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Namur (former Chamber of Representatives constituency)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Namur was a constituency used to elect members of the Belgian Chamber of Representatives between 1831 and 1995.

Representatives

Election Representative
(Party)
Representative
(Party)
Representative
(Party)
Representative
(Party)
Representative
(Party)
Representative
(Party)
1831 Isidore Fallon
(Catholic)
Jean-Baptiste Brabant
(Catholic)
Pierre-Charles Desmanet de Biesme
(Liberal)
3 seats
1833
1837 Denis François de Garcia de la Véga
(Catholic)
1841
1845
1848 Constantin Moxhon
(Liberal)
François Moncheur
(Catholic)
Xavier Lelièvre
(Liberal)
1852 Armand Wasseige
(Catholic)
1856
1857 Auguste Royer de Behr
(Catholic)
Charles de Montpellier
(Catholic)
4 seats
1861
1864 Xavier Lelièvre
(Liberal)
1868
1870
1874 Alphonse de Moreau
(Catholic)
Jean Martin Dohet
(Catholic)
1878 Charles de Montpellier
(Catholic)
Julien Tournay-Detilleux
(Liberal)
1882 Auguste Doucet de Tillier
(Catholic)
Ernest Mélot
(Catholic)
Ferdinand Dohet
(Catholic)
1886
1890
1892
1894 Eugène Hambursin
(Liberal)
Gustave Defnet
(PS)
Joseph Bodart
(Liberal)
Léopold Gillard
(Liberal)
1898
1900 Auguste Mélot
(Catholic)
Louis Petit
(Catholic)
1904 Joseph Fossion
(PS)
Léon Furnémont
(PS)
5 seats
1908 Joseph Bologne
(PS)
1912 Georges Honincks
(Liberal)
Fernand Golenvaux
(Catholic)
Emile Sevrin
(PS)
1919 Joseph Gris
(PS)
Léon Delacroix
(Catholic)
1921 Adrien de Montpellier de Vedrin
(Catholic)
François Bovesse
(Liberal)
1925 Emile Maillen
(PS)
1929 François Bovesse
(Liberal)
Fernand Mathieu
(Catholic)
1932 Joseph Gris
(PS)
Louis Huart
(Catholic)
Lucien-Marie Harmegnies
(PS)
1936 Georges Guilmin
(Liberal)
Jean Denis
(REX)
1939 Maurice Jaminet
(Catholic)
René Dieudonné
(PS)
1946 Charles Héger
(CVP)
Gustave Fiévet
(BSP)
Victor Briol
(PCB)
1949 Louis Namèche
(BSP)
1950
1954 Fernand Massart
(BSP)
1958 Albert Servais
(CVP)
Emile Lacroix
(BSP)
1961
1965 Léon Remacle
(CVP)
Charles Poswick
(PVV)
1968 Fernand Massart
(RW)
1971 Robert Denison
(PSB)
1974
1977 Bernard Anselme
(PSB)
Robert Marchal
(cdH)
1978
1981 Jean Barzin
(PRL)
1985 André Tilquin
(cdH)
Claude Eerdekens
(PS)
Paul-Henry Gendebien
(cdH)
1988 Gil Gilles
(PS)
Pierre Beaufays
(cdH)
1991 Jean-Marie Severin
(PRL)
Philippe Defeyt
(Ecolo)
1995 Merged into Namur-Dinant-Philippeville

References

This page was last edited on 6 December 2021, at 21:09
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