Leopold I of Belgium
Appearance
Leopold I (16 December 1790 – 10 December 1865) was the first King of the Belgians, reigning from July 1831 until his death.
Quotes
[edit]- My heart knows of no other ambition than that of seeing you happy.
- Foreign Relations of the United States, Translation of the speech from the throne. On ascending the throne, Leopold I to the Belgians.
- He is as uncontrollable and crabby as one can imagine. Not to be understood, because neither his mother nor his father is like that.
- Take a serious look at yourself. Ask yourself questions about your mood, the way you view the world and people, think about your mistakes and the dangers they unleash. Today the character of a person determines whether he can exercise influence and authority, far more than all the minds on this earth. As you know, this is all the more true in Belgium, and Belgians want to see in their leader the qualities they will never want from themselves. It is very good that you are involved in trade and industry, you understand well how desirable it would be that the Belgians were given the means to do something outside the homeland.
- I am saddened by the case of Constantinople, this journey was so well served to you, and you have spoiled it with a childishness.
- It is not for us that we exhort you to learn, but for yourself, because ignorance is an inability, a real disaster, because social positions and protection are no longer there as before, there is a ground for malice and even hatred.
- Leopold II, The Whole Story King Leopold I to his son Prince Leopold II.
- But Palmerston likes to put his foot on their necks! Now, no statesman must triumph over an enemy that is not quite dead, because people forget a real loss, a real misfortune, but they won’t forget an insult. Napoleon made great mistakes that way; he hated Prussia, insulted it on all occasions, but still left it alive. The consequence was that in 1813 they rose to a man in Prussia, even children and women took arms, because they had been treated with contempt and insulted.
- Early Belgian colonial Efforts: The long and fateful shadow of Leopold I King Leopold I of Belgium in a letter to Palmerston. After both Victoria and Palmerston agreed and united against Leopold in forcing him to accept the treaty with Holland, thus settling for less than he and the Belgian people had hoped for after the revolution of 1830.
- My fate is bound up with that of England, and whatever befalls the green isle, I shall not easily abandon it.
- Early Belgian colonial Efforts: The long and fateful shadow of Leopold I, Page 60 Leopold to the Archduke John in Richardson, 71.
- If we had some sense here other than to quarrel for miserable places we should buy some of the colonies of the Portuguese, it would do an immense amount of good for many of our young officers who we have no means of employing usefully, we want elbow room and it is not probable we shall get it in Europe.
- Early Belgian colonial Efforts: The long and fateful shadow of Leopold I, Page 63 Leopold to Victoria, 26 March 1847, APR, copy, original by permission of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II, at RA (RA VIC/Y 73/35).
- Constitutional government, especially in a small country, takes a great deal of time, and causes sight to be lost of the questions, which lone can secure to the country a political future. I have many a time that I saw you feeling more and more interest therein, and I am very anxious that it should be so, for it is time to be seriously occupied with those questions; otherwise Belgium will find herself at the tail of all other countries. I have heard that an association of German princes is actively occupied in an attempt at colonization in Texas…
- Early Belgian colonial Efforts: The long and fateful shadow of Leopold I, Page 109 Leopold to General Goblet, 27 February 1844 in Théodore Juste, Memoirs of Leopold I, King of the Belgians, from unpublished documents Translated by Robert Black. (London: Sampson Low, Son & Martson, 1868), 211.
- The sedition mongers are not numerous, but they frighten the peaceful majority, who, although it can be really strong, feels a veritable panic before this agitating force in the shadows? It is in this fear that lies the principal danger, and it would be in the veritable interest of the welfare of Europe that the Powers could show that the necessary force to support and defend the right is not still lacking to them.
- Early Belgian colonial Efforts: The long and fateful shadow of Leopold I, Page 178 Leopold to Prince Metternich, December 1847, Pollman 148
- Certainly all those who possess something and who have at heart to see the legal situation subsist, ought to feel that the moment has come to defend itself against the complete dissolution of society in Europe, which dissolution is to lead to most frightful anarchy....may all the measures that you take be crowned with success, that is my heartiest desire...
- Early Belgian colonial Efforts: The long and fateful shadow of Leopold I, Page 178 Leopold to Prince Metternich, 28 February 1848, Pollman, 149.
