Van den Wiele, Adolphe (1803-1843), politician
- Pessoa singular
- 1803-1843
Van den Wiele, Adolphe (1803-1843), politician
Van Halen, Juan (1788-1864), military officer
Van Mons, Jean-Baptiste (1765-1842), Belgian chemist and apothecary
Van den Steen, Louis (1813-1864), politician
Rodenbach, Constantin (1791-1846), politician and diplomat
Nerenburger, Guillaume-Adolphe (1804-1869), lieutenant general
Orts, Louis (1786-1856), lawyer and politician
Mellinet, Émile Henry (1798-1894), soldier
Mercy d’Argenteau, Comte François (1780-1869), diplomat
Mérode, Comte Frédéric de (1792-1830), politician
Mérode, Werner de (1797-1840), politician
Florisone de Siam, Auguste de (1793-1845), politician
Henot, Jean-François Henri Romain (1799-1865), judge and politician
Heptia, Lambert Joseph (1798-1858), judge and politician
Pinnoy, Joseph (1808–1866), painter
Kervyn, Henri (1809-1894), politician
Cornez de Grez, Comte Ferdinand (1797-1869), politician
Madou, Jean-Baptiste (1796-1877), painter and lithographer
Jay, Anthony Sir (1930 – 2016), writer and broadcaster
Born in Paddington, London, the son of Ernest Jay, a character actor, and Catherine. He was educated at St Paul's School and Magdalene College, Cambridge, graduating with first-class honours in Classics and comparative philology. With Jonathan Lynn, he co-wrote the British political comedies Yes Minister and Yes, Prime Minister (1980–88). He was knighted in the 1988 New Years Honours.
Little is known about the French clockmaker and bronzier Raingo, who almost certainly apprenticed in Paris circa 1790. He moved to Belgium, circa 1800, probably for political reasons, and from the signatures on some of his clocks, it is known that he worked in Gand and Tournay. Later, in 1823, he is recorded as being clockmaker to the duc de Chartres. The company became Raingo Frères in 1825 and thereafter clocks bear their signature with various Paris addresses. They had a workshop workshop on Rue Vielle du Temple in 1829, and from 1840 to 1850 in Rue de Saintonge. After 1860 they moved again back to Rue Vielle du Temple where they started sell bronzes. noted for the quality of their gilding and chasing. The firm exhibited at many of the important exhibitions of the second half of the 19th century, including London in 1862, and was known for the fine quality of its ormolu in particular their superb gilding and chasing.