Леопольд III из Бельгии
Леопольд III | |||||
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![]() Леопольд III в 1934 году | |||||
Король бельгийцев | |||||
Правление | 23 февраля 1934 - 16 июля 1951 г. | ||||
Предшественник | Альберт я | ||||
Преемник | Баудуин | ||||
Регент | Принц Чарльз (1944–1950) Принц Баудуин (1950–1951) | ||||
Главные министры | Смотрите список | ||||
Рожденный | Брюссель , Бельгия | 3 ноября 1901 г. ||||
Умер | 25 сентября 1983 г. Woluwe-Saint-Lambert , Брюссель, Бельгия | (в возрасте 81 года) ||||
Погребение | |||||
Супруги | |||||
Проблема | |||||
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Дом | Сакс-Кобург и Гота (до 1920 года) Бельгия (с 1920) | ||||
Отец | Альберт I из Бельгии | ||||
Мать | Элизабет Бавария | ||||
Религия | Римско -католицизм | ||||
Подпись | ![]() |
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Леопольд III [ А ] (3 ноября 1901 г. - 25 сентября 1983 г.) был королем бельгийцев с 23 февраля 1934 года до своего отречения 16 июля 1951 года. Во время начала Второй мировой войны Леопольд попытался сохранить бельгийский нейтралитет, но после вторжения Германии в мае 1940 года , Он сдал свою страну, заработав ему большую враждебность, как дома, так и за рубежом.
Закон Леопольда был объявлен неконституционным премьер-министром Хьюбертом Пьерлотом и его кабинетом, которые переехали в Лондон, чтобы сформировать правительство в избытке , в то время как Леопольд и его семья были помещены под домашний арест. В 1944 году они были переведены в Германию, а затем в Австрии, прежде чем их освободить американцы, но в течение нескольких лет запретили возвращению в Бельгию, где его брат принц Чарльз, граф Фландрии , был объявлен регентом. Возможное возвращение Леопольда на родину в 1950 году почти вызвало гражданскую войну с серьезными призывами к сепаратистской республике в Валлонии . Под давлением правительства он отрекся от своего сына Баудуина в июле 1951 года.
Первая жена Леопольда, Астрид из Швеции , погибла в результате аварии на дороге во время вождения в Швейцарии в августе 1935 года, когда общественность была очень оплачена. Леопольд, который ехал на машине, когда он попал в дерево, также был слегка ранен. Его морганический второй брак с Лилиан Баэлс в плену в 1941 году противоречит бельгийскому закону, который прилагает к тому, что гражданский брак должен произойти до религиозного брака, и ей никогда не разрешали титул королевы. Хотя Лилиан и Леопольд изначально планировали отложить свой гражданский брак до конца войны, Лилиан вскоре ожидал своего первого ребенка, требуя гражданского брака, который состоялся 6 декабря 1941 года. [ 1 ]
Ранняя жизнь и семья
[ редактировать ]Эта статья требует дополнительных цитат для проверки . ( ноябрь 2019 г. ) |
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Принц Леопольд родился в Брюсселе , первом ребенке принца Альберта, наследника бельгийского престола и его супруги, герцогиня Элизабет в Баварии . В 1909 году его отец стал царем бельгийцев, как Альберт I , а принц Леопольд стал герцогом Брабант.
В августе 1914 года, когда Бельгия была захвачена Германией, король Альберт позволил Леопольду, которому тогда было двенадцать лет, поступить в бельгийскую армию в качестве рядовой и борьбы в защиту королевства. Однако в 1915 году, когда Бельгия почти полностью заняла немцы, Леопольд был отправлен в Итон -колледж , в то время как его отец сражался во Франции. [ 2 ] [ 3 ]
После войны, в 1919 году, герцог Брабант посетил старую миссию и семинарию Святого Антония в Санта -Барбаре, штат Калифорния .
