senate; it has not been unusual for aristocrats to be elected directly to that position.[15] Previously a Unionist, he broke with the Liberal party and then joined the Catholic party,[15] in the controversy over a new inheritance law. In 1855, he was re-elected to the Senate after returning to the Liberal party, and served as vice-president of the Senate at the time of his death.[15]

Honours and awards

After successfully securing a loan to the Roman Court, Pope Gregory XVI granted him the title of Count. The first king of the Belgians sanctioned this distinction by giving him the rank of Count for himself and the comital title to his male descendants (Royal Decree December 30, 1837).[2]

Death and legacy

Epitaphe of Jacques Coghen, Cemetery of Laeken (by Guillaume Geefs)

Jacques Coghen died in Lembeek, on 16 May 1858.[2] He is buried at Laeken Cemetery in Brussels.[citation needed] After his death, his family sold his estate at Wolvendael into lots; today, most of his estate is a city park in Uccle, and the old castle retains some improvements made by Coghen.[citation needed]

In 2004, the city of Genk named a street after Coghen.[18]

The local history society of Uccle has a collection of papers by and about Coghen.[19]

His daughter, Isabelle Coghen (1822-1891), married Theodore Mosselman du Chenoy. Their daughter Laura Mosselman du Chenoy married Fulco Tristano Beniamino Ruffo di Calabria (1848-1901). Their son Fulco Ruffo di Calabria was the father of Queen Paola.[20] Through them, Coghen is a great-great-great grandfather of the current King of the Belgians, Phillipe.[21][verification needed]

See also

References

  1. ^ English translation of the French Wikipedia article, citing Jean Bartelous, Nos Premiers Ministres, de Léopold Ier à Albert Ier, 1983, Bruxelles, éd. J.M. Collet, p. 23. Translated as Our Prime Ministers from Leopold I to Albert I.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Jacques COGHEN (1791-1858)". Chambre des représentants de Belgique (1831-1848) on Unionisme.be website. February 7, 2013.
  3. ^ Cogen, Etienne (1994). Uitvoerige genealogie van de familie Cogen van 1300 tot 1993. Gent. pp. 5–30.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  4. ^ French Wikipedia article on Jacques Coghen, citing these original sources:
    • Étienne Cogen, Jacques-André graaf Coghen : zijn afstamming, leven, werk en nakomelingschap = Jacques-André Comte Coghen : ses origines, sa vie, ses activités et sa descendance, Gand, 1998. (Translated as: Etienne Coghen, Jacques-André Count Coghen: his origins, his life, his work and his descendants. (Ghent, 1998).)
    • Étienne Cogen et Alice Demeyer, Uitvoerige genealogie van de familie Cogen van 1300 tot 1993, Vol. 1-2, Gand, 1994. (Translated as: Etienne Coghen and Alice Demeyer Comprehensive genealogy of the Coghen family from 1300 to 1993, Vol. 1-2, (Ghent, 1994).)
    • François Houtart, Liste des familles belges par ancienneté, Bruxelles, 2008. (cet auteur donne comme date d'ancienneté prouvée l'an 1483). (Translated as: List of Belgian families by seniority (Brussels, 2008). (This author gives a proven "seniority date" of the year 1483).
  5. ^ Cogen, Etienne (1998). Jacques-André graaf Coghen: zijn afstamming, leven, werk en nakomelingschap = Jacques-André Comte Coghen: ses origines, sa vie, ses activités et sa descendance. Gent. pp. 69–75.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  6. ^ Cogen, Etienne (1998). Jacques-André graaf Coghen: zijn afstamming, leven, werk en nakomelingschap = Jacques-André Comte Coghen: ses origines, sa vie, ses activités et sa descendance. Gent. pp. 143–148.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  7. ^ Cogen, Etienne (1994). Uitvoerige genealogie van de familie Cogen van 1300 tot 1993. Gent. p. 261.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  8. ^ Depuydt, Piet (April 7, 2009). "Robbed of its heritage, Belgium's aristocracy licks its wounds". nrc.nl. Archived from the original on July 16, 2015. Retrieved July 31, 2013.
  9. ^ Jean-Luis Moreau; Rene Brion (2001). From AG to Fortis. (abstract). Amsterdam University Press. doi:10.5117/9789061534266. ISBN 9789061534266. Retrieved July 31, 2013.
  10. ^ a b Raymond Chambon and P. Verleysen (1956). "Verrieres de Mariemont: 1786-1956 (translated as Glassmaking in Mariemont)" (PDF). Marymount Museum of Hainaut. p. 28. Retrieved July 31, 2013.
  11. ^ a b c Laureyssens, Julie (1989). "FINANCIAL INNOVATION AND REGULATION: The Société Générale and the Belgian State after Independence (1830-1850)" (PDF). Journal of Belgian History. pp. 230–236. Retrieved July 31, 2013.
  12. ^ Cogen, Etienne (1994). Uitvoerige genealogie van de familie Cogen van 1300 tot 1993, Vol.1. pp. 264–267.
  13. ^ Verzameling der wetten en besluiten, Volume 23, p. 965 (1849). Found at Google Books. Accessed 31 July 2013.
  14. ^ Almanach Royal et du Commerce de Belgique pour l’an M DCCC XXX VIII, présenté à Sa Majesté. Bruxelles, Imprimerie Balleroy, 1838. (Translated as Royal Almanac and Commerce of Belgium for the year 1838, presented to His Majesty. Brussels:Balleroy Printing, 1838.)
  15. ^ a b c d Meuwissen, Eric (June 6, 1999). "Autant savoir avant l'isoloir (2) Une législature sans sénateur... Un siècle et demi de prépondérance libérale au Sénat Une Flamande pour seule élue directe (translated as: Before the voting booth: A legislature without Senators: A century and a half of Liberal dominance in the directly elected Senate for a Flemish district)". LeSoir archives. Retrieved July 31, 2013.
  16. ^ a b Le livre d'or de l'ordre de Léopold et de la croix de fer, Volume 1 /Ferdinand Veldekens
  17. ^ "COGHEN". www.ars-moriendi.be.
  18. ^ "Stad Genk heeft twee nieuwe straten (translated as: Genk has two new city streets)". City of Genk, Belgium. November 23, 2004. Retrieved July 31, 2013.
  19. ^ Jean Lhoir, ed. (2006). "Ucclesia: Review bimestrielle: Table analytique 1996-2000 (translated as: Ucclesia: a bimonthly review, with analytical tables)" (PDF). Cercle d'histoire d'archeologie et de folklore d'Uccle et environs (translated as: The History, archeology, and folklore society of the Uccle region). Retrieved July 31, 2013.[permanent dead link]
  20. ^ "Les origines belges de la reine Paola (translated as: The Belgian roots of Queen Paola". Blog of the Royal Family of Belgium. January 25, 2011. Retrieved July 20, 2013.
  21. ^ "Josefine Charlotte Ingeborg van BELGIE ... (genealogy of the royal family of Belgium) (date n.d.)". vdbrempt.be. Retrieved July 31, 2013.
This page was last edited on 5 May 2023, at 00:44
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