- Abuse is somewhat the staff of life in England everything, everybody is to be abused; it is a pity, as nothing more unproductive as this everlasting abuse can be imagined. As nothing ever gave the slightest opening to this abuse, it is hoped that it will be soon got over the meeting of Parliament will now do good in this respect. As far as your few continental relatives are concerned, I don’t think they will be able to fix anything upon your faithful servant. I have done in England at all times good services… Successes of vanity, I am never fishing for in England, nor anywhere else. The only influence I may exercise is to prevent mischief where I can, which occasionally succeeds: if war can be avoided, and the same ends obtained, it is natural that they should be tried first…
- Early Belgian colonial Efforts: The long and fateful shadow of Leopold I, Page 180 Leopold to Victoria, Pollman, 212.
- Belgium is a boiler that needs valves.
- All the King's Men' A search for the colonial ideas of some advisers and "accomplices" of Leopold II (1853-1892). (Hannes Vanhauwaert), 6. Baron Auguste Lambermont (1819-1905), The uncrowned king of economic liberalism Leopold I once said to Lambermont. DE ROBIANO, A. Baron Lambermont: His life and his Work. Brussel, 1905, 59.
- The names of the little one will be, Philippe Eugène Ferdinand Marie Clement Baudoin (baldwin, a name of the old counts of Flanders) Leopold George. My aunt who is his godmother wished he should be called Philippe, honour of his grandfather, and as Philippe le bon, who was one of the most powerful princes of this country. I gave him the name with pleasure. Eugene is her own name, Ferdinand that of Chartres, Marie is the name of the queen and of princess Marie, Clement of princess Clémentine, Leopold your aunt wished and George honour of St. George of England and of George the IV.
- A royal puppet show in the Belgian royal family. The education of the first Belgian royal children. (Greet Donckers) AKP, Copies of the Correspondence between Queen Victoria and King Leopold I, Vol. I, Letter from King Leopold I to Queen Victoria, March 31, 1837.
- I will be more and more concerned with giving you sound and true political ideas, few people are better able to do this than I; since the age of 16 I have been involved in the big affairs of Europe.
- A royal puppet show in the Belgian royal family. The education of the first Belgian royal children. (Greet Donckers) AKP, Fund Leopold I, III Archives Conway, Letter from King Leopold I to Prince Leopold, 11 November 1850, 20/3.
- The Belgians are a people without a shadow of nationality, they have no political intelligence whatsoever, they are without a doubt the most insufferable creatures that exist, fortunately a certain apathy prevents the Belgians from doing much damage and doing stupidities in which they be so lost.
- You are as good a politician as you are a prelate.
Quotes about Leopold I
[edit]- This wise prince, the true head of a nation of freemen, did more than deserve the love and admiration of his subjects. He rendered a distinguished service to the cause of popular liberty.
- A reference to Nestor of the Iliad, portrayed by Homer as an “Elder Statesman”. Leopold was given this informal title as a result of his role as a neutral, in the internal affairs of Europe.
- Early Belgian colonial Efforts: The long and fateful shadow of Leopold I, Page 40 See Egon C. Corti, Leopold I of Belgium - Secret Pages of European History, trans. Joseph McCabe (London: Unwin Brothers, Ltd., 1923).
- Augusta's children married well. With the exception of one daughter, all either married royalty, achieved royal status in their own right or secured it for their children. One daughter married the brother of Alexander I of Russia; another, the King of Württemberg; a third married Britain's Duke of Kent, a brother of George IV. But it was Augusta's youngest son, Leopold, who was the real founder of the Saxe-Coburg fortunes. Leopold suffered a setback when his first wife, Princess Charlotte, daughter of George IV of Britain, died in childbirth in November 1817, just eighteen months after their marriage. But his circumstances were transformed when, having previously toyed with the idea of accepting the throne of Greece, he became King of the Belgians in 1831.
- Niall Ferguson, The War of the World: Twentieth-Century Conflict and the Descent of the West (2006), pp. 94-95
- It was said that he rejected the crown of Greece because it was too far from England.
- With the guidance of King Leopold and a handful of talented diplomats, Belgium marched toward the goal of international peace and cooperation with strides only temporarily deviated.
