Société Belge d'Études Coloniales
Appearance
The Société d'Études Coloniales (lit. 'Society for Colonial Studies') was a society that promoted the creation and maintenance of Belgian overseas colonies which was established in 1894. For some years it was headquartered in the Hôtel Ravenstein in Brussels (along with similar groups such as the Cercle Africain and the Ligue Nationale pour l'Oeuvre Africain).[1] By 1902 it had a library.
Auguste Couvreur served briefly as its first chairman.[2] Other members included Alexandre Halot . "Of the twenty-nine founding members of the Société, fourteen had civil functions (eleven were lawyers), nine were intellectuals,...five were soldiers,...one was a businessman.[1]
As of 2008, the Society's archives were reported to have been lost.[1]
See also
[edit]- Institut Royal Colonial Belge (est. 1928)
References
[edit]- ^ a b c Vincent Viaene (2008). "King Leopold's Imperialism and the Origins of the Belgian Colonial Party, 1860–1905". Journal of Modern History. 80 (4): 741–790. doi:10.1086/591110. JSTOR 10.1086/591110. S2CID 144513498.
- ^ Couttenier 2005.
Bibliography
[edit]- issued by the society
- Bulletin de la Société d'études coloniales (in French), OCLC 18922350 – via HathiTrust 1894-
- Albert Donny (1896–1897). Manuel du voyageur et du résident au Congo (in French). 1900 ed.
- Bibliotheque, Société d'Études Coloniales: Catalogue (in French), Brussels: A. Lesigne, 1902 via Google Books
- about the society
- Maarten Couttenier (2005). Congo tentoongesteld: Een geschiedenis van de Belgische antropologie en het museum van Tervuren (1882–1925 (in Dutch). Leuven. pp. 121–124. ISBN 9033457709.
Société d'Études Coloniales
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: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
External links
[edit]- WorldCat. Société d'études coloniales (Belgium)
- Archive Société d'études coloniales, Royal museum of central Africa