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Leopold II of Belgium

Leopold II (French: Léopold Louis Philippe Marie Victor, Dutch: Leopold Lodewijk Filips Maria Victor; 9 April 1835 – 17 December 1909) was the second King of the Belgians from 1865 to 1909, and the founder and sole owner of the Congo Free State from 1885 to 1908.

Leopold II
Royal portrait, c. 1900
King of the Belgians
Reign17 December 1865 – 17 December 1909
PredecessorLeopold I
SuccessorAlbert I
Prime ministers
Sovereign of the Congo Free State
Reign1 July 1885 – 15 November 1908
Governors-general
Born(1835-04-09)9 April 1835
Brussels, Belgium
Died17 December 1909(1909-12-17) (aged 74)
Laeken, Brussels, Belgium
Burial
Spouses
(m. 1853; died 1902)
Caroline Lacroix (disputed)
(m. 1909)
Issue
Detail
Names
  • Dutch: Leopold Lodewijk Filips Maria Victor
  • French: Léopold Louis Philippe Marie Victor
  • German: Leopold Ludwig Philipp Maria Viktor
HouseSaxe-Coburg and Gotha
FatherLeopold I of Belgium
MotherLouise of Orléans
Signature

Born in Brussels as the second but eldest-surviving son of King Leopold I and Queen Louise, Leopold succeeded his father to the Belgian throne in 1865 and reigned for 44 years until his death, the longest reign of a Belgian monarch to date. He died without surviving legitimate sons. The current Belgian king descends from his nephew and successor, Albert I. He is popularly referred to as the Builder King (Dutch: Koning-Bouwheer, French: Roi-Bâtisseur) in Belgium in reference to the great number of buildings, urban projects and public works he commissioned.

Leopold was the founder and sole owner of the Congo Free State, a private project undertaken on his own behalf as a personal union with Belgium. He used Henry Morton Stanley to help him lay claim to the Congo, the present-day Democratic Republic of the Congo. At the Berlin Conference of 1884–1885, the colonial nations of Europe authorised his claim and committed the Congo Free State to him. Leopold ran the Congo by using the mercenary Force Publique for his personal gain. He extracted a fortune from the territory, initially by the collection of ivory and, after a rise in the price of natural rubber in the 1890s, by forced labour from the native population to harvest and process rubber.

Leopold's administration of the Congo Free State was characterized by atrocities and systematic brutality, including forced labour, torture, murder, kidnapping, and the amputation of the hands of men, women, and children when the quota of rubber was not met. In one of the first uses of the term, George Washington Williams described the practices of Leopold's administration of the Congo Free State as "crimes against humanity" in 1890.[1] These and other facts were established during Leopold's rule by eyewitness testimony, by on-site inspection from an international commission of inquiry, by the investigative journalism and activism of E. D. Morel, and by the 1904 Casement Report.

While it has proven difficult to accurately estimate the pre-colonial population and the amount by which it changed under the Congo Free State, estimates for the Congolese population decline during Leopold's rule range from 1 million to 15 million. The causes of the decline included epidemic disease, a reduced birth rate, and violence and famine caused by the regime.[2][3][4][5]: 225–233 

In 1908, the reports of deaths and abuse, along with pressure from the Congo Reform Association and other international groups, induced the Belgian Government to take over the administration of the Congo from Leopold during the penultimate year of his rule. The Congo Free State was thus reconstituted as a new territory, the Belgian Congo.

Early life edit

 
Leopold as a child. Painting by Franz Xaver Winterhalter (1844)

Leopold was born in Brussels on 9 April 1835, the second child of the reigning Belgian monarch, Leopold I, and of his second wife, Louise, the daughter of King Louis Philippe of France.[6] The French Revolution of 1848 forced his maternal grandfather, Louis Philippe, to flee to the United Kingdom.[7] Louis Philippe died two years later, in 1850. Leopold's fragile mother was deeply affected by the death of her father and her health deteriorated. She died of tuberculosis that same year, when Leopold was 15 years old.[8]

Leopold's sister Charlotte became Empress Carlota of Mexico in the 1860s. The British monarch at the time, Queen Victoria, was Leopold II's first cousin, as was Victoria's husband, Prince Albert, since Leopold's father, Albert's father, Duke Ernest I of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, and Victoria's mother, the then Duchess of Kent, were all siblings.[9]

Marriage and family edit

 
Leopold as a younger man in the uniform of the Grenadiers (Portrait by Nicaise de Keyser)

At the age of 18, Leopold married Marie Henriette of Austria, a cousin of Emperor Franz Joseph I of Austria and granddaughter of the late Holy Roman Emperor Leopold II, on 22 August 1853 in Brussels. Lively and energetic, Marie Henriette endeared herself to the people by her character and benevolence. Her beauty earned her the sobriquet "The Rose of Brabant". She was also an accomplished artist and musician.[10] She was passionate about horseback riding, to the point that she would care for her horses personally. Some joked about this "marriage of a stableman and a nun",[11] the latter referring to the shy and withdrawn Leopold.

The marriage produced four children: three daughters and one son, Prince Leopold, Duke of Brabant. The younger Leopold died in 1869 at the age of nine from pneumonia after falling into a pond. His death was a source of great sorrow for King Leopold. The marriage became unhappy, and the couple separated after a last attempt to have another son, a union that resulted in the birth of their last daughter, Clementine. Marie Henriette retreated to Spa in 1895, and died there in 1902.[12]

 
A political cartoon pillorying Leopold's affair with Caroline Lacroix.
The Abbot: Oh! Sire, at your age?
The King: You should try it for yourself!

Leopold had many mistresses. In 1899, in his 65th year, Leopold took as a mistress Caroline Lacroix, a 16-year-old French prostitute, and they remained together until his death ten years later.[13] Leopold lavished upon her large sums of money, estates, gifts, and a noble title, Baroness de Vaughan. Owing to these gifts and the unofficial nature of their relationship, their affair ironically lost Leopold more popularity in Belgium than any of his crimes in the Congo.[14] Caroline bore two sons, Lucien Philippe Marie Antoine, Duke of Tervuren, and Philippe Henri Marie François, Count of Ravenstein. Their second son was born with a deformed hand, leading a cartoon to depict Leopold holding the child surrounded by Congolese corpses with their hands sliced off: the caption said "Vengeance from on high".[15][16] They married secretly in a religious ceremony five days before his death. Their failure to perform a civil ceremony rendered the marriage invalid under Belgian law. After the king's death, it soon emerged that he had left his widow a large fortune in Congo securities, only some of which the Belgian government and Leopold's three estranged daughters were able to win back.[17]

Early political career edit

As Leopold's older brother, the earlier crown prince Louis Philippe, had died the year before Leopold's birth, Leopold was heir to the throne from his birth. When he was 9 years old, Leopold received the title of Duke of Brabant, and was appointed a sub-lieutenant in the army. He served in the army until his accession in 1865, by which time he had reached the rank of lieutenant-general.[10]

Leopold's public career began on his attaining the age of majority in 1855, when he became a member of the Belgian Senate. He took an active interest in the senate, especially in matters concerning the development of Belgium and its trade,[10] and began to urge Belgium's acquisition of colonies. Leopold traveled abroad extensively from 1854 to 1865, visiting India, China, Egypt, and the countries on the Mediterranean coast of Africa. His father died on 10 December 1865, and Leopold took the oath of office on 17 December, at the age of 30.[12]

Domestic reign edit

 
Leopold II at his accession to the throne

Leopold became king in 1865. He explained his goal for his reign in an 1888 letter addressed to his brother, Prince Philippe, Count of Flanders: "the country must be strong, prosperous, therefore have colonies of her own, beautiful and calm."[18]

Leopold's reign was marked by a number of major political developments. The Liberals governed Belgium from 1857 to 1880, and during its final year in power legislated the Frère-Orban Law of 1879. This law created free, secular, compulsory primary schools supported by the state and withdrew all state support from Roman Catholic primary schools. The Catholic Party obtained a parliamentary majority in 1880, and four years later restored state support to Catholic schools. In 1885, various socialist and social democratic groups drew together and formed the Labour Party. Increasing social unrest and the rise of the Labour Party forced the adoption of universal male suffrage in 1893.

 
Leopold II, possibly by Nadar, c. 1865

During Leopold's reign other social changes were enacted into law. Among these were the right of workers to form labour unions and the abolition of the livret d'ouvrier, an employment record book. Laws against child labour were passed. Children younger than 12 were not allowed to work in factories, children younger than 16 were not allowed to work at night, and women younger than 21 years old were not allowed to work underground. Workers gained the right to be compensated for workplace accidents and were given Sundays off.

The first revision of the Belgian Constitution came in 1893. Universal male suffrage was introduced, though the effect of this was tempered by plural voting. The eligibility requirements for the Senate were reduced, and elections would be based on a system of proportional representation, which continues to this day. Leopold pushed strongly to enable a royal referendum, whereby the king would have the power to consult the electorate directly on an issue, and use his veto according to the results of the referendum. The proposal was rejected, as it would have given the king the power to override the elected government. Leopold was so disappointed that he considered abdication.[19]

Leopold emphasized military defence as the basis of neutrality, and strove to make Belgium less vulnerable militarily. He achieved the construction of defensive fortresses at Liège, at Namur and at Antwerp. During the Franco-Prussian War, he managed to preserve Belgium's neutrality in a period of unusual difficulty and danger.[10] Leopold pushed for a reform in military service, but he was unable to obtain one until he was on his deathbed. The Belgian army was a combination of volunteers and a lottery, and it was possible for men to pay for substitutes for service. This was replaced by a system in which one son in every family would have to serve in the military.

Builder King edit

 
The Cinquantenaire/Jubelpark memorial arcade and museums in Brussels, commissioned by Leopold II
 
Cartoon depicting Leopold II laying the first stone of the Basilica of the Sacred Heart in Brussels

Leopold commissioned a great number of buildings, urban projects and public works, largely with the profits generated from exploitation of the Congo Free State. These projects earned him the epithet of "Builder King" (Dutch: Koning-Bouwheer, French: Roi-Bâtisseur). The public buildings were mainly in Brussels, Ostend, Tervuren and Antwerp, and include the Parc du Cinquantenaire/Jubelpark (1852-1880), memorial arcade and complex, the Basilica of the Sacred Heart (1905-1969)[20] and Duden Park in Brussels (1881); the Hippodrome Wellington racetrack (1883), the Royal Galleries and Maria Hendrikapark in Ostend (1902); the Royal Museum for Central Africa and its surrounding park in Tervuren (1898); and Antwerpen-Centraal railway station in Antwerp (1895–1905).

In addition to his public works, Leopold acquired and built numerous private properties for himself inside and outside Belgium. He expanded the grounds of the Royal Castle of Laeken, and built the Royal Greenhouses, as well as the Japanese Tower and the Chinese Pavilion near the palace (now the Museums of the Far East). In the Ardennes, his domains consisted of 6,700 hectares (17,000 acres) of forests and agricultural lands and the châteaux of Ardenne, Ciergnon, Fenffe, Villers-sur-Lesse and Ferage. He also built important country estates on the French Riviera, including the Villa des Cèdres and its botanical garden, and the Villa Leopolda.