4 ноября 1926 года он женился на принцессе Астрид из Швеции на гражданской церемонии в Стокгольме , за которой последовала религиозная церемония в Брюсселе 10 ноября. Брак заставил троих детей:
- Принцесса Хосефина Шарлотта из Бельгии , родившаяся в Королевском дворце Брюссельской, 11 октября 1927 года, Гранд Герцогиня Консорт Люксембурга . Она вышла замуж 9 апреля 1953 года за принца Джин , позже великого княжества Люксембурга. Она умерла в замке Фишбах 10 января 2005 года.
- Принц Баудуин из Бельгии , герцог Брабант , граф Хайнаут , который стал пятым королем бельгийцев в качестве Баудуина , родившегося в Стуйвенберге на окраине Брюсселя 7 сентября 1930 года и умер в Мотриле в Андалусии , Испания , 31 июля 1993 г. Полем
- Принц Альберт из Бельгии, принц Лиеж , который стал шестым королем бельгийцев в качестве Альберта II , родившегося в Стуйвенберге 6 июня 1934 года. Он отрекся от отрекания в июле 2013 года.
29 августа 1935 года, когда король и королева ехали по извилистым, узким дорогам возле их виллы в Кюснахте Ам Риги , Швис , Швейцария, на берегах озера Люцерн , Леопольд потерял контроль над автомобилем, который погрузился в озеро, убив Королева Астрид.
Леопольд женился на Лилиан Баэлс 11 сентября 1941 года на секретной религиозной церемонии, которая не была действительной в соответствии с законом Бельгии . Первоначально они намеревались подождать до окончания войны за гражданский брак, но, поскольку новая принцесса Рети вскоре ожидала своего первого ребенка, церемония состоялась 6 декабря 1941 года. У них было трое детей в общей сложности:
- Принц Александр из Бельгии , родившийся в Брюсселе 18 июля 1942 года. В 1991 году он женился на Леа Волмане , брак показал только семь лет спустя. Он умер 29 ноября 2009 года.
- Принцесса Мари-Кристин из Бельгии , родившаяся в Брюсселе 6 февраля 1951 года. Ее первый брак с Полом Друкером в 1981 году длился 40 дней (они были официально разведены в 1985 году). Позже она вышла замуж за Жан-Поль Гуржи в 1989 году.
- Princess Marie-Esméralda of Belgium, later Lady Moncada, born in Brussels on 30 September 1956. She became a journalist; her professional name is Esmeralda de Réthy. She married pharmacologist Sir Salvador Moncada in 1998. They have a son and a daughter.
World War II
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Leopold I |
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Children Grandchildren |
Leopold II |
Children |
Albert I |
Children |
Leopold III |
Children |
Baudouin |
Albert II |
Children Grandchildren |
Philippe |
Children |
When World War II broke out in September 1939, the French and British governments immediately sought to persuade Belgium to join them. Leopold and his government refused, maintaining Belgium's neutrality. Belgium considered itself well-prepared against a possible invasion by Axis forces, for during the 1930s the Belgian government had made extensive preparations to deter and repel an invasion of the country by Germany such as the one that had occurred in 1914.
On 10 May 1940, the Wehrmacht invaded Belgium. On the first day of the offensive, the principal Belgian strong point of Fort Eben-Emael was overwhelmed by a daring paratroop operation and the defensive perimeter thus penetrated before any French or British troops could arrive. After a short running battle that eventually involved the armies of all four belligerents, Belgium was overwhelmed by the numerically superior and better-prepared Germans.
