The Malines Congresses were a series of Catholic Congresses held in Mechelen (French : Malines), Belgium, with the purpose of bringing together Catholics with leading roles in all walks of life, on the model of the German Katholikentage . [1] The first three, held in 1863, 1864 and 1867, had considerable cultural, social and political impact. [2] They lay at the foundation of the future development of a Catholic Party in Belgian politics, [3] as well as a nascent Social Catholicism. [4] The first congress saw the establishment of the Guild of Saint Thomas and Saint Luke, which shaped Belgian Gothic Revival architecture and art education. [5] The main organiser of the first three congresses was Édouard Ducpétiaux, who died in 1868. [6] They were hosted in Mechelen by the archbishop, Engelbert Sterckx, who died in December 1867, [4] although much of the practical management fell to Isidore-Joseph du Rousseaux, a teacher at the junior seminary where many of the sessions were held. [7]
Further congresses were held in 1891, 1909, [8] and 1936.
The first Catholic Congress in Mechelen was held from 18 to 22 August 1863. [1] The main speakers invited were Cardinal Wiseman, who spoke on the condition of Catholics in England, and Charles de Montalembert, who spoke on the principle of religious liberty. [9]
The second congress was held from 29 August to 3 September 1864. [1] For the occasion, an exhibition of ecclesiastical art was organised in Mechelen through to the end of September. [10]
The third congress was held from 2 to 7 September 1867. [1] It led directly to the 1868 founding of a Federation of Belgian Catholic Workers' Associations (a precursor of the Confederation of Christian Trade Unions). [11]
The 1891 congress, held 8-12 September, followed the publication of Pope Leo XIII's encyclical on social issues, Rerum Novarum , discussion of which dominated proceedings. [12] There was a strong attempt from the political right to relativise or minimise the encyclical's impact and "correct" the leftwards tendency of the Social Congresses that had been held in Liège in 1886, 1887 and 1890. [13] Proceedings were published in 1892 under the title Assemblée générale des Catholiques de Belgique: session de 1891. [14] At the congress, Désiré-Joseph Mercier (the future cardinal) presented the work of the Higher Institute of Philosophy, founded in 1889.
Concerned about the development of Christian Democracy and the generation of policy ideas outside political circles, the Catholic Party then in power insisted that the fifth congress be strictly apolitical. [15] It brought together Catholic trade unionists, catechists, sodalities, confraternities, women's organisations, educators, and representatives of agricultural co-operatives, who reported to one another on their membership and activities under the broad concept of Catholic Action and dedicated to Christ the King. [16] The fifth congress was later regarded as having been less dominated by political and intellectual elites than previous congresses had been. [17]
The papers delivered to the sixth congress, held in 1936, were published in French and in Dutch as an eight-volume series entitled Actes du VIe Congrès catholique de Malines and Verhandelingen van het VIe Katholiek Kongres van Mechelen respectively.
On 10 September, Georges Lemaître delivered an address on Catholic culture and exact science. [18]
Developments in higher education for women were discussed by Marie Haps. [19]
The Catholic University of Leuven or Louvain was founded in 1834 in Mechelen as the Catholic University of Belgium, and moved its seat to the town of Leuven in 1835, changing its name to Catholic University of Leuven. In 1968, it was split into two universities, the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven and the Université catholique de Louvain, following tensions between the Dutch and French-speaking student bodies.
UCLouvain is Belgium's largest French-speaking university and one of the oldest in Europe. It is located in Louvain-la-Neuve, which was expressly built to house the university, and Brussels, Charleroi, Mons, Tournai and Namur. Since September 2018, the university uses the branding UCLouvain, replacing the acronym UCL, following a merger with Saint-Louis University, Brussels.
Godefroid Kurth (1847–1916) was a Belgian historian and pioneering Christian democrat. He is known for his histories of the city of Liège in the Middle Ages and of Belgium, his Catholic account of the formation of modern Europe in Les Origines de la civilisation moderne, and his defence of the medieval guild system.
Pierre François Xavier de Ram, was a Belgian papal prelate, canon and historian, best known for being the first rector of the new Catholic University of Belgium, founded in Mechelen in 1834, which in 1835 moved to Leuven as the Catholic University of Leuven.
Désiré Félicien François Joseph Mercier was a Belgian Catholic prelate who served as Archbishop of Mechelen from 1906 until his death in 1926. A Thomist scholar, he had several of his works translated into other European languages. He was known for his book, Les origines de la psychologie contemporaine (1897). He was elevated to the cardinalate in 1907.
Engelbert Sterckx was the Archbishop of Mechelen, Belgium, from 1832 to 1867.
The State University of Leuven was a university founded in 1817 in Leuven in Belgium, then part of the United Kingdom of the Netherlands. It was distinct from the Old University of Leuven (1425-1797) and from the Catholic University of Leuven, founded in 1834, which moved from Mechlin to Leuven after the State University had been closed in 1835.
The Old University of Leuven is the name historians give to the university, or studium generale, founded in Leuven, Brabant, in 1425. The university was closed in 1797, a week after the cession to the French Republic of the Austrian Netherlands and the principality of Liège by the Treaty of Campo Formio.
Antoine Édouard Ducpétiaux was a Belgian journalist and social reformer.
Marie Haps was a Luxembourg-born Belgian educationalist, the founder of what subsequently became the Institut Libre Marie Haps and the Marie Haps Faculty of Translation and Interpreting.
This is a timeline of Belgian history, including important legal and territorial changes and political events in Belgium and its predecessor states. To read about the background to these events, see History of Belgium. See also the list of Belgian monarchs.
Arthur Théodore Verhaegen was a Gothic Revival Belgian architect and a politician of the Catholic Party, one of the founders of Belgian Christian democracy. He was a grandson of the politician and lawyer Pierre-Théodore Verhaegen.
Bruno Destrée (1867-1919) was a Benedictine monk, a French-language poet, and a Belgian literary critic. He was the brother of the politician Jules Destrée.
Alfred Cauchie was a professor of history at the Catholic University of Leuven.
Events in the year 1835 in Belgium.
Events in the year 1864 in Belgium.
Isidore-Joseph du Rousseaux (1826–1897) was a bishop of Tournai in Belgium.
Aloïs Jacques Victor Marie Simon (1897–1964) was a Belgian historian and professor at the University Faculty of Saint-Louis in Brussels, with a particular interest in 19th-century Belgian Church history from the perspective of Church–State relations and international diplomacy.
Saint Catherine's Church is a Catholic parish church in Brussels, Belgium. It is dedicated to Saint Catherine.
Luc Terlinden is a Belgian Catholic prelate who has served as Archbishop of Mechelen-Brussels, Primate of Belgium and head of the Military Ordinariate of Belgium since September 2023. He is president of the Episcopal Conference of Belgium and the second-youngest Primate of Belgium.