Thinking of the future after his death, Leopold did not want the collection of estates, lands and heritage buildings he had privately amassed to be scattered among his daughters, each of whom was married to a foreign prince. In 1900, he created the Royal Trust, by means of which he donated most of his properties to the Belgian nation in perpetuity, and arranged for the royal family to continue using them after his death.

Attempted assassination edit

On 15 November 1902, Italian anarchist Gennaro Rubino attempted to assassinate Leopold, who was riding in a royal cortege from a ceremony at Church of St. Michael and St. Gudula in memory of his recently deceased wife, Marie Henriette. After Leopold's carriage passed, Rubino fired three shots at the procession. The shots missed Leopold but almost killed the king's grand marshal, Count Charles John d'Oultremont. Rubino was immediately arrested and subsequently sentenced to life imprisonment. He died in prison in 1918.

The king replied after the attack to a senator: "My dear senator, if fate wants me shot, too bad!" ("Mon cher Sénateur, si la fatalité veut que je sois atteint, tant pis"!)[21] After the failed regicide, the king's security was questioned, because the glass of the landaus was 2 cm thick. Elsewhere in Europe, the news of this assassination attempt was received with alarm. Heads of state and the pope sent telegrams to the king congratulating him for surviving the assassination attempt.

The Belgians rejoiced that the king was safe. Later in the day, in the Royal Theatre of La Monnaie before Tristan und Isolde was performed, the orchestra played The Brabançonne, which was sung loudly and ended with loud cheers and applause.[21]

Congo Free State edit

 
Map of the Congo Free State, c. 1890

Leopold was the founder and sole owner of the Congo Free State, a private project undertaken on his own behalf.[22]: 136  He used explorer Henry Morton Stanley to help him lay claim to the Congo, an area now known as the Democratic Republic of the Congo. At the Berlin Conference of 1884–1885, the colonial nations of Europe authorised his claim by committing the Congo Free State to improving the lives of the people.[22]: 122–124 

From the beginning, Leopold ignored these conditions. He ran the Congo using the mercenary Force Publique for his personal enrichment.[23] Failure to meet rubber collection quotas was punishable by death. Meanwhile, the Force Publique were required to provide the hand of their victims as proof when they had shot and killed someone, as it was believed that they would otherwise use the munitions (imported from Europe at considerable cost) for hunting. As a consequence, the rubber quotas were in part paid off in chopped-off hands. Leopold extracted a fortune from the Congo, initially by the collection of ivory, and after a rise in the price of rubber in the 1890s, by forced labour from the people to harvest and process rubber.

Shortly after the Brussels Anti-Slavery Conference (1889–1890), Leopold issued a new decree mandating that Africans in a large part of the Free State could sell their harvested products (mostly ivory and rubber) only to the state. This law extended an earlier decree declaring that all "unoccupied" land belonged to the state. Any ivory or rubber collected from the state-owned land, the reasoning went, must belong to the state, thus creating a de facto state-controlled monopoly. Therefore, a large share of the local population could sell only to the state, which could set prices and thereby control the income the Congolese could receive for their work. For local elites, however, this system presented new opportunities, as the Free State and concession companies paid them with guns to tax their subjects in kind.

Under his regime, millions of Congolese inhabitants, including children, were mutilated, killed or died from disease and famine.[22]: 115, 118, 127  In addition, the birth rate rapidly declined during this period.[3] Estimates for the total population decline range from one million to fifteen million, with a consensus growing around 10 million.[24]: 25 [25] Several historians argue against this figure due to the absence of reliable censuses, the enormous mortality of diseases such as smallpox or sleeping sickness and the fact that there were only 175 administrative agents in charge of rubber exploitation.[26][27]

Reports of deaths and abuse led to a major international scandal in the early 20th century, and Leopold was forced by the Belgian government to relinquish control of the colony to the civil administration in 1908.

Obtaining the Congo Free State edit

 
Cartoon depicting Leopold II and other imperial powers at the Berlin Conference of 1884

Leopold fervently believed that overseas colonies were the key to a country's greatness, and he worked tirelessly to acquire colonial territory for Belgium. He envisioned "our little Belgium" as the capital of a large overseas empire.[5] Leopold eventually began to acquire a colony as a private citizen. The Belgian government lent him money for this venture.

During his reign, Leopold saw the empires of the Netherlands, Portugal, and Spain as being in a state of decline and expressed interest in buying their territories.[28] In 1866, Leopold instructed the Belgian ambassador in Madrid to speak to Queen Isabella II of Spain about ceding the Philippines to Belgium. Knowing the situation fully, the ambassador did nothing. Leopold quickly replaced the ambassador with a more sympathetic individual to carry out his plan.[28] In 1868, when Isabella II was deposed as queen of Spain, Leopold tried to press his original plan to acquire the Philippines. But without funds, he was unsuccessful. Leopold then devised another unsuccessful plan to establish the Philippines as an independent state, which could then be ruled by a Belgian. When both of these plans failed, Leopold shifted his aspirations of colonisation to Africa.[28]

After numerous unsuccessful schemes to acquire colonies in Africa and Asia, in 1876 Leopold organized a private holding company disguised as an international scientific and philanthropic association, which he called the International African Society, or the International Association for the Exploration and Civilization of the Congo. In 1878, under the auspices of the holding company, he hired explorer Henry Stanley to explore and establish a colony in the Congo region.[5]: 62  Much diplomatic maneuvering among European nations resulted in the Berlin Conference of 1884–1885 regarding African affairs, at which representatives of 14 European countries and the United States recognized Leopold as sovereign of most of the area to which he and Stanley had laid claim.[5]: 84–87  On 5 February 1885, the Congo Free State, an area 76 times larger than Belgium, was established under Leopold II's personal rule and private army, the Force Publique.[5]: 123–124 

 
Leopold II's effigy on a Congo Free State 5 Franc, with the unabridged and translated lettering of "Leopold II, King of the Belgians, Sovereign of the Independent State of the Congo".

Lado Enclave edit

In 1894, King Leopold signed a treaty with Great Britain which conceded a strip of land on the Congo Free State's eastern border in exchange for a lifetime lease of the Lado Enclave, which provided access to the navigable Nile and extended the Free State's sphere of influence northwards into Sudan.[29] After rubber profits soared in 1895, Leopold ordered the organization of an expedition into the Lado Enclave, which had been overrun by Mahdist rebels since the outbreak of the Mahdist War in 1881. The expedition was composed of two columns: the first, under Belgian Baron Dhanis, consisted of a sizable force, numbering around 3,000, and was to strike north through the jungle and attack the rebels at their base at Rejaf. The second, a much smaller force of 800, was led by Louis-Napoléon Chaltin and took the main road towards Rejaf. Both expeditions set out in December 1896.[30]

Although Leopold had initially planned for the expedition to carry on much farther than the Lado Enclave, hoping indeed to take Fashoda and then Khartoum,[31] Dhanis' column mutinied in February 1897, resulting in the death of several Belgian officers and the loss of his entire force. Nonetheless, Chaltin continued his advance, and on 17 February 1897, his outnumbered forces defeated the rebels in the Battle of Rejaf, securing the Lado Enclave as Free State territory until Leopold's death in 1909.[32]

Exploitation, atrocities, and death toll edit

 
A Congolese man, Nsala, looking at the severed hand and foot of his five-year-old daughter who was killed, cooked, and cannibalized by members of the Force Publique in 1904.[33]

Leopold was responsible for the theft of vast fortunes from the Congolese people by exploiting the nation's natural resources. At first, mass amounts of ivory was taken from the country, but this did not yield the expected levels of revenue. When the global demand for rubber exploded, exploitative efforts shifted to the labour-intensive collection of sap from rubber plants. Violating the commitments made at the Berlin Conference in the late 1890s, the Free State government restricted foreign access and extorted forced labour from the native people, held against their will.

Abuses, especially in the rubber industry, included forced labour of the native population, physical assault, widespread murder, and frequent mutilation when production quotas were not met. One practice used to force workers to collect rubber included taking wives and family members hostage.[34]

 
Mutilated Congolese children and adults

Missionary John Harris of Baringa was so shocked by what he had encountered that he wrote to Leopold's chief agent in the Congo, saying:

I have just returned from a journey inland to the village of Insongo Mboyo. The abject misery and utter abandon is positively indescribable. I was so moved, Your Excellency, by the people's stories that I took the liberty of promising them that in future you will only kill them for crimes they commit.[35]

Estimates of the death toll range from one million to fifteen million,[4][36] since accurate records were not kept. Historians Louis and Stengers in 1968 stated that population figures at the start of Leopold's control are only "wild guesses", and that attempts by E. D. Morel and others to determine a figure for the loss of population were "but figments of the imagination".[37][38]

Adam Hochschild devotes a chapter of his 1998 book King Leopold's Ghost to the problem of estimating the death toll. He cites several recent lines of investigation, by anthropologist Jan Vansina and others, that examine local sources (police records, religious records, oral traditions, genealogies, personal diaries, and "many others"), which generally agree with the assessment of the 1919 Belgian government commission: roughly half the population were killed or died during the Free State period. Hochschild points out that since the first official census by the Belgian authorities in 1924 put the population at about 10 million, these various approaches suggest a rough estimate of a population decline by 10 million.[5]: 225–233 

Smallpox epidemics and sleeping sickness also devastated the deeply traumatized population.[39] By 1896, African trypanosomiasis had killed up to 5,000 people in the village of Lukolela on the Congo River. The mortality statistics were collected through the efforts of British consul Roger Casement, who found, for example, only 600 survivors of the disease in Lukolela in 1903.[40]

Criticism of the management of Congo edit

 
A 1906 Punch cartoon by Edward Linley Sambourne depicting Leopold II as a rubber snake entangling a Congolese rubber collector

Inspired by works such as Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness (1902), originally published as a three-part series in Blackwood’s Magazine (1899) and based on Conrad's experience as a steamer captain on the Congo 12 years earlier, international criticism of Leopold’s rule increased and mobilized. Reports of outrageous exploitation and widespread human rights abuses led the British Crown to appoint their consul Roger Casement to investigate conditions there. His extensive travels and interviews in the region resulted in the Casement Report, which detailed the extensive abuses under Leopold's regime.[41] A widespread war of words ensued. In Britain, former shipping clerk E. D. Morel with Casement's support founded the Congo Reform Association, the first mass human rights movement.[35] Supporters included American writer Mark Twain, whose stinging political satire entitled King Leopold's Soliloquy portrays the king arguing that bringing Christianity to the country outweighs a little starvation, and uses many of Leopold's own words against him.[42]

