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Gérard Cooreman

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Gérard Cooreman - Wikipedia
Monarch
  
Albert I

Name
  
Gerard Cooreman

Role
  
Belgian Politician


Preceded by
  
Frans Schollaert

Party
  
Catholic Party

Political party
  
Catholic Party

Succeeded by
  
Leon Delacroix

Born
  
25 March 1852Ghent, Belgium (
1852-03-25
)

Died
  
December 2, 1926, Brussels, Belgium

Preceded by
  
Charles de Broqueville

What is Gérard Cooreman? Explain Gérard Cooreman, Define Gérard Cooreman, Meaning of Gérard Cooreman


Gérard François Marie Cooreman (25 March 1852 – 2 December 1926) was a Belgian Catholic Party politician.

Contents

Born in Ghent, Cooreman was trained in law, and practised as a lawyer, but was more active as a businessman and financier, and became involved with Catholic social groups.

In 1892 Cooreman was elected to the Belgian Senate, and from 1898 to 1914 he represented Ghent in the Belgian Chamber of Representatives, holding the position of leader of the Chamber from 1908 to 1912.

He held office as Labour and Industry minister for a short time in 1899, and on the fall of Frans Schollaert's government in 1911 he was asked to become the 21st Prime Minister of Belgium and form the new government, but declined. He was appointed an honorary Minister of State in 1912 and left politics in 1914 to become a director of the Société Générale de Belgique.

During the First World War, Cooreman followed the Belgian government into exile at Le Havre. On the fall of Charles de Broqueville, King Albert I of Belgium appointed Cooreman to lead a new government on 1 June 1918. With the end of the war in November 1918, Cooreman resigned as Prime Minister.

Honours

  •  Belgium: Minister of State, by Royal Decree.
  •  Belgium: Grand Cordon in the Order of Leopold, By royal Decree of 1918.
  •  France: Knight grand Cross in the Legion of Honour
  •  Sweden: Knight grand Cross in the Order of the Polar Star
  •  United Kingdom: Knight grand Cross in the Royal Victorian Order
  •  Japan: Knight grand Cross in the Imperial Order of the Rising Sun
  • Knight Commander in the Order of Pius IX
  • References

    Gérard Cooreman Wikipedia