Société des douze

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Sylvain Van de Weyer, who would become the 8th prime minister of Belgium, was a founding member of the first society.

The Société des douze (French; lit.'Society of the Twelve') was a scholarly and literary dining club in Brussels.

Founding members

Its precursor, the Société de littérature de Bruxelles (lit.'Literature Society of Brussels') founded on 10 January 1800, was deprecated by the government of the United Kingdom of the Netherlands and disappeared in 1823. Goswin de Stassart, Victor-Joseph de Jouy, Adolphe Quetelet, Frédéric de Reiffenberg, Eugène Van Bemmel, and the poet Philippe Lesbroussart [fr] were members of this society.

Some of its members continued to meet in the salon of Lesbroussart and founded in the same year (1823) the Société des douze.[1]

The founding members were:[2][3]

Activities

Since its inception, important personalities were members of the society. The secrecy surrounding it[11] attracted suspicion from the Press and William I's government.[12]

Dissolution

This first Société des douze, founded during the reign of William I, ended around 1830, as the Belgian Revolution seemed imminent.[13]

It was, however, revived in 1834 after Belgian independence.

Augustus van Dievoet, lawyer and legal historian, founding member of the second society

The new society

Notes and references

Further reading

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