Writer Arthur Conan Doyle also criticised the "rubber regime" in his 1908 work The Crime of the Congo, written to aid the work of the Congo Reform Association. Doyle contrasted Leopold's rule with British rule in Nigeria, arguing that decency required those who ruled primitive peoples to be concerned first with their uplift, not how much could be extracted from them. As Hochschild describes in King Leopold's Ghost, many of Leopold's policies, in particular those of colonial monopolies and forced labour, were influenced by Dutch practice in the East Indies.[5]: 37  Similar methods of forced labour were employed to some degree by Germany, France, and Portugal where natural rubber occurred in their own colonies.[5]: 280 

King Leopold II and Princess Clémentine visit colonial celebrations in Antwerp on the occasion of the Congo's annexation to Belgium in 1909

Relinquishment of the Congo edit

International opposition and criticism at home from the Catholic Party, Progressive Liberals[43] and the Labour Party caused the Belgian Parliament to compel the king to cede the Congo Free State to Belgium in 1908. The deal that led to the handover cost Belgium the considerable sum of 215.5 million Francs. This was used to discharge the debt of the Congo Free State and to pay out its bond holders as well as 45.5 million for Leopold's pet building projects in Belgium and a personal payment of 50 million to him.[5]: 259  The Congo Free State was transformed into a Belgian colony under parliamentary control known as the Belgian Congo. Leopold went to great lengths to conceal potential evidence of wrongdoing during his time as ruler of his private colony. The entire archive of the Congo Free State was burned and he told his aide that even though the Congo had been taken from him, "they have no right to know what I did there".[5]: 294 

When the Belgian government took over the administration in 1908, the situation in the Congo improved in certain respects. The brutal exploitation and arbitrary use of violence, in which some of the concessionary companies had excelled, were curbed. Article 3 of the new Colonial Charter of 18 October 1908 stated that: "Nobody can be forced to work on behalf of and for the profit of companies or privates", but this was not enforced, and the Belgian government continued to impose forced labour on the natives, albeit by less obvious methods.[44] The Belgian Congo gained independence in 1960 and became known as the Republic of the Congo.

Death and legacy edit

 
Leopold II's funeral procession passes the unfinished Royal Palace of Brussels, 22 December 1909

On 17 December 1909, Leopold II died at Laeken, and the Belgian crown passed to Albert I, the son of Leopold's brother, Philippe, Count of Flanders. His funeral cortege was booed by the crowd[45] in expression of disapproval of his rule.[46] Leopold's reign of exactly 44 years remains the longest in Belgian history. He was interred in the royal vault at the Church of Our Lady of Laeken.

Attention to the Congo atrocities subsided in the years after Leopold's death. Statues of him were erected in the 1930s at the initiative of Albert I, while the Belgian government celebrated his accomplishments in Belgium.[46] The debate over Leopold's legacy was reignited in 1999 with the publication of King Leopold's Ghost by American historian Adam Hochschild,[46] which recounts Leopold's plan to acquire the colony, the exploitation, and the large death toll.[47][48][49][50] The debate then periodically resurfaced over the following 20 years.[46]

 
The last picture of Leopold II

In 2010, Louis Michel, a Belgian member of the European Parliament and former Belgian foreign minister, called Leopold II a "visionary hero." According to Michel, "To use the word 'genocide' in relation to the Congo is absolutely unacceptable and inappropriate. ... maybe colonisation was domineering and acquiring more power, but at a certain moment, it brought civilisation."[51] Michel's remarks were countered by several Belgian politicians. Senator Pol Van Den Driessche replied, "[A] great visionary? Absolutely not. What happened then was shameful. If we measured him against 21st century standards, it is likely that Leopold would be hauled before the International Criminal Court in The Hague."[51]

In June 2020, a Black Lives Matter demonstration in Brussels protested the murder of George Floyd, causing Leopold II's legacy to become once again the subject of debate.[52] MPs agreed to set up a parliamentary commission to examine Belgium's colonial past, a step likened to the Truth and Reconciliation Committee set up in South Africa after the apartheid regime was abolished. On 30 June, the 60th anniversary of the Democratic Republic of the Congo's independence, King Philippe released a statement expressing his "deepest regret" for the wounds of the colonial past, and the "acts of violence and cruelty committed" in the Congo during colonisation[53] but did not explicitly mention Leopold's role in the atrocities. Some activists accused him of not making a full apology.[54]

Statues edit

 
Equestrian Statue of Leopold II, Place du Trône/Troonplein, Brussels

Leopold II remains a controversial figure in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. In the capital Kinshasa (known until 1966 as Leopoldville in his honor) his statue was removed after independence. Congolese culture minister Christophe Muzungu decided to reinstate the statue in 2005. He noted that the beginning of the Free State had been a time of some economic and social progress. He argued that people should recognize some positive aspects of the king as well as the negative, but hours after the six-metre (20 ft) statue was installed near Kinshasa's central station, it was officially removed.[55]

Several statues have been erected to honour the legacy of Leopold II in Belgium. According to Professor of Colonial History Idesbald Goddeeris of the University of Leuven (2018), most of the statues date from the interwar period, the peak of colonial-patriotic propaganda. The monuments were supposed to help get rid of the scandal after international commotion about the atrocities in the Congo Free State during Leopold II's rule, and to raise people's enthusiasm for the colonial enterprise in Belgian Congo.[56]

Leopold's controversial regime in the Congo Free State has motivated proposals for these statues to be removed.[57][58] During the international George Floyd protests against racism (May–July 2020), several statues of Leopold II were vandalised, and petitions calling for the removal of some or all statues were signed by tens of thousands of Belgians.[57][59][60][61] Other petitions, signed by hundreds, called for the statues to remain.[62][63]

In early June 2020, a majority in the Brussels Parliament requested a committee to be set up to 'decolonise the public sphere' in the Brussels-Capital Region.[64] From 9 June 2020 onwards, authorities in Belgium began removing some of the statues of Leopold, beginning with ones in Ekeren in the municipality of Antwerp[58] and in the Warocqué Faculty of Economics and Management of the University of Mons on that day.[65]

Family edit

 
Leopold and Marie Henriette
 
Caroline Lacroix and her children, Lucien, Duke of Tervuren and Philippe, Count of Ravenstein.

Leopold's sister became the Empress Carlota of Mexico. His first cousins included both Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom and her husband Prince Albert, as well as King Fernando II of Portugal.

He had four children with Queen Marie Henriette, of whom the youngest two have descendants living as of 2018:

Leopold also fathered two sons by Caroline Lacroix. They were adopted in 1910 by Lacroix's second husband, Antoine Durrieux.[67] Leopold granted them courtesy titles that were honorary, as the parliament would not have supported any official act or decree:

  • Lucien Philippe Marie Antoine (9 February 1906 – 15 November 1984)Duke of Tervuren; he married Lucie Gracieuse Mundutey (30 October 1900 – 8 February 2005) on 1 March 1927.[67]
  • Philippe Henri Marie François (16 October 1907 – 21 August 1914) Count of Ravenstein[67]

