Banque de Commerce

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Building on Lange Gasthuisstraat 9–11 in Antwerp, head office of the Banque de Commerce from 1907 to 1968; repurposed as a clothing store in 2002[1][2]
Building at Place Royale 6 (right), Banque de Commerce's Brussels branch from 1929 to 1968, later ING Art Center

The Banque de Commerce (French pronunciation: [bɑ̃k kɔmɛʁs]) was a medium-sized Belgian bank. It was founded in Antwerp in 1780 by Charles Jean Michel De Wolf and was known as the Banque De Wolf until 1893. Just before World War I, it was the sixth-largest bank by total assets in Antwerp,[3]:117 and before World War II, the second-largest.[4]:59

From the aftermath of World War I, the Banque de Commerce then successively controlled by Barclays, Banque de Bruxelles, and Chase Manhattan Bank which in 1985 rebranded it Chase Banque de Commerce S.A. / Chase Handelsbank N.V., then eventually acquired in 1989 by France's Crédit Lyonnais.

Even though the bank was primarily active in the Dutch-speaking part of Belgium, for most of its existence it was generally referred to by its French name including in Dutch-speaking or English-speaking contexts.[1][3] In the 1980s, as sensitivities about language had evolved in Belgium, Chase adopted a bilingual approach for its rebranding.[5]

Overview

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