Nevertheless, the Belgian perseverance prevented the British Expeditionary Force from being outflanked and cut off from the coast, enabling the evacuation from Dunkirk. Alan Brooke who commanded II Corps of the BEF thought that the 10th Belgian Division was in the wrong place and wanted to deploy north of Brussels to avoid "double-banking". He was advised by Roger Keyes to see the king, and on 12 May was "making progress in getting matters put right" in discussion with the king in English, but was interrupted (twice) by the king's advisor who spoke to the king in French (in which Brooke was fluent). The advisor was insistent that the Belgian division could not be moved and the BEF should be stopped further south and clear of Brussels; Brooke said he was not putting the whole case to the king; he found that arguing with the advisor was a sheer waste of time as he cared little about the BEF and most of his suggestions were "fantastic". The king's advisor Raoul Van Overstraeten was not the Chief of Staff, as Brooke had assumed - Van Overstraeten had refused that rank - but the king's aide-de-camp, with the rank of Major-General, and would not give up the Louvain front. The French liaison officer, General Champon, told Brooke that Van Overstraeten had ascendancy over the king and had taken control, so it was useless to see the Chief of Staff. Later (15 May) Brooke found that the BEF was likely to "have both flanks turned" with French defeats, and started withdrawal on 16 May.[4][5]
After his military surrender, Leopold (unlike Queen Wilhelmina of the Netherlands in a similar predicament) remained in Brussels to surrender to the victorious invaders, while his entire civil government fled to Paris and later to London.
Surrender and constitutional crisis
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On 24 May 1940, Leopold, having assumed command of the Belgian Army, met with his ministers for the final time. The ministers urged the king to leave the country with the government. Prime Minister Hubert Pierlot reminded him that capitulation was a decision for the Belgian government, not for the king, to make. The king indicated that he had decided to remain in Belgium with his troops, whatever the outcome. The ministers took this to mean that he would establish a new government under the direction of Hitler, potentially a treasonous act. Leopold thought that he might be seen as a deserter if he were to leave the country: "Whatever happens, I have to share the same fate as my troops."[citation needed] Leopold had long had a difficult and contentious relationship with his ministers, acting independently of government influence whenever possible, and seeking to circumvent and even limit the ministers' powers, while expanding his own.[citation needed]
French, British, and Belgian troops were encircled by German forces at the Battle of Dunkirk. Leopold notified King George VI by telegram on 25 May 1940 that Belgian forces were being crushed, saying "assistance which we give to the Allies will come to an end if our army is surrounded".[6] Two days later (27 May 1940), Leopold surrendered the Belgian forces to the Germans.
Prime Minister Pierlot spoke on French radio, saying that the king's decision to surrender went against the Belgian Constitution. The decision, he said, was not only a military decision but also a political decision, and the king had acted without his ministers' advice, and therefore contrary to the Constitution. Pierlot and his Government believed this created an impossibilité de régner:
Should the king find himself unable to reign, the ministers, having observed this inability, immediately summon the Chambers. Regency and guardianship are to be provided by the united Chambers.[7]
It was impossible, however, to summon the Belgian Chamber of Representatives or Belgian Senate at this time, or to appoint a regent. After the liberation of Belgium in September 1944, the government asked Leopold's brother, Prince Charles, to serve as regent.
After Leopold's surrender, the British press denounced him as "Traitor King" and "King Rat"; the Daily Mirror published a picture of Leopold with the headline "The Face That Every Woman Now Despises". A group of Belgian refugees in Paris placed a message at King Albert's statue denouncing his son as "your unworthy successor".[8] French Prime Minister Paul Reynaud accused Leopold of treason. Flemish historians Valaers and Van Goethem wrote that Leopold III had become "The scapegoat of Reynaud",[9] because Reynaud was likely already aware that the Battle of France was lost.