Ancestry edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Hochschild, A. King Leopold's Ghost: A Story of Greed, Terror and Heroism in Colonial Africa. Houghton Mifflin, 1999. pp. 111–112
  2. ^ "Controverse over standbeelden van Leopold II: Waarom is de Belgische koning zo omstreden?". VRT (in Dutch). 5 June 2020. Retrieved 10 August 2023.
  3. ^ a b Renton, David; Seddon, David; Zeilig, Leo (2007). The Congo: Plunder and Resistance. London: Zed Books. p. 37. ISBN 978-1-84277-485-4.
  4. ^ a b Forbath, Peter (1977). The River Congo: The Discovery, Exploration and Exploitation of the World's Most Dramatic Rivers. Harper & Row. p. 278. ISBN 978-0-06-122490-4.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Hochschild, Adam (1998). King Leopold's Ghost: A Story of Greed, Terror and Heroism in Colonial Africa. Mariner. ISBN 978-0-330-49233-1. OCLC 50527720.
  6. ^ Emerson, pp 4–6.
  7. ^ Emerson, p 9.
  8. ^ Emerson, p 9–10.
  9. ^ Aronson, p 13.
  10. ^ a b c d   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Leopold II., King of the Belgians". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 16 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 461.
  11. ^ (in French) « mariage d'un palefrenier et d'une religieuse »
  12. ^ a b "Leopold II". The Belgian Monarchy. Retrieved 4 December 2013.
  13. ^ Hochschild, Adam (1998). King Leopold's Ghost: A Story of Greed, Terror, and Heroism in Colonial Africa. New York: Mariner Books. p. 221. ISBN 0-330-49233-0.
  14. ^ Hochschild, p. 222.
  15. ^ Hochschild, p. 224.
  16. ^ Rappoport, p. 268.
  17. ^ Wheeler, Edward (1910). Current Literature, Volume 48. New York: The Current Literature Publishing Company. p. 138.
  18. ^ (in French) « la patrie doit être forte, prospère, par conséquent posséder des débouchés à elle, belle et calme. » The King to the Count of Flanders, 26 January 1888; The Count of Flanders's papers.
  19. ^ Stengers, Jean (2008). L'action du Roi en Belgique depuis 1831: pouvoir et influence [The action of the King in Belgium since 1831: power and influence] (in French) (3rd ed.). Brussels: Racine. pp. 123–24. ISBN 978-2-87386-567-2.
  20. ^ Vandenbreeden. p. 13
  21. ^ a b Meuse (La) 17 November 1902
  22. ^ a b c Ewans, Sir Martin (2017). European Atrocity, African Catastrophe: Leopold II, the Congo Free State and its Aftermath. Abingdon, England: Routledge. doi:10.4324/9781315829173. ISBN 978-1317849070.
  23. ^ Ascherson (1999), p. 8.
  24. ^ Jalata, Asafa (March 2013). "Colonial Terrorism, Global Capitalism and African Underdevelopment: 500 Years of Crimes Against African Peoples". Journal of Pan African Studies. 5 (9). ISSN 0888-6601.
  25. ^ Stanley, Tim (October 2012). "Belgium's Heart of Darkness". History Today. 62 (10): 49. ISSN 0018-2753. 
  26. ^ Stengers, Jean. "Critique de Livre de Hochschild" (PDF) (in French).
  27. ^ Sophie Mignon (22 December 2015). "Non, Léopold II n'est pas un génocidaire!" (in French).
  28. ^ a b c Ocampo, Ambeth (2009). Looking Back. Mandaluyong, Philippines: Anvil Publishing. pp. 54–57. ISBN 978-971-27-2336-0.
  29. ^ Roger Louis, William (2006). Ends of British Imperialism. I.B. Tauris. ISBN 978-1-84511-347-6. p. 68.
  30. ^ Charles de Kavanagh Boulger, Demetrius (1898). The Congo State: Or, The Growth of Civilisation in Central Africa. Congo: W. Thacker & Company. ISBN 0-217-57889-6. p. 214.
  31. ^ Pakenham, Thomas (1992). The Scramble for Africa. Avon Books. ISBN 978-0-380-71999-0. pp. 525–26.
  32. ^ "Lado Enclave". Encyclopædia Britannica. Encyclopædia Britannica, inc. 19 July 2011.
  33. ^ Thompson, T. Jack (October 2002). "Light on the Dark Continent: The Photography of Alice Seely Harris and the Congo Atrocities of the Early Twentieth Century". International Bulletin of Missionary Research. 26 (4): 146–9. doi:10.1177/239693930202600401. S2CID 146866987. from the original on 21 July 2021. Retrieved 21 July 2021.
  34. ^ Renton, Seddon & Zeilig 2007, p. 31.
  35. ^ a b Dummett, Mark (24 February 2004). "King Leopold's legacy of DR Congo violence". BBC. Retrieved 1 December 2011.
  36. ^ Wertham, Fredric (1968). A Sign For Cain: An Exploration of Human Violence. ISBN 978-0-7091-0232-8.[page needed]
  37. ^ Louis, William Roger; Stengers, Jean (1968). E. D. Morel's History of the Congo Reform Movement. London: Clarendon. pp. 252–57. OCLC 685226763.
  38. ^ Guy Vanthemsche (2012). Belgium and the Congo, 1885–1980. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521194211.
  39. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 March 2009. Retrieved 2 December 2011.
  40. ^ "Le rapport Casement annoté par A. Schorochoff" (PDF). Royal Union for Overseas Colonies.
  41. ^ Ascherson, pp. 250–60.
  42. ^ . Time. 16 May 1955. Archived from the original on 21 December 2007. Retrieved 7 May 2010.
  43. ^ Lauwers Nathan; Georges Lorand (1860–1918): Een transnationale progressieve liberaal; VUB; 2016
  44. ^ Citations:
    • Marchal, Jules (1999). Forced labor in the gold and copper mines: a history of Congo under Belgian rule, 1910-1945. Translated by Ayi Kwei Armah (reprint ed.). Per Ankh Publishers.
    • Marchal, Jules (2008). Lord Leverhulme's Ghosts: Colonial Exploitation in the Congo. Translated by Martin Thom. Introduced by Adam Hochschild. London: Verso. ISBN 978-1-84467-239-4. First published as Travail forcé pour l'huile de palme de Lord Leverhulme: L'histoire du Congo 1910-1945, tome 3 by Editions Paula Bellings in 2001.
    • Rich, Jeremy (Spring 2009). "Lord Leverhulme's Ghost: Colonial Exploitation in the Congo (review)". Journal of Colonialism and Colonial History. 10. doi:10.1353/cch.0.0053. S2CID 161485622. from the original on 17 March 2018. Retrieved 17 March 2018.
    • Hochschild, Adam (1999). "18. Victory?". King Leopold's Ghost: a story of greed, terror, and heroism in colonial Africa. Boston: Mariner Books.
    • Buell, Raymond Leslie (1928). The native problem in Africa, Volume II. New York: The Macmillan Company. pp. 540–544.
    • Zoellner, Tom (2009). "1 Scalding Fruit". Uranium: war, energy, and the rock that shaped the world. New York: Penguin Group. pp. 4–5.
    • Lewis, Brian (2008). "Sunlight for Savages". So Clean: Lord Leverhulme, Soap and Civilisation. Manchester: Manchester University Press. pp. 188–190.
    • Edmondson, Brad (2014). "10: The Sale Agreements". Ice Cream Social: The Struggle for the Soul of Ben & Jerry's. San Francisco, California: Berrett-Koehler Publishers.
    • Makelele, Albert. This is a Good Country: Welcome to the Congo. pp. 43–44.
    • De Witte, Ludo (9 January 2016). . DeWereldMorgen.be. Archived from the original on 17 March 2018. Retrieved 17 March 2018.
    • "Lord Leverhulme". History. from the original on 17 March 2018. Retrieved 17 March 2018.
    • Mitchell, Donald (2014). The Politics of Dissent: A Biography of E D Morel. SilverWood Books.
    • (PDF). p. 14. Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 June 2017. Retrieved 17 March 2018.
  45. ^ Dargis, Manohla (21 October 2005). "The Horrors of Belgium's Congo". The New York Times. Retrieved 4 December 2016.
  46. ^ a b c d Keating, Dave (9 June 2020). "How Belgium is being forced to confront the bloody legacy of King Leopold II". New Statesman. Retrieved 16 June 2020.
  47. ^ Jeremy Harding (20 September 1998). . New York Times. Archived from the original on 13 September 2001. Retrieved 13 June 2012. a superb synoptic history of European misdemeanor in central Africa
  48. ^ Michiko Kakutani (1 September 1998). . The New York Times. Archived from the original on 18 April 2001. Retrieved 13 June 2012. Hochschild has stitched it together into a vivid, novelistic narrative
  49. ^ Luc Sante (27 September 1998). "Leopold's Heart of Darkness". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved 13 June 2012. 'King Leopold's Ghost' is an absorbing and horrifying account
  50. ^ Godwin Rapando Murunga (1999). . African Studies Quarterly. 3 (2). Archived from the original on 18 June 2012. Retrieved 13 June 2012. King Leopold's Ghost tells the story of the Congo with fresh and critical insights, bringing new analysis to this topic.
  51. ^ a b Phillips, Leigh (22 June 2010). "Ex-commissioner calls Congo's colonial master a 'visionary hero'". EU Observer. Retrieved 1 January 2020.
  52. ^ "King Leopold II ruled Congo as a private slave state and brutal legacy is finally acknowledged". 26 June 2020.
  53. ^ "Belgian king expresses regrets for colonial abuses". BBC News. 30 June 2020. Retrieved 2 July 2020.
  54. ^ Picheta, Rob (1 July 2020). "Belgium's King sends 'regrets' to Congo for Leopold II atrocities – but doesn't apologize". CNN. Retrieved 1 July 2020.
  55. ^ Vasagar, Jeevan (4 February 2005). "Leopold reigns for a day in Kinshasa". The Guardian.
  56. ^ Yolan Devriendt (2018). "Belgische koloniale geschiedenis in het katholiek middelbaar onderwijs: vergeten verhaal of kritisch discours?" (PDF) (in Dutch). Ghent University. p. 13. Retrieved 26 February 2021.
  57. ^ a b Teri Schultz (5 June 2020). "Belgians Target Some Royal Monuments In Black Lives Matter Protest". NPR. Retrieved 7 June 2020.
  58. ^ a b "Burned Leopold II statue removed from Antwerp square". The Brussels Times. 9 June 2020. Retrieved 9 June 2020.
  59. ^ "Al meer dan 16.000 handtekeningen voor petitie om standbeelden Leopold II uit Brussel weg te nemen, Tommelein wil beeld in Oostende niet verwijderen". Het Laatste Nieuws (in Dutch). 3 June 2020. Retrieved 7 June 2020.
  60. ^ "Het Debat. Moeten standbeelden van Leopold II en andere bedenkelijke historische figuren verdwijnen uit het straatbeeld?". Het Laatste Nieuws (in Dutch). 6 June 2020. Retrieved 7 June 2020.
  61. ^ Burno Struys (6 June 2020). "Dit zijn de organisatoren van de Belgische Black Lives Matter-betogingen". De Morgen (in Dutch). Retrieved 7 June 2020.
  62. ^ "Pourquoi les opposants à Léopold II continuent-ils à vandaliser les statues de l'ancien Roi ?". RTBF (in French). 6 June 2020. Retrieved 19 June 2020.
  63. ^ Jean-Luc Bodeux (18 June 2020). "Arlon: pétition et contre-pétition autour de Léopold II". Le Soir (in French). Retrieved 19 June 2020.
  64. ^ "Brusselse meerderheid vraagt dekolonisering van openbare ruimte". Bruzz (in Dutch). 4 June 2020. Retrieved 7 June 2020.
  65. ^ Isabelle Palmitessa (9 June 2020). "L'UMons retire un buste de Léopold II suite à une pétition". RTBF (in French). Retrieved 4 July 2020.
  66. ^ As documented in several autograph letters by the two unfortunate lovers ANSA newsbrief (in Italian)
  67. ^ a b c "Le Petit Gotha"

Bibliography edit

  • Ascherson, Neal: The King Incorporated, Allen & Unwin, 1963. ISBN 1-86207-290-6 (1999 Granta edition).
  • Aronson, Theo: Defiant Dynasty: The Coburgs of Belgium, Bobbs-Merrill, 1968.
  • Emerson, Barbara: Leopold II of the Belgians, Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1979, ISBN 0-297-77569-3.
  • Hochschild, Adam: King Leopold’s Ghost: A Story of Greed, Terror, and Heroism in Colonial Africa, Mariner Books, 1998. ISBN 0-330-49233-0.
  • Petringa, Maria: Brazza, A Life for Africa, 2006. ISBN 978-1-4259-1198-0
  • Wm. Roger Louis and Jean Stengers: E.D. Morel's History of the Congo Reform Movement, Clarendon Press Oxford, 1968.
  • Ó Síocháin, Séamas and Michael O’Sullivan, eds: The Eyes of Another Race: Roger Casement's Congo Report and 1903 Diary. University College Dublin Press, 2004. ISBN 1-900621-99-1.
  • Ó Síocháin, Séamas: Roger Casement: Imperialist, Rebel, Revolutionary. Dublin: Lilliput Press, 2008.
  • Roes, Aldwin (2010). "Towards a History of Mass Violence in the Etat Indépendant du Congo, 1885–1908" (PDF). South African Historical Journal. 62 (4): 634–70. doi:10.1080/02582473.2010.519937. S2CID 144843155.
  • Stanard, Matthew G. Selling the Congo: A history of European pro-empire propaganda and the making of Belgian imperialism (U of Nebraska Press, 2012)
  • Vandenbreeden, Jos; de Puydt, Raoul Maria (2005). Basilique Koekelberg: monument art déco (in French and Dutch). Bruxelles: Editions Racine. ISBN 90-209-6144-6.
  • Vanthemsche, Guy (2012). Belgium and the Congo, 1885–1980 (Cambridge UP, ISBN 978-0521194211).
  • Vanthemsche, Guy (2006) 'The historiography of Belgian colonialism in the Congo" in C Levai ed., Europe and the World in European Historiography (Pisa University Press), pp. 89–119.
  • Viaene, Vincent. "King Leopold's imperialism and the origins of the Belgian colonial party, 1860–1905." Journal of Modern History 80.4 (2008): 741–90.

