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Roi des Belges

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Roi-des-Belges

Roi-des-Belges or tulip phaeton was a popular car body style for luxury motor vehicles in the early 1900s. It was a double phaeton with exaggerated bulges suggestive of a tulip.

The Roi-des-Belges style began with a 1901 40 hp Panhard et Levassor with a Rothschild body commissioned by Leopold II of Belgium, Roi des Belges. The style was suggested by Leopold's mistress, Cléo de Mérode.

The style and the name Roi-des-Belges were used on many makes of the time, including Mototri Contal, Spyker, and Renault and by other coachwork builders.

References

Roi-des-Belges Wikipedia


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