Leopold's surrender was also decried by Winston Churchill. In the House of Commons on 4 June 1940 he said:
At the last moment when Belgium was already invaded, King Leopold called upon us to come to his aid, and even at the last moment we came. He and his brave, efficient army, nearly half a million strong, guarded our left flank and thus kept open our only line of retreat to the sea. Suddenly, without prior consultation, with the least possible notice, without the advice of his ministers and upon his own personal act, he sent a plenipotentiary to the German Command, surrendered his army and exposed our whole flank and means of retreat.[10]
In 1949, Churchill's comments about the events of May 1940 were published in Le Soir (12 February 1949). Leopold's former secretary sent a letter to Churchill saying that Churchill was wrong. Churchill sent a copy of this letter to the King's brother, Prince Charles, via his secretary André de Staercke. In his own letter Churchill wrote,
With regards to King Leopold, the words which I used at the time in the House of Commons are upon record and after careful consideration I do not see any reason to change them (...) it seemed to me and many others that the king should have been guided by the advice of his ministers and should not have favoured a course which identified the capitulation of the Belgian Army with the submission of the Belgian State to Herr Hitler and consequently taking them out of the war. Happily this evil was averted, and in the end, all came right. I need scarcely say that nothing I said at the time could be interpreted as a reflection upon the personal courage or honour of King Leopold.[11]
De Staercke replied that Churchill was right: "The Prince, Monsieur Spaak [Belgian Foreign Minister Paul-Henri Spaak] and I read your text, which states the precise truth and seems perfect to us."[12]
Belgian historian Francis Balace wrote that capitulation was inevitable because the Belgian Army was not able to fight any longer against the German army.[13] Even Churchill admitted that their position was perilous. In a telegram to Field Marshal Lord Gort on 27 May, only one day before the Belgian capitulation, he wrote, "We are asking them to sacrifice themselves for us."[14]
After the fall of France
[edit]Upon Leopold's surrender, the government ministers left for exile, mostly in France. When France fell at the end of June 1940, several ministers sought to return to Belgium. They made an overture to Leopold but were rebuffed.
Because of the great popularity of the king, and the unpopularity of the civil government from the middle of 1940,[15] the government crisis persisted.[citation needed]
On 2 August 1940, several ministers conferred in Le Perthus in France near the Spanish border. Prime Minister Pierlot and Foreign Minister Spaak were persuaded to go to London, but they were able to start out for London only at the end of August and could travel only via neutral Spain and Portugal. When they reached Spain, they were arrested and detained by the regime of Francisco Franco; they finally arrived in London on 22 October.[citation needed]
Meeting with Hitler
[edit]Leopold rejected cooperation with the government of Nazi Germany and refused to administer Belgium in accordance with its dictates; thus, the Germans implemented a military government. Leopold attempted to assert his authority as monarch and head of the Belgian government, although he was a prisoner of the Germans. Despite his defiance of the Germans, the Belgian government-in-exile in London maintained that the king did not represent the Belgian government and was unable to reign. The Germans held him at first under house arrest at the Royal Castle of Laeken. Having since June 1940 desired a meeting with Adolf Hitler in respect of the situation of Belgian prisoners of war, Leopold III finally met with him on 19 November 1940. Leopold wanted to persuade Hitler to release Belgian POWs, and issue a public statement about Belgium's future independence. Hitler refused to speak about the independence of Belgium or issue a statement about it. In refusing to publish a statement, Hitler preserved the king from being seen as cooperating with Germany, and thus engaged in treasonous acts, which would likely have obliged him to abdicate upon the liberation of Belgium. "The [German] Chancellor saved the king two times."[16]
Second marriage
[edit]On 11 September 1941, while a prisoner of the Germans, Leopold secretly married Lilian Baels in a religious ceremony that had no validity under Belgian law, which required a religious marriage to be preceded by a legal or civil marriage. On 6 December, they were married under civil law. The reason for the out-of-order marriages was never officially made public.[citation needed]