External links edit

  • Archive Léopold II, Royal museum of central Africa
  • Official biography from the Belgian Royal Family website
  • "The Political Economy of Power" Interview with political scientist Bruce Bueno de Mesquita, with a discussion of Leopold halfway through
  • Interview with King Leopold II Publishers' Press, 1906
  • The Crime of the Congo, 1909, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, Archive.org
  • Grant, Kevin (2001). "Christian critics of empire: Missionaries, lantern lectures, and the Congo reform campaign in Britain". The Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History. 29 (2): 27–58. doi:10.1080/03086530108583118. S2CID 159607969.
  • Peffer, John (2008). "Snap of the Whip/Crossroads of Shame: Flogging, Photography, and the Representation of Atrocity in the Congo Reform Campaign". Visual Anthropology Review. 24: 55–77. doi:10.1111/j.1548-7458.2008.00005.x.
  • van den Braembussche, Antoon (2002). "The Silence of Belgium: Taboo and Trauma in Belgian Memory". Yale French Studies (102): 34–52. doi:10.2307/3090591. JSTOR 3090591.
  • Weisbord, Robert G. (2003). "The King, the Cardinal and the Pope: Leopold II's genocide in the Congo and the Vatican". Journal of Genocide Research. 5: 35–45. doi:10.1080/14623520305651. S2CID 73371517.
  • Langbein, John H. (January 1976). "The Historical Origins of the Sanction of Imprisonment for Serious Crime". The Journal of Legal Studies. 5 (1): 35–60. doi:10.1086/467543. JSTOR 724073. S2CID 29172387.
  • Gewald, Jan-Bart (2006). "More than Red Rubber and Figures Alone: A Critical Appraisal of the Memory of the Congo Exhibition at the Royal Museum for Central Africa, Tervuren, Belgium". The International Journal of African Historical Studies. 39 (3): 471–86. JSTOR 40034827.
  • Pavlakis, Dean (2010). "The Development of British Overseas Humanitarianism and the Congo Reform Campaign". Journal of Colonialism and Colonial History. 11 (1). doi:10.1353/cch.0.0102. S2CID 162285976.
  • Newspaper clippings about Leopold II of Belgium in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW
Leopold II of Belgium
Cadet branch of the House of Wettin
Born: 9 April 1835 Died: 17 December 1909
Regnal titles
Preceded by King of the Belgians
1865–1909
Succeeded by
Belgian royalty
New title Duke of Brabant
1840–1865
Succeeded by