- They could not and would not understand how a German Prince belonging to one of the oldest families, could allow himself to be chosen King on the pretext of an open revolution.
- Early Belgian colonial Efforts: The long and fateful shadow of Leopold I, Page 177 Duke of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha Ernst II, Percy Andreae, and tr, Memoirs of Ernest II, Duke of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha (London: Remington & Co., 1888)
- Leopold was forced to admit his failure. He had been powerless to prevent the war, unable to fight in it, he had naturally been excluded from the peace conference. Young men with young ideas were coming on the scene and taking power from a king grown old.
- But Leopold was past all pleasures now. He was failing fast. Late in August, on her return from Germany, Victoria paid her final visit to him. On October 18th, Palmerston died, begging his grandson, Ashley, to read him the sixteenth clause in the Belgian Treaty; the clause that guaranteed the independence and neutrality of Belgium Leopold remarked that since his most stubborn enemy had gone, he was sure to follow soon.
- No one knows if Leopold I made Van Praet, or if Van Praet made Leopold I.
- All the King's Men' A search for the colonial ideas of some advisers and "accomplices" of Leopold II (1853-1892). (Hannes Vanhauwaert), 4. Viceroys without colonial aspirations? Jules Van Praet (1806-1887) Adolphe Dechamps (1807-1875) wrote of the very close relationship between the king and the private secretary as follows. BRONNE, C. Jules Van Praet, 23.
- Always tell the truth, even if it should make him jump out of his shoe.
- All the King's Men' A search for the colonial ideas of some advisers and "accomplices" of Leopold II (1853-1892). (Hannes Vanhauwaert), 4. Viceroys without colonial aspirations? Jules Van Praet (1806-1887) He certainly did not play his role of chief of staff to the king as that of a submissive slave: this is apparent from a preserved quote from him in Bruges in which he was determined to be his king. VIAENE, V. “Leopold I, Belgian Diplomacy and the Culture of the European Concert, 1831-1865”, 130. Van Praet then rebelled against the fact that Leopold I had already had several mistresses there, which according to the private secretary was detrimental to the popularity of the monarchy.
- A smile of self-satisfaction and pride shines on the face of every citizen, and he lifts his eye in thanks to God, who granted him the small but richly blessed Belgium as his birthplace.
- Our Heritage. Volume 23 (1980), The Belgian uprising by dr. Hans van der Hoeven H. Conscience, Description of the national jubilees... (Brussels, 1856), p. 7. The following quotes are taken from p. 18, 26, 34, 38.
- The discourse of those gentlemen whose clothing glitters with gold trim, of those rough workmen who have donned their Sunday smock, of those women whose long lace caps remind us of the Scheldt River; yes, even of the brussels schoolboys who so boldly push through the crowd. All... bless the name of the King, all speak of his unblemished faithfulness and infinite wisdom...
- Our Heritage. Volume 23 (1980), The Belgian uprising by dr. Hans van der Hoeven H. Conscience, Description of the national jubilees... (Brussels, 1856), p. 7. The following quotes are taken from p. 18, 26, 34, 38.
- In the midst of all this wealth we have seen something humble, something seemingly small, which nevertheless moved us deeply. It was in a dark alley of the lower town, in front of a little house so low that one could touch its roof with one's hand. An old woman, perhaps eighty years old, was decorating her hut. Her hands trembled with stiffness, her chest hygged with heaviness. She brought an image of the well-beloved King in front of her few windows, an image which might not have cost ten cents. Around it she hung a wreath of cut flowers and tinsel; under a strip of paper on which her waddling hand had written in almost illegible letters. Long live the King! On the other side a stone candlestick, to burn two small candles on it in the evening. This was the patriotic tribute of the poor decrepit widow! Perhaps such simplicity would make others smile; she snatched from us a tear of admiration and compassion...
- Our Heritage. Volume 23 (1980), The Belgian uprising by dr. Hans van der Hoeven H. Conscience, Description of the national jubilees... (Brussels, 1856), p. 7. The following quotes are taken from p. 18, 26, 34, 38.
See Also
[edit]External links
[edit]- Leopold I: Un Roi Protestant at the Chapelle royale" (Belgium)