Jozef-Ernest Cardinal van Roey, Archbishop of Mechelen, wrote an open letter to parish priests throughout the country announcing Leopold's second marriage on 7 December. The letter from the Cardinal revealed that the king's new wife would be known as Princesse de Réthy, not Queen Lilian, and that any children they had would have no claim to the throne. Leopold's new marriage damaged his reputation further in the eyes of many of his subjects.[citation needed]
The Political Testament
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The ministers made several efforts during the war to work out a suitable agreement with Leopold III. They sent Pierlot's son-in-law as an emissary to Leopold in January 1944, carrying a letter offering reconciliation from the Belgian government-in-exile. The letter never reached its destination, however, as the son-in-law was killed by the Germans en route. The ministers did not know what happened either to the message or the messenger and assumed that Leopold was ignoring them.[citation needed]
Leopold wrote his Political Testament in January 1944, shortly after this failed attempt at reconciliation. The testament was to be published in case he was not in Belgium when Allied forces arrived. The testament, which had an imperious and negative tone, considered the potential Allied movement into Belgium an "occupation", not a "liberation". It gave no credit to the active Belgian resistance. The Belgian government-in-exile in London did not like Leopold's demand that the government ministers involved in the 1940 crisis be dismissed. The Allies did not like Leopold's repudiation of the treaties concluded by the Belgian government-in-exile in London. The United States was particularly concerned about the economic treaty it had reached with the government-in-exile that enabled it to obtain Congolese uranium for America's secret atom bomb program, which had been developed for use against Germany (although, as it turned out, Germany surrendered before the first bomb was ready).[citation needed]
The Belgian government did not publish the Political Testament and tried to ignore it, partly for fear of increased support for the Belgian Communist party. When Pierlot and Spaak learned of its contents in September 1944, they were astonished and felt deceived by the king. According to André de Staercke, they were dismayed "in the face of so much blindness and unawareness".[17]
Churchill's reaction to the Testament was simply, "It stinks."[18] In a sentence inspired by a quote of Talleyrand about the Bourbons after the restoration of the French monarchy in 1815, Churchill declared, "He is like the Bourbons, he has learned nothing and forgotten nothing."[19]
Exile and abdication
[edit]Deportation and exile
[edit]On 7 June 1944, Heinrich Himmler ordered Leopold deported to Germany. Princess Lilian followed with the family in another car the following day under an SS armed guard. The Nazis interned the family in a fort at Hirschstein in Saxony from June 1944 to March 1945, and then at Strobl, Austria.[citation needed]
The British and American governments worried about the return of the king. Charles W. Sawyer, US Ambassador to Belgium, warned his government that an immediate return by the king to Belgium would "precipitate serious difficulties". "There are deep differences even in the royal family and the situation holds dynamite for Belgium and perhaps for Europe".[20] "The Foreign Office feared that an increasing minority in French-speaking Wallonia would demand either autonomy or annexation to France. Winant, the American Ambassador to the Court of Saint James's, reported a Foreign Office official's concern regarding irredentist propaganda in Wallonia."[21] and that "the French Ambassador in Brussels... is believed to have connived in the spreading of this propaganda".[22]
Leopold and his companions were released by members of the United States 106th Cavalry Group in early May 1945. Because of the controversy about his conduct during the war, Leopold III and his wife and children were unable to return to Belgium and spent the next six years in exile at Pregny-Chambésy near Geneva, Switzerland. A regency under his brother Prince Charles had been established by the Belgian legislature in 1944.[citation needed]
Resistance to Leopold's return
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Frans Henri van den Dungen, rector of the Free University of Brussels, wrote to Leopold on 25 June 1945 about concerns for serious disorder in Wallonia, "The question is not if the accusations against you are right or not [but that...] you are no longer a symbol of Belgian unity."[23]