leopold, belgium, leopold, french, léopold, louis, philippe, marie, victor, dutch, leopold, lodewijk, filips, maria, victor, april, 1835, december, 1909, second, king, belgians, from, 1865, 1909, founder, sole, owner, congo, free, state, from, 1885, 1908, leop. Leopold II French Leopold Louis Philippe Marie Victor Dutch Leopold Lodewijk Filips Maria Victor 9 April 1835 17 December 1909 was the second King of the Belgians from 1865 to 1909 and the founder and sole owner of the Congo Free State from 1885 to 1908 Leopold IIRoyal portrait c 1900King of the BelgiansReign17 December 1865 17 December 1909PredecessorLeopold ISuccessorAlbert IPrime ministersSee list Charles RogierWalthere Frere OrbanBaron d AnethanJules MalouAuguste BeernaertJules de BurletPaul de Smet de NaeyerJules VandenpeereboomPaul de Smet de NaeyerJules de TroozFrancois SchollaertSovereign of the Congo Free StateReign1 July 1885 15 November 1908Governors generalSee list Theophile WahisCamille JanssenFrancis de WintonBorn 1835 04 09 9 April 1835Brussels BelgiumDied17 December 1909 1909 12 17 aged 74 Laeken Brussels BelgiumBurialChurch of Our Lady of LaekenSpousesMarie Henriette of Austria m 1853 died 1902 wbr Caroline Lacroix disputed m 1909 wbr IssueDetailLouise Princess Philipp of Saxe Coburg and Gotha Prince Leopold Duke of Brabant Stephanie Crown Princess of Austria Clementine Princess Napoleon Lucien Duke of Tervuren Philippe Count of RavensteinNamesDutch Leopold Lodewijk Filips Maria Victor French Leopold Louis Philippe Marie Victor German Leopold Ludwig Philipp Maria ViktorHouseSaxe Coburg and GothaFatherLeopold I of BelgiumMotherLouise of OrleansSignatureBorn in Brussels as the second but eldest surviving son of King Leopold I and Queen Louise Leopold succeeded his father to the Belgian throne in 1865 and reigned for 44 years until his death the longest reign of a Belgian monarch to date He died without surviving legitimate sons The current Belgian king descends from his nephew and successor Albert I He is popularly referred to as the Builder King Dutch Koning Bouwheer French Roi Batisseur in Belgium in reference to the great number of buildings urban projects and public works he commissioned Leopold was the founder and sole owner of the Congo Free State a private project undertaken on his own behalf as a personal union with Belgium He used Henry Morton Stanley to help him lay claim to the Congo the present day Democratic Republic of the Congo At the Berlin Conference of 1884 1885 the colonial nations of Europe authorised his claim and committed the Congo Free State to him Leopold ran the Congo by using the mercenary Force Publique for his personal gain He extracted a fortune from the territory initially by the collection of ivory and after a rise in the price of natural rubber in the 1890s by forced labour from the native population to harvest and process rubber Leopold s administration of the Congo Free State was characterized by atrocities and systematic brutality including forced labour torture murder kidnapping and the amputation of the hands of men women and children when the quota of rubber was not met In one of the first uses of the term George Washington Williams described the practices of Leopold s administration of the Congo Free State as crimes against humanity in 1890 1 These and other facts were established during Leopold s rule by eyewitness testimony by on site inspection from an international commission of inquiry by the investigative journalism and activism of E D Morel and by the 1904 Casement Report While it has proven difficult to accurately estimate the pre colonial population and the amount by which it changed under the Congo Free State estimates for the Congolese population decline during Leopold s rule range from 1 million to 15 million The causes of the decline included epidemic disease a reduced birth rate and violence and famine caused by the regime 2 3 4 5 225 233 In 1908 the reports of deaths and abuse along with pressure from the Congo Reform Association and other international groups induced the Belgian Government to take over the administration of the Congo from Leopold during the penultimate year of his rule The Congo Free State was thus reconstituted as a new territory the Belgian Congo Contents 1 Early life 2 Marriage and family 3 Early political career 4 Domestic reign 4 1 Builder King 4 2 Attempted assassination 5 Congo Free State 5 1 Obtaining the Congo Free State 5 1 1 Lado Enclave 5 2 Exploitation atrocities and death toll 5 3 Criticism of the management of Congo 5 4 Relinquishment of the Congo 6 Death and legacy 6 1 Statues 7 Family 8 Ancestry 9 See also 10 References 11 Bibliography 12 External linksEarly life edit nbsp Leopold as a child Painting by Franz Xaver Winterhalter 1844 Leopold was born in Brussels on 9 April 1835 the second child of the reigning Belgian monarch Leopold I and of his second wife Louise the daughter of King Louis Philippe of France 6 The French Revolution of 1848 forced his maternal grandfather Louis Philippe to flee to the United Kingdom 7 Louis Philippe died two years later in 1850 Leopold s fragile mother was deeply affected by the death of her father and her health deteriorated She died of tuberculosis that same year when Leopold was 15 years old 8 Leopold s sister Charlotte became Empress Carlota of Mexico in the 1860s The British monarch at the time Queen Victoria was Leopold II s first cousin as was Victoria s husband Prince Albert since Leopold s father Albert s father Duke Ernest I of Saxe Coburg Gotha and Victoria s mother the then Duchess of Kent were all siblings 9 Marriage and family edit nbsp Leopold as a younger man in the uniform of the Grenadiers Portrait by Nicaise de Keyser At the age of 18 Leopold married Marie Henriette of Austria a cousin of Emperor Franz Joseph I of Austria and granddaughter of the late Holy Roman Emperor Leopold II on 22 August 1853 in Brussels Lively and energetic Marie Henriette endeared herself to the people by her character and benevolence Her beauty earned her the sobriquet The Rose of Brabant She was also an accomplished artist and musician 10 She was passionate about horseback riding to the point that she would care for her horses personally Some joked about this marriage of a stableman and a nun 11 the latter referring to the shy and withdrawn Leopold The marriage produced four children three daughters and one son Prince Leopold Duke of Brabant The younger Leopold died in 1869 at the age of nine from pneumonia after falling into a pond His death was a source of great sorrow for King Leopold The marriage became unhappy and the couple separated after a last attempt to have another son a union that resulted in the birth of their last daughter Clementine Marie Henriette retreated to Spa in 1895 and died there in 1902 12 nbsp A political cartoon pillorying Leopold s affair with Caroline Lacroix The Abbot Oh Sire at your age The King You should try it for yourself Leopold had many mistresses In 1899 in his 65th year Leopold took as a mistress Caroline Lacroix a 16 year old French prostitute and they remained together until his death ten years later 13 Leopold lavished upon her large sums of money estates gifts and a noble title Baroness de Vaughan Owing to these gifts and the unofficial nature of their relationship their affair ironically lost Leopold more popularity in Belgium than any of his crimes in the Congo 14 Caroline bore two sons Lucien Philippe Marie Antoine Duke of Tervuren and Philippe Henri Marie Francois Count of Ravenstein Their second son was born with a deformed hand leading a cartoon to depict Leopold holding the child surrounded by Congolese corpses with their hands sliced off the caption said Vengeance from on high 15 16 They married secretly in a religious ceremony five days before his death Their failure to perform a civil ceremony rendered the marriage invalid under Belgian law After the king s death it soon emerged that he had left his widow a large fortune in Congo securities only some of which the Belgian government and Leopold s three estranged daughters were able to win back 17 Early political career editAs Leopold s older brother the earlier crown prince Louis Philippe had died the year before Leopold s birth Leopold was heir to the throne from his birth When he was 9 years old Leopold received the title of Duke of Brabant and was appointed a sub lieutenant in the army He served in the army until his accession in 1865 by which time he had reached the rank of lieutenant general 10 Leopold s public career began on his attaining the age of majority in 1855 when he became a member of the Belgian Senate He took an active interest in the senate especially in matters concerning the development of Belgium and its trade 10 and began to urge Belgium s acquisition of colonies Leopold traveled abroad extensively from 1854 to 1865 visiting India China Egypt and the countries on the Mediterranean coast of Africa His father died on 10 December 1865 and Leopold took the oath of office on 17 December at the age of 30 12 Domestic reign edit nbsp Leopold II at his accession to the throneLeopold became king in 1865 He explained his goal for his reign in an 1888 letter addressed to his brother Prince Philippe Count of Flanders the country must be strong prosperous therefore have colonies of her own beautiful and calm 18 Leopold s reign was marked by a number of major political developments The Liberals governed Belgium from 1857 to 1880 and during its final year in power legislated the Frere Orban Law of 1879 This law created free secular compulsory primary schools supported by the state and withdrew all state support from Roman Catholic primary schools The Catholic Party obtained a parliamentary majority in 1880 and four years later restored state support to Catholic schools In 1885 various socialist and social democratic groups drew together and formed the Labour Party Increasing social unrest and the rise of the Labour Party forced the adoption of universal male suffrage in 1893 nbsp Leopold II possibly by Nadar c 1865During Leopold s reign other social changes were enacted into law Among these were the right of workers to form labour unions and the abolition of the livret d ouvrier an employment record book Laws against child labour were passed Children younger than 12 were not allowed to work in factories children younger than 16 were not allowed to work at night and women younger than 21 years old were not allowed to work underground Workers gained the right to be compensated for workplace accidents and were given Sundays off The first revision of the Belgian Constitution came in 1893 Universal male suffrage was introduced though the effect of this was tempered by plural voting The eligibility requirements for the Senate were reduced and elections would be based on a system of proportional representation which continues to this day Leopold pushed strongly to enable a royal referendum whereby the king would have the power to consult the electorate directly on an issue and use his veto according to the results of the referendum The proposal was rejected as it would have given the king the power to override the elected government Leopold was so disappointed that he considered abdication 19 Leopold emphasized military defence as the basis of neutrality and strove to make Belgium less vulnerable militarily He achieved the construction of defensive fortresses at Liege at Namur and at Antwerp During the Franco Prussian War he managed to preserve Belgium s neutrality in a period of unusual difficulty and danger 10 Leopold pushed for a reform in military service but he was unable to obtain one until he was on his deathbed The Belgian army was a combination of volunteers and a lottery and it was possible for men to pay for substitutes for service This was replaced by a system in which one son in every family would have to serve in the military Builder King edit nbsp The Cinquantenaire Jubelpark memorial arcade and museums in Brussels commissioned by Leopold II nbsp Cartoon depicting Leopold II laying the first stone of the Basilica of the Sacred Heart in BrusselsLeopold commissioned a great number of buildings urban projects and public works largely with the profits generated from exploitation of the Congo Free State These projects earned him the epithet of Builder King Dutch Koning Bouwheer French Roi Batisseur The public buildings were mainly in Brussels Ostend Tervuren and Antwerp and include the Parc du Cinquantenaire Jubelpark 1852 1880 memorial arcade and complex the Basilica of the Sacred Heart 1905 1969 20 and Duden Park in Brussels 1881 the Hippodrome Wellington racetrack 1883 the Royal Galleries and Maria Hendrikapark in Ostend 1902 the Royal Museum for Central Africa and its surrounding park in Tervuren 1898 and Antwerpen Centraal railway station in Antwerp 1895 1905 In addition to his public works Leopold acquired and built numerous private properties for himself inside and outside Belgium He expanded the grounds of the Royal Castle of Laeken and built the Royal Greenhouses as well as the Japanese Tower and the Chinese Pavilion near the palace now the Museums of the Far East In the Ardennes his domains consisted of 6 700 hectares 17 000 acres of forests and agricultural lands and the chateaux of Ardenne Ciergnon Fenffe Villers sur Lesse and Ferage He also built important country estates on the French Riviera including the Villa des Cedres and its botanical garden and the Villa Leopolda Thinking of the future after his death Leopold did not want the collection of estates lands and heritage buildings he had privately amassed to be scattered among his daughters each of whom was married to a foreign prince In 1900 he created the Royal Trust by means of which he donated most of his properties to the Belgian nation in perpetuity and arranged for the royal family to continue using them after his death Attempted assassination edit On 15 November 1902 Italian anarchist Gennaro Rubino attempted to assassinate Leopold who was riding in a royal cortege from a ceremony at Church of St Michael and St Gudula in memory of his recently deceased wife Marie Henriette After Leopold s carriage passed Rubino fired three shots at the procession The shots missed Leopold but almost killed the king s grand marshal Count Charles John d Oultremont Rubino was immediately arrested and subsequently sentenced to life imprisonment He died in prison in 1918 The king replied after the attack to a senator My dear senator if fate wants me shot too bad Mon cher Senateur si la fatalite veut que je sois atteint tant pis 21 After the failed regicide the king s security was questioned because the glass of the landaus was 2 cm thick Elsewhere in Europe the news of this assassination attempt was received with alarm Heads of state and the pope sent telegrams to the king congratulating him for surviving the assassination attempt The Belgians rejoiced that the king was safe Later in the day in the Royal Theatre of La Monnaie before Tristan und Isolde was performed the orchestra played The Brabanconne which was sung loudly and ended with loud cheers and applause 21 Congo Free State edit nbsp Map of the Congo Free State c 1890Leopold was the founder and sole owner of the Congo Free State a private project undertaken on his own behalf 22 136 He used explorer Henry Morton Stanley to help him lay claim to the Congo an area now known as the Democratic Republic of the Congo At the Berlin Conference of 