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See also: born at Huy on the 3rd of See also: January 1794
.
He received his early See also: education from an See also: uncle who was parish See also: priest of Hannut, and became a clerk
.
By dint of See also: economy he raised See also: money to study See also: law at Liege, and was called to the See also: bar in 1819
.
At Liege he formed a fast friendship with See also: Charles
See also: Rogier and See also: Paul Devaux, in conjunction with whom he founded at Liege in 1824 the Mathieu Laensbergh, afterwards Le politique, 'a journal which helped to unite the Catholic party with the Liberals in their opposition to the See also: ministry, without manifesting any open disaffection to the Dutch See also: government
.
See also: Lebeau had not contemplated the separation of See also: Holland and Belgium, but his
See also: hand was forced by the revolution
.
He was sent by his native See also: district to the See also: National Congress, and became See also: minister of See also: foreign affairs in See also: March 1831 during the
See also: interim regency of Surlet de Chokier
.
By proposing the election of Leopold of Saxe-See also: Coburg as See also: king of the Belgians he secured a benevolent attitude on the
See also: part of See also: Great Britain, but the restoration to Holland of part of the duchies of See also: Limburg and Luxemburg provoked a heated opposition to the treaty of See also: London, and Lebeau was accused of treachery to Belgian interests
.
He resigned the direction of foreign affairs on the accession of King Leopold, but in the next See also: year became minister of See also: justice
.
He was elected deputy for Brussels in 1833, and retained his seat until 1848
.
Differences with the king led to his retirement in 1834
.
He was subsequently governor of the province of See also: Namur (1838), ambassador to the See also: Frankfort See also: diet (1839), and in 1840 he formed a See also: short-lived Liberal ministry
.
From this See also: time he held no office of See also: state, though he continued his energetic support of liberal and See also: anti-clerical See also: measures
.
He died at Huy on the 19th of March 1865 . Lebeau published La Belgique depuis 1847 (Brussels, 4 vols., 1852), Lettres aux electeurs belges (8 vols., Brussels, 1853-1856) . His Souvenirs personnels et See also: correspondence diplomatique 1824—1841 (Brussels, 1883) were edited by A
.
Freson
.
See an article by A
.
Freson in the Biographic nationale de Belgique; and T
.
Juste, See also: Joseph Lebeau (Brussels, 1865)
.
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