1932 in Belgium
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Incumbents

- Jules Renkin (to 22 October)
- Charles de Broqueville (from 22 October)
Events

- 27 June to 10 September â Ten weeks of strikes in the Borinage to protest against economic conditions.[1]
- 9 October â Municipal elections
- 18 October â Jules Renkin offers his resignation as prime minister
- 27 November â Legislative election returns Catholic Party majority
- 4 December â Provincial elections
Publications
- Franz Hellens, Poésie de la veille et du lendemain
- Hergé, Tintin en Amérique (serialised 1931â1932) published as an album
Art and architecture
- Paintings
- René Magritte, The Universe Unmasked
- Cinema
- La Nuit du Carrefour (France), Jean Renoir's adaptation of Georges Simenon's La Nuit du carrefour (1931)
Business
- Lotus Bakeries established
Births
- 17 January â Roger Lallemand, politician (died 2016)
- 11 March â Piet Van Brabant, journalist (died 2006)
- 18 March â Arthur Luysterman, bishop of Ghent
- 23 March â Bettina Le Beau, actress (died 2015)
- 31 March â Jean-Pierre Grafé, politician (died 2019)
- 29 June â Evrard Godefroid, cyclist (died 2013)
- 4 July â Aurèle Vandendriessche, marathon runner
- 20 August â Claudine Wallet, Olympic fencer
- 27 August â François Glorieux, musician (died 2023)
- 4 October â Ãtienne Davignon, politician
- 6 November â François Englert, theoretical physicist
- 23 November â Solange Berry, singer
- 16 December â Karel Oomen, wrestler
- 20 December â Carla Walschap, writer and teacher
Deaths
- 17 February â Fredegand Cogels (born 1850), politician
- 10 April â Jean-François Heymans (born 1859), pharmacologist
- 19 April â Edgard Colle (born 1897), chess master
- 24 June â Guy Reyntiens (born 1880), Olympic equestrian
- 25 July â Cyriel Buysse (born 1859), playwright
- 20 August â Ãmile Mathieu (born 1844), composer
- 27 August â Ursmer Berlière (born 1861), monastic historian
- 29 September â Ãmile van Ermengem (born 1851), bacteriologist
- 7 October â Eugène Broerman (born 1861), painter
- 28 October â Joseph Dejardin (born 1873), trade unionist