1884 1885 the colonial nations of Europe authorised his claim by committing the Congo Free State to improving the lives of the people 22 122 124 From the beginning Leopold ignored these conditions He ran the Congo using the mercenary Force Publique for his personal enrichment 23 Failure to meet rubber collection quotas was punishable by death Meanwhile the Force Publique were required to provide the hand of their victims as proof when they had shot and killed someone as it was believed that they would otherwise use the munitions imported from Europe at considerable cost for hunting As a consequence the rubber quotas were in part paid off in chopped off hands Leopold extracted a fortune from the Congo initially by the collection of ivory and after a rise in the price of rubber in the 1890s by forced labour from the people to harvest and process rubber Shortly after the Brussels Anti Slavery Conference 1889 1890 Leopold issued a new decree mandating that Africans in a large part of the Free State could sell their harvested products mostly ivory and rubber only to the state This law extended an earlier decree declaring that all unoccupied land belonged to the state Any ivory or rubber collected from the state owned land the reasoning went must belong to the state thus creating a de facto state controlled monopoly Therefore a large share of the local population could sell only to the state which could set prices and thereby control the income the Congolese could receive for their work For local elites however this system presented new opportunities as the Free State and concession companies paid them with guns to tax their subjects in kind Under his regime millions of Congolese inhabitants including children were mutilated killed or died from disease and famine 22 115 118 127 In addition the birth rate rapidly declined during this period 3 Estimates for the total population decline range from one million to fifteen million with a consensus growing around 10 million 24 25 25 Several historians argue against this figure due to the absence of reliable censuses the enormous mortality of diseases such as smallpox or sleeping sickness and the fact that there were only 175 administrative agents in charge of rubber exploitation 26 27 Reports of deaths and abuse led to a major international scandal in the early 20th century and Leopold was forced by the Belgian government to relinquish control of the colony to the civil administration in 1908 Obtaining the Congo Free State edit Further information Congo Free State nbsp Cartoon depicting Leopold II and other imperial powers at the Berlin Conference of 1884Leopold fervently believed that overseas colonies were the key to a country s greatness and he worked tirelessly to acquire colonial territory for Belgium He envisioned our little Belgium as the capital of a large overseas empire 5 Leopold eventually began to acquire a colony as a private citizen The Belgian government lent him money for this venture During his reign Leopold saw the empires of the Netherlands Portugal and Spain as being in a state of decline and expressed interest in buying their territories 28 In 1866 Leopold instructed the Belgian ambassador in Madrid to speak to Queen Isabella II of Spain about ceding the Philippines to Belgium Knowing the situation fully the ambassador did nothing Leopold quickly replaced the ambassador with a more sympathetic individual to carry out his plan 28 In 1868 when Isabella II was deposed as queen of Spain Leopold tried to press his original plan to acquire the Philippines But without funds he was unsuccessful Leopold then devised another unsuccessful plan to establish the Philippines as an independent state which could then be ruled by a Belgian When both of these plans failed Leopold shifted his aspirations of colonisation to Africa 28 After numerous unsuccessful schemes to acquire colonies in Africa and Asia in 1876 Leopold organized a private holding company disguised as an international scientific and philanthropic association which he called the International African Society or the International Association for the Exploration and Civilization of the Congo In 1878 under the auspices of the holding company he hired explorer Henry Stanley to explore and establish a colony in the Congo region 5 62 Much diplomatic maneuvering among European nations resulted in the Berlin Conference of 1884 1885 regarding African affairs at which representatives of 14 European countries and the United States recognized Leopold as sovereign of most of the area to which he and Stanley had laid claim 5 84 87 On 5 February 1885 the Congo Free State an area 76 times larger than Belgium was established under Leopold II s personal rule and private army the Force Publique 5 123 124 nbsp Leopold II s effigy on a Congo Free State 5 Franc with the unabridged and translated lettering of Leopold II King of the Belgians Sovereign of the Independent State of the Congo Lado Enclave edit Further information Lado Enclave and Battle of Rejaf In 1894 King Leopold signed a treaty with Great Britain which conceded a strip of land on the Congo Free State s eastern border in exchange for a lifetime lease of the Lado Enclave which provided access to the navigable Nile and extended the Free State s sphere of influence northwards into Sudan 29 After rubber profits soared in 1895 Leopold ordered the organization of an expedition into the Lado Enclave which had been overrun by Mahdist rebels since the outbreak of the Mahdist War in 1881 The expedition was composed of two columns the first under Belgian Baron Dhanis consisted of a sizable force numbering around 3 000 and was to strike north through the jungle and attack the rebels at their base at Rejaf The second a much smaller force of 800 was led by Louis Napoleon Chaltin and took the main road towards Rejaf Both expeditions set out in December 1896 30 Although Leopold had initially planned for the expedition to carry on much farther than the Lado Enclave hoping indeed to take Fashoda and then Khartoum 31 Dhanis column mutinied in February 1897 resulting in the death of several Belgian officers and the loss of his entire force Nonetheless Chaltin continued his advance and on 17 February 1897 his outnumbered forces defeated the rebels in the Battle of Rejaf securing the Lado Enclave as Free State territory until Leopold s death in 1909 32 Exploitation atrocities and death toll edit Further information Atrocities in the Congo Free State nbsp A Congolese man Nsala looking at the severed hand and foot of his five year old daughter who was killed cooked and cannibalized by members of the Force Publique in 1904 33 Leopold was responsible for the theft of vast fortunes from the Congolese people by exploiting the nation s natural resources At first mass amounts of ivory was taken from the country but this did not yield the expected levels of revenue When the global demand for rubber exploded exploitative efforts shifted to the labour intensive collection of sap from rubber plants Violating the commitments made at the Berlin Conference in the late 1890s the Free State government restricted foreign access and extorted forced labour from the native people held against their will Abuses especially in the rubber industry included forced labour of the native population physical assault widespread murder and frequent mutilation when production quotas were not met One practice used to force workers to collect rubber included taking wives and family members hostage 34 nbsp Mutilated Congolese children and adultsMissionary John Harris of Baringa was so shocked by what he had encountered that he wrote to Leopold s chief agent in the Congo saying I have just returned from a journey inland to the village of Insongo Mboyo The abject misery and utter abandon is positively indescribable I was so moved Your Excellency by the people s stories that I took the liberty of promising them that in future you will only kill them for crimes they commit 35 Estimates of the death toll range from one million to fifteen million 4 36 since accurate records were not kept Historians Louis and Stengers in 1968 stated that population figures at the start of Leopold s control are only wild guesses and that attempts by E D Morel and others to determine a figure for the loss of population were but figments of the imagination 37 38 Adam Hochschild devotes a chapter of his 1998 book King Leopold s Ghost to the problem of estimating the death toll He cites several recent lines of investigation by anthropologist Jan Vansina and others that examine local sources police records religious records oral traditions genealogies personal diaries and many others which generally agree with the assessment of the 1919 Belgian government commission roughly half the population were killed or died during the Free State period Hochschild points out that since the first official census by the Belgian authorities in 1924 put the population at about 10 million these various approaches suggest a rough estimate of a population decline by 10 million 5 225 233 Smallpox epidemics and sleeping sickness also devastated the deeply traumatized population 39 By 1896 African trypanosomiasis had killed up to 5 000 people in the village of Lukolela on the Congo River The mortality statistics were collected through the efforts of British consul Roger Casement who found for example only 600 survivors of the disease in Lukolela in 1903 40 Criticism of the management of Congo edit Main article Congo Free State propaganda war nbsp A 1906 Punch cartoon by Edward Linley Sambourne depicting Leopold II as a rubber snake entangling a Congolese rubber collectorInspired by works such as Joseph Conrad s Heart of Darkness 1902 originally published as a three part series in Blackwood s Magazine 1899 and based on Conrad s experience as a steamer captain on the Congo 12 years earlier international criticism of Leopold s rule increased and mobilized Reports of outrageous exploitation and widespread human rights abuses led the British Crown to appoint their consul Roger Casement to investigate conditions there His extensive travels and interviews in the region resulted in the Casement Report which detailed the extensive abuses under Leopold s regime 41 A widespread war of words ensued In Britain former shipping clerk E D Morel with Casement s support founded the Congo Reform Association the first mass human rights movement 35 Supporters included American writer Mark Twain whose stinging political satire entitled King Leopold s Soliloquy portrays the king arguing that bringing Christianity to the country outweighs a little starvation and uses many of Leopold s own words against him 42 Writer Arthur Conan Doyle also criticised the rubber regime in his 1908 work The Crime of the Congo written to aid the work of the Congo Reform Association Doyle contrasted Leopold s rule with British rule in Nigeria arguing that decency required those who ruled primitive peoples to be concerned first with their uplift not how much could be extracted from them As Hochschild describes in King Leopold s Ghost many of Leopold s policies in particular those of colonial monopolies and forced labour were influenced by Dutch practice in the East Indies 5 37 Similar methods of forced labour were employed to some degree by Germany France and Portugal where natural rubber occurred in their own colonies 5 280 source source source King Leopold II and Princess Clementine visit colonial celebrations in Antwerp on the occasion of the Congo s annexation to Belgium in 1909Relinquishment of the Congo edit See also Belgian Congo International opposition and criticism at home from the Catholic Party Progressive Liberals 43 and the Labour Party caused the Belgian Parliament to compel the king to cede the Congo Free State to Belgium in 1908 The deal that led to the handover cost Belgium the considerable sum of 215 5 million Francs This was used to discharge the debt of the Congo Free State and to pay out its bond holders as well as 45 5 million for Leopold s pet building projects in Belgium and a personal payment of 50 million to him 5 259 The Congo Free State was transformed into a Belgian colony under parliamentary control known as the Belgian Congo Leopold went to great lengths to conceal potential evidence of wrongdoing during his time as ruler of his private colony The entire archive of the Congo Free State was burned and he told his aide that even though the Congo had been taken from him they have no right to know what I did there 5 294 When the Belgian government took over the administration in 1908 the situation in the Congo improved in certain respects The brutal exploitation and arbitrary use of violence in which some of the concessionary companies had excelled were curbed Article 3 of the new Colonial Charter of 18 October 1908 stated that Nobody can be forced to work on behalf of and for the profit of companies or privates but this was not enforced and the Belgian government continued to impose forced labour on the natives albeit by less obvious methods 44 The Belgian Congo gained independence in 1960 and became known as the Republic of the Congo Death and legacy edit nbsp Leopold II s funeral procession passes the unfinished Royal Palace of Brussels 22 December 1909On 17 December 1909 Leopold II died at Laeken and the Belgian crown passed to Albert I the son of Leopold s brother Philippe Count of Flanders His funeral cortege was booed by the crowd 45 in expression of disapproval of his rule 46 Leopold s reign of exactly 44 years remains the longest in Belgian history He was interred in the royal vault at the Church of Our Lady of Laeken Attention to the Congo atrocities subsided in the years after Leopold s death Statues of him were erected in the 1930s at the initiative of Albert I while the Belgian government celebrated his accomplishments in Belgium 46 The debate over Leopold s legacy was reignited in 1999 with the publication of King Leopold s Ghost by American historian Adam Hochschild 46 which recounts Leopold s plan to acquire the colony the exploitation and the large death toll 47 48 49 50 The debate then periodically resurfaced over the following 20 years 46 nbsp The last picture of Leopold IIIn 2010 Louis Michel a Belgian member of the European Parliament and former Belgian foreign minister called Leopold II a visionary hero According to Michel To use the word genocide in relation to the Congo is absolutely unacceptable and inappropriate maybe colonisation was domineering and acquiring more power but at a certain moment it brought civilisation 51 Michel s remarks were countered by several Belgian politicians Senator Pol Van Den Driessche replied A great visionary Absolutely not What happened then was shameful If we measured him against 21st century standards it is likely that Leopold would be hauled before the International Criminal Court in The Hague 51 In June 2020 a Black Lives Matter demonstration in Brussels protested the murder of George Floyd causing Leopold II s legacy to become once again the subject of debate 52 MPs agreed to set up a parliamentary commission to examine Belgium s colonial past a step likened to the Truth and Reconciliation Committee set up in South Africa after the apartheid regime was abolished On 30 June the 60th anniversary of the Democratic Republic of the Congo s independence King Philippe released a statement expressing his deepest regret for the wounds of the colonial past and the acts