Robert Gillon, the President of the Belgian Senate, told the king that there was a threat of serious disorder: "If there are only ten or twenty people killed, the situation would become terrible for the king."[24]
The president of the Belgian Chamber of Representatives, Frans Van Cauwelaert, was concerned that there would be a general strike in Wallonia and revolt in Liège. He wrote, "The country is not able to put down the disorders because of the insufficient forces of the police and a lack of weapons."[25]
In 1946, a commission of inquiry exonerated Leopold of treason. Nonetheless, controversy concerning his loyalty continued, and in 1950, a referendum was held about his future. Fifty-seven per cent of the voters favoured his return. The divide between Leopoldists and anti-Leopoldists ran along the lines of socialists and Walloons who were mostly opposed (42% favourable votes in Wallonia) and Christian Democrats and Flemish who were more in favour of the king (70% favourable votes in Flanders).[citation needed]
General strike of 1950
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On his return to Belgium on 22 July 1950, Leopold was met with one of the most violent general strikes in the history of Belgium. Three protesters were killed when the gendarmerie opened automatic fire upon the protesters. The country stood on the brink of civil war, and Belgian banners were replaced by Walloon flags in Liège and other municipalities of Wallonia.[26] To avoid tearing the country apart, and to preserve the monarchy, Leopold decided on 1 August 1950 to delegate his powers and duties to his 20-year-old son Baudouin, making the latter regent. He abdicated on 16 July 1951 in favour of Baudouin, being urged to do so by the government.[27][28]
Post-abdication life
[edit]Leopold and his wife continued to advise King Baudouin until the latter's marriage in 1960. Some Belgian historians, such as Vincent Delcorps, speak of there having been a "diarchy" during this period.[29]
In retirement, he followed his passion as an amateur social anthropologist and entomologist and travelled the world, collecting zoological specimens. Two species of reptiles are named after him, Gehyra leopoldi and Polemon leopoldi.[30]
Leopold died in 1983 in Woluwe-Saint-Lambert (Sint-Lambrechts-Woluwe) following emergency heart surgery. He was interred next to Queen Astrid in the royal vault at the Church of Our Lady of Laeken. Leopold's second wife, the Princess de Réthy, was later interred with them.[citation needed]
Notable royal descendants
[edit]As of 2023, two of Leopold's grandsons are reigning monarchs: Grand Duke Henri of Luxembourg since 2000, and King Philippe of Belgium since 2013.[citation needed]
Ancestry
[edit]Ancestors of Leopold III of Belgium |
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See also
[edit]- Crown Council of Belgium
- Kings of Belgium family tree
- Royal Trust
- List of covers of Time magazine (1930s), (1940s)
Notes
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Geais, Pierrick (12 February 2021). "L'histoire d'amour du roi Léopold III qui a scandalisé la Belgique". Vanity Fair (in French). Retrieved 26 July 2024.
- ^ Evelyn Graham, Albert, King of the Belgians
- ^ Roger Keyes, Outrageous Fortune: The Tragedy of Leopold III of the Belgians
- ^ Alan Brooke, Field Marshal Lord (2001). War Diaries 1939–1945. Phoenix Press. pp. 60, 61. ISBN 1-84212-526-5.
- ^ Fraser, David (1982). Alanbrooke. New York: Atheneum. pp. 152, 153. ISBN 0-689-11267-X.
- ^ The Miracle of Dunkirk, Walter Lord, New York 1982, p. 101, ISBN 0-670-28630-3.
- ^ Art. 93. The Constitution of Belgium, Coordinated text of 14 February 1994 (last updated 8 May 2007)."Constitution of Belgium". Archived from the original on 1 June 2013. Retrieved 10 December 2014.
- ^ Atkin, Ronald (1990). Pillar of Fire: Dunkirk 1940. Edinburgh: Birlinn Limited. pp. 140–141. ISBN 1-84158-078-3.
- ^ In Dutch De zondebok van Reynaud, from Velaers and Van Goethem, Leopold III, Lannoo, Tielt, 1994 ISBN 90-209-2387-0 , P. 264
- ^ Джин Стенгерс , Леопольд III и правительство , Duculot, Gembloux, 1980, p. 28 OCLC 7795577 . Текст цитируется на французском языке в этой книге, но оригинальный текст [ Цитация необходима ] цитируется здесь.
- ^ Письмо Черчилля де Сарке, цитируемое на английском языке в Андре де Старке, все это прошло как тень, мемуары о Регенстве и королевский вопрос , предисловие Жана Стенгерса , Расин, Брюссель, 2003, с. 279, ISBN 2-87386-316-1 .
- ^ Французский принц, мистер Спаак и я прочитали (...) ваш текст [который] выражает точную правду, кажется нам идеальным. Андре де Старке, все это прошло как тень, мемуары о Регенстве и королевский вопрос , там же, с. 280.
- ^ Фрэнсис Балас, заслуживает чести. Тени и ясности на бельгийской капитуляции в дни войны , № 4, Брюссель 1991, стр. 5–50, ISBN 2-87193-137-2 .
- ^ Балас, работа, с. 21
- Жан Стенгерс, Леопольд III и правительство, цитируют Opus, стр. 199–128.
- ^ Джин Стенгерс, работа, с. 161.
- ^ По -французски: в них доминировали ужас до такой большой слепоты и бессознательного, Андре де Старке, все это прошло как тень, мемуары о регентности и королевский вопрос , Opus citatus, p. 75
- ^ Джин Стенгерс, Леопольд III и правительство , Опус упомянул, с. 176
- ^ Джин Стенгерс, там же.
- ^ Департамент государственных департаментов США (USDSR), Национальный архив, 855,001 Леопольд, Сойер, госсекретарь Эдвард Р. Стеттиниус, 29 марта 1945 года.
- ^ «Джонатан Э. Хельмрейх, декан обучения (колледж Аллегейни), политика Соединенных Штатов и Королевский вопрос Бельгии (март - октябрь 1945 г.)» . [ Постоянная мертвая ссылка ]
- ^ USDSR IBIDEM, Winant to Stettinius, 26 мая 1945 года. Je Hemelreich добавляет: «В файле любой предполагаемой французской деятельности нет дальнейшего упоминания».
- ^ Голландский: не было вопросом о том, были ли обвинения, которые были представлены против вас оправданы [ но ... ] вы больше не символ бельгийского единства. Velaers и Van Goethem Leopold III , Lannooo, Tielt, 1994, ISBN 90-209-2387-0 , P. 955.
- ^ Голландский: Хотя только десять или двадцать человек были убиты, ситуация короля быстро станет ужасной. Velaers и Van Goethem (1994), p. 968.
- ^ Голландский: Страна не могла сдержать сопротивление из -за недостаточной полицейской власти нехватки оружия. Velaers и Van Goethem (1994), p. 969.
- ^ Philippe Destatte, L'Adient Wallonne , Institut Destriee, Charleroi, 1997, p. 235, ISBN 2-87035-000-7 .
- ^ Жюль Герард-Либоис , Хосе Готилич, Леопольд III, из 40 à l'Da , Pol-His, Brussels, 1991, pp. 304–306, ISBN 2-87311-005-8 .
- ^ Els Witte, Jan Craeybeckx, Alain Meynen, Политическая история Бельгии: с 1830 года рассказал о вынужденном порекле , академических и научных издателях, Брюссель, 2009, с. 244 ISBN 978-90-5487-517-8 .
- ^ La Couronne et la Rose, Baudouin и The Socialist World 1950–1974 , Le Cri, Брюссель, 2010, ISBN 978-2-87106-537-1 .
- ^ Beolens, bo; Уоткинс, Майкл; Грейсон, Майкл (2011). Эпоним Словарь рептилий . Балтимор: издательство Джона Хопкинса. XIII + 296 стр. ISBN 978-1-4214-0135-5 . («Леопольд», стр. 155).
- Уинстон Черчилль, речь в Палату общин, произнесенную 4 июня 1940 года («Мы будем сражаться на пляжах ...»)
Внешние ссылки
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- Официальная биография на сайте бельгийской королевской семьи
- Наш Королевский гость: король Леопольд в Англии (1937 г.) , кинохроника 1937 года, государственный визит, British Pathé британский канал YouTube
- Джин Стенгерс , Леопольд III и правительство: две бельгийские политики 1940 года . Duculot, 1980
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