Charles Le Hon

Charles Amé Joseph Graf Le Hon ( born January 10, 1792 in Tournai, † April 30, 1868 in Paris) was a südniederländischer, later Belgian statesman.

Le Hon practiced for completed legal studies as a lawyer in Liege, until he became a deputy in 1825 the Second Chamber of the States General. He joined the opponents of the government at that time, but without taking in the Belgian revolution of 1830 direct proportion.

Elected a member of the Belgian Congress, he was one in the same to the temperate doctrinaire, whose work was the construction of the new Kingdom of Belgium and its constitution. From 1831 to 1842 he was Belgian ambassador in Paris, 1836, he was elevated to the Belgian title of count, and from 1847 to 1857 he was a member of the Second Chamber. Since 1857 he lived again in Paris, and died there April 30, 1868.

His son, Louis Léopold Xavier Lehon 1851-1856 was Chief of Cabinet of Count Morny in Paris, 1856-1870 Member of the Legislative Body.

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  • Minister of State (Belgium )
  • Member of the Second Chamber of the States General
  • Member of the Chamber of Deputies ( Belgium)
  • Belgian Ambassador to France
  • Belgian
  • Born in 1792
  • Died in 1868
  • Man
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