of violence and cruelty committed in the Congo during colonisation 53 but did not explicitly mention Leopold s role in the atrocities Some activists accused him of not making a full apology 54 Statues edit Main article List of statues of Leopold II of Belgium nbsp Equestrian Statue of Leopold II Place du Trone Troonplein BrusselsLeopold II remains a controversial figure in the Democratic Republic of the Congo In the capital Kinshasa known until 1966 as Leopoldville in his honor his statue was removed after independence Congolese culture minister Christophe Muzungu decided to reinstate the statue in 2005 He noted that the beginning of the Free State had been a time of some economic and social progress He argued that people should recognize some positive aspects of the king as well as the negative but hours after the six metre 20 ft statue was installed near Kinshasa s central station it was officially removed 55 Several statues have been erected to honour the legacy of Leopold II in Belgium According to Professor of Colonial History Idesbald Goddeeris of the University of Leuven 2018 most of the statues date from the interwar period the peak of colonial patriotic propaganda The monuments were supposed to help get rid of the scandal after international commotion about the atrocities in the Congo Free State during Leopold II s rule and to raise people s enthusiasm for the colonial enterprise in Belgian Congo 56 Leopold s controversial regime in the Congo Free State has motivated proposals for these statues to be removed 57 58 During the international George Floyd protests against racism May July 2020 several statues of Leopold II were vandalised and petitions calling for the removal of some or all statues were signed by tens of thousands of Belgians 57 59 60 61 Other petitions signed by hundreds called for the statues to remain 62 63 In early June 2020 a majority in the Brussels Parliament requested a committee to be set up to decolonise the public sphere in the Brussels Capital Region 64 From 9 June 2020 onwards authorities in Belgium began removing some of the statues of Leopold beginning with ones in Ekeren in the municipality of Antwerp 58 and in the Warocque Faculty of Economics and Management of the University of Mons on that day 65 Family edit nbsp Leopold and Marie Henriette nbsp Caroline Lacroix and her children Lucien Duke of Tervuren and Philippe Count of Ravenstein Leopold s sister became the Empress Carlota of Mexico His first cousins included both Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom and her husband Prince Albert as well as King Fernando II of Portugal He had four children with Queen Marie Henriette of whom the youngest two have descendants living as of 2018 update Princess Louise of Belgium born in Brussels on 18 February 1858 and died at Wiesbaden on 1 March 1924 She married Prince Philipp of Saxe Coburg and Gotha on 4 February 1875 they had two children and divorced on 15 January 1906 Prince Leopold Duke of Brabant Count of Hainaut as eldest son of the heir apparent later Duke of Brabant as heir apparent born at Laeken on 12 June 1859 and died at Laeken on 22 January 1869 from pneumonia after falling into a pond Princess Stephanie of Belgium born at Laeken on 21 May 1864 and died at the Archabbey of Pannonhalma in Gyor Moson Sopron Hungary on 23 August 1945 She married 1 Crown Prince Rudolf of Austria the heir apparent to the throne of Austria Hungary In 1889 he died in a suicide pact with his mistress Baroness Mary Vetsera at the Mayerling hunting lodge 66 Stephanie s second husband was 2 Elemer Edmund Graf Lonyay de Nagy Lonya et Vasaros Nameny created in 1917 Prince Lonyay de Nagy Lonya et Vasaros Nameny Princess Clementine of Belgium born at Laeken on 30 July 1872 and died at Nice on 8 March 1955 She married Prince Napoleon Victor Jerome Frederic Bonaparte 1862 1926 head of the Bonaparte family The current head of the Imperial family Jean Christophe Prince Napoleon is a direct descendant of King Leopold II Leopold also fathered two sons by Caroline Lacroix They were adopted in 1910 by Lacroix s second husband Antoine Durrieux 67 Leopold granted them courtesy titles that were honorary as the parliament would not have supported any official act or decree Lucien Philippe Marie Antoine 9 February 1906 15 November 1984 Duke of Tervuren he married Lucie Gracieuse Mundutey 30 October 1900 8 February 2005 on 1 March 1927 67 Philippe Henri Marie Francois 16 October 1907 21 August 1914 Count of Ravenstein 67 Ancestry editAncestors of Leopold II of Belgium8 Ernest Frederick Duke of Saxe Coburg Saalfeld4 Francis Duke of Saxe Coburg Saalfeld9 Duchess Sophie Antoinette of Brunswick Wolfenbuttel2 Leopold I of Belgium10 Heinrich XXIV Count Reuss of Ebersdorf5 Countess Augusta Reuss of Ebersdorf11 Countess Karoline Ernestine of Erbach Schonberg1 Leopold II of Belgium12 Louis Philippe II Duke of Orleans6 Louis Philippe I of France13 Louise Marie Adelaide de Bourbon3 Princess Louise of Orleans14 Ferdinand I of the Two Sicilies7 Princess Maria Amalia of Naples and Sicily15 Archduchess Maria Carolina of AustriaSee also edit nbsp Monarchy portal nbsp Belgium portal nbsp History portal nbsp Biography portalAbir Congo Company Atrocities in the Congo Free State Emile Banning Congo Free State propaganda war Crown Council of Belgium Kings of Belgium family treeReferences edit Hochschild A King Leopold s Ghost A Story of Greed Terror and Heroism in Colonial Africa Houghton Mifflin 1999 pp 111 112 Controverse over standbeelden van Leopold II Waarom is de Belgische koning zo omstreden VRT in Dutch 5 June 2020 Retrieved 10 August 2023 a b Renton David Seddon David Zeilig Leo 2007 The Congo Plunder and Resistance London Zed Books p 37 ISBN 978 1 84277 485 4 a b Forbath Peter 1977 The River Congo The Discovery Exploration and Exploitation of the World s Most Dramatic Rivers Harper amp Row p 278 ISBN 978 0 06 122490 4 a b c d e f g h i j Hochschild Adam 1998 King Leopold s Ghost A Story of Greed Terror and Heroism in Colonial Africa Mariner ISBN 978 0 330 49233 1 OCLC 50527720 Emerson pp 4 6 Emerson p 9 Emerson p 9 10 Aronson p 13 a b c d nbsp One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Leopold II King of the Belgians Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 16 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 461 in French mariage d un palefrenier et d une religieuse a b Leopold II The Belgian Monarchy Retrieved 4 December 2013 Hochschild Adam 1998 King Leopold s Ghost A Story of Greed Terror and Heroism in Colonial Africa New York Mariner Books p 221 ISBN 0 330 49233 0 Hochschild p 222 Hochschild p 224 Rappoport p 268 Wheeler Edward 1910 Current Literature Volume 48 New York The Current Literature Publishing Company p 138 in French la patrie doit etre forte prospere par consequent posseder des debouches a elle belle et calme The King to the Count of Flanders 26 January 1888 The Count of Flanders s papers Stengers Jean 2008 L action du Roi en Belgique depuis 1831 pouvoir et influence The action of the King in Belgium since 1831 power and influence in French 3rd ed Brussels Racine pp 123 24 ISBN 978 2 87386 567 2 Vandenbreeden p 13 a b Meuse La 17 November 1902 a b c Ewans Sir Martin 2017 European Atrocity African Catastrophe Leopold II the Congo Free State and its Aftermath Abingdon England Routledge doi 10 4324 9781315829173 ISBN 978 1317849070 Ascherson 1999 p 8 Jalata Asafa March 2013 Colonial Terrorism Global Capitalism and African Underdevelopment 500 Years of Crimes Against African Peoples Journal of Pan African Studies 5 9 ISSN 0888 6601 Stanley Tim October 2012 Belgium s Heart of Darkness History Today 62 10 49 ISSN 0018 2753 nbsp Stengers Jean Critique de Livre de Hochschild PDF in French Sophie Mignon 22 December 2015 Non Leopold II n est pas un genocidaire in French a b c Ocampo Ambeth 2009 Looking Back Mandaluyong Philippines Anvil Publishing pp 54 57 ISBN 978 971 27 2336 0 Roger Louis William 2006 Ends of British Imperialism I B Tauris ISBN 978 1 84511 347 6 p 68 Charles de Kavanagh Boulger Demetrius 1898 The Congo State Or The Growth of Civilisation in Central Africa Congo W Thacker amp Company ISBN 0 217 57889 6 p 214 Pakenham Thomas 1992 The Scramble for Africa Avon Books ISBN 978 0 380 71999 0 pp 525 26 Lado Enclave Encyclopaedia Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica inc 19 July 2011 Thompson T Jack October 2002 Light on the Dark Continent The Photography of Alice Seely Harris and the Congo Atrocities of the Early Twentieth Century International Bulletin of Missionary Research 26 4 146 9 doi 10 1177 239693930202600401 S2CID 146866987 Archived from the original on 21 July 2021 Retrieved 21 July 2021 Renton Seddon amp Zeilig 2007 p 31 a b Dummett Mark 24 February 2004 King Leopold s legacy of DR Congo violence BBC Retrieved 1 December 2011 Wertham Fredric 1968 A Sign For Cain An Exploration of Human Violence ISBN 978 0 7091 0232 8 page needed Louis William Roger Stengers Jean 1968 E D Morel s History of the Congo Reform Movement London Clarendon pp 252 57 OCLC 685226763 Guy Vanthemsche 2012 Belgium and the Congo 1885 1980 Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521194211 The Leopold II concession system exported to French Congo with as example the Mpoko Company PDF Archived from the original PDF on 27 March 2009 Retrieved 2 December 2011 Le rapport Casement annote par A Schorochoff PDF Royal Union for Overseas Colonies Ascherson pp 250 60 CONGO Boom in the Jungle Time 16 May 1955 Archived from the original on 21 December 2007 Retrieved 7 May 2010 Lauwers Nathan Georges Lorand 1860 1918 Een transnationale progressieve liberaal VUB 2016 Citations Marchal Jules 1999 Forced labor in the gold and copper mines a history of Congo under Belgian rule 1910 1945 Translated by Ayi Kwei Armah reprint ed Per Ankh Publishers Marchal Jules 2008 Lord Leverhulme s Ghosts Colonial Exploitation in the Congo Translated by Martin Thom Introduced by Adam Hochschild London Verso ISBN 978 1 84467 239 4 First published as Travail force pour l huile de palme de Lord Leverhulme L histoire du Congo 1910 1945 tome 3 by Editions Paula Bellings in 2001 Rich Jeremy Spring 2009 Lord Leverhulme s Ghost Colonial Exploitation in the Congo review Journal of Colonialism and Colonial History 10 doi 10 1353 cch 0 0053 S2CID 161485622 Archived from the original on 17 March 2018 Retrieved 17 March 2018 Hochschild Adam 1999 18 Victory King Leopold s Ghost a story of greed terror and heroism in colonial Africa Boston Mariner Books Buell Raymond Leslie 1928 The native problem in Africa Volume II New York The Macmillan Company pp 540 544 Zoellner Tom 2009 1 Scalding Fruit Uranium war energy and the rock that shaped the world New York Penguin Group pp 4 5 Lewis Brian 2008 Sunlight for Savages So Clean Lord Leverhulme Soap and Civilisation Manchester Manchester University Press pp 188 190 Edmondson Brad 2014 10 The Sale Agreements Ice Cream Social The Struggle for the Soul of Ben amp Jerry s San Francisco California Berrett Koehler Publishers Makelele Albert This is a Good Country Welcome to the Congo pp 43 44 De Witte Ludo 9 January 2016 Congolese oorlogstranen Deportatie en dwangarbeid voor de geallieerde oorlogsindustrie 1940 1945 DeWereldMorgen be Archived from the original on 17 March 2018 Retrieved 17 March 2018 Lord Leverhulme History Archived from the original on 17 March 2018 Retrieved 17 March 2018 Mitchell Donald 2014 The Politics of Dissent A Biography of E D Morel SilverWood Books Un autre regard sur l Histoire Congolaise Guide alternatif de l exposition de Tervuren PDF p 14 Archived from the original PDF on 28 June 2017 Retrieved 17 March 2018 Dargis Manohla 21 October 2005 The Horrors of Belgium s Congo The New York Times Retrieved 4 December 2016 a b c d Keating Dave 9 June 2020 How Belgium is being forced to confront the bloody legacy of King Leopold II New Statesman Retrieved 16 June 2020 Jeremy Harding 20 September 1998 Into Africa New York Times Archived from the original on 13 September 2001 Retrieved 13 June 2012 a superb synoptic history of European misdemeanor in central Africa Michiko Kakutani 1 September 1998 Genocide With Spin Control The New York Times Archived from the original on 18 April 2001 Retrieved 13 June 2012 Hochschild has stitched it together into a vivid novelistic narrative Luc Sante 27 September 1998 Leopold s Heart of Darkness San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved 13 June 2012 King Leopold s Ghost is an absorbing and horrifying account Godwin Rapando Murunga 1999 King Leopold s Ghost review African Studies Quarterly 3 2 Archived from the original on 18 June 2012 Retrieved 13 June 2012 King Leopold s Ghost tells the story of the Congo with fresh and critical insights bringing new analysis to this topic a b Phillips Leigh 22 June 2010 Ex commissioner calls Congo s colonial master a visionary hero EU Observer Retrieved 1 January 2020 King Leopold II ruled Congo as a private slave state and brutal legacy is finally acknowledged 26 June 2020 Belgian king expresses regrets for colonial abuses BBC News 30 June 2020 Retrieved 2 July 2020 Picheta Rob 1 July 2020 Belgium s King sends regrets to Congo for Leopold II atrocities but doesn t apologize CNN Retrieved 1 July 2020 Vasagar Jeevan 4 February 2005 Leopold reigns for a day in Kinshasa The Guardian Yolan Devriendt 2018 Belgische koloniale geschiedenis in het katholiek middelbaar onderwijs vergeten verhaal of kritisch discours PDF in Dutch Ghent University p 13 Retrieved 26 February 2021 a b Teri Schultz 5 June 2020 Belgians Target Some Royal Monuments In Black Lives Matter Protest NPR Retrieved 7 June 2020 a b Burned Leopold II statue removed from Antwerp square The Brussels Times 9 June 2020 Retrieved 9 June 2020 Al meer dan 16 000 handtekeningen voor petitie om standbeelden Leopold II uit Brussel weg te nemen Tommelein wil beeld in Oostende niet verwijderen Het Laatste Nieuws in Dutch 3 June 2020 Retrieved 7 June 2020 Het Debat Moeten standbeelden van Leopold II en andere bedenkelijke historische figuren verdwijnen uit het straatbeeld Het Laatste Nieuws in Dutch 6 June 2020 Retrieved 7 June 2020 Burno Struys 6 June 2020 Dit zijn de organisatoren van de Belgische Black Lives Matter betogingen De Morgen in Dutch Retrieved 7 June 2020 Pourquoi les opposants a Leopold II continuent ils a vandaliser les statues de l ancien Roi RTBF in French 6 June 2020 Retrieved 19 June 2020 Jean Luc Bodeux 18 June 2020 Arlon petition et contre petition autour de Leopold II Le Soir in French Retrieved 19 June 2020 Brusselse meerderheid vraagt dekolonisering van openbare ruimte Bruzz in Dutch 4 June 2020 Retrieved 7 June 2020 Isabelle Palmitessa 9 June 2020 L UMons retire un buste de Leopold II suite a une petition RTBF in French Retrieved 4 July 2020 As documented in several autograph letters by the two unfortunate lovers ANSA newsbrief in Italian a b c Le Petit Gotha Bibliography editAscherson Neal The King Incorporated Allen amp Unwin 1963 ISBN 1 86207 290 6 1999 Granta edition Aronson Theo Defiant Dynasty The Coburgs of Belgium Bobbs Merrill 1968 Emerson Barbara Leopold II of the Belgians Weidenfeld amp Nicolson 1979 ISBN 0 297 77569 3 Hochschild Adam King Leopold s Ghost A Story of Greed Terror and Heroism in Colonial Africa Mariner Books 1998 ISBN 0 330 49233 0 Petringa Maria Brazza A Life for Africa 2006 ISBN 978 1 4259 1198 0 Wm Roger Louis and Jean Stengers E D Morel s History of the Congo Reform Movement Clarendon Press