ARTICLE: Antoine LECLÈRE, "Négocier avec son protecteur : la personnalité et l’action des diplomates de la principauté de Liège à Versailles à la fin du xviiie siècle"', Bulletin du Centre de Recherche du Château de Versailles 2024 [OPEN ACCESS]

 

(image source: openedition)

Joint PhD-candidate Antoine Leclère (ULiège/FNRS-VUB) published an article in the peer reviewed open access journal Bulletin du Centre de Recherche du Château de Versailles.

Abstract:

The imperial and ecclesiastical Principality of Liège, a state at the crossroads of European influences, was a central player in French and Austrian policy in the region roughly corresponding to present-day Belgium. During the reign of the Francophile prince-bishop François-Charles de Velbrück (1772-1784), the Principality turned towards France and entered into a series of economic, military and territorial negotiations. Faced with the scale of the task, the prince-bishop successively sent two diplomats to Versailles to maintain a direct channel with the French government, much to the regret of the Viennese court. This rapprochement continued under the reign of his successor, despite Vergennes’s reluctance to see a new diplomat from Liège installed at court. Based on the extensive diplomatic correspondence kept in the archives of La Courneuve, Liège, Brussels and Vienna, this article sheds light on the activity of these agents, which has been little studied to date, as well as their careers before and during their missions at the royal court, while highlighting the issues at stake in French foreign policy in the Austrian Low Countries shortly before the Revolution.

On the author:

Research fellow of the Fonds de la Recherche Scientifique FRS-FNRS in legal history and diplomatic history at ULiège, voluntary researcher in legal history at the Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Antoine Leclère holds a double master’s degree in history with a research and teaching focus (ULiège), and works on the history of constitutional ideas and diplomacy in the Principality of Liège and the Austrian Low Countries at the end of the eighteenth century. He has published several articles on diplomatic relations between the Principality of Liège and its European neighbours and on the imperial trials during the Liège Revolution. His master’s thesis was awarded the Prix du Corps Consulaire de la Province de Liège (2022), a scientific distinction awarded by both ULiège and the diplomatic corps. 

Read the article in open acces

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

CALL FOR PAPERS/APPEL A CONTRIBUTIONS: The Worlds of Pre-Modern Neutrality (ca. 1400-1800): Norms, Institutions and Practices (Antwerp: Conscience Heritage Library, 8-9 MAY 2025); DEADLINE 1 OCT 2024

SEMINAR: Michele SPANÒ (EHESS, Paris) on "Re-reading Pasukanis" [CORE Seminar in Legal Theory] (Brussels: VUB, 4 APR, 12:00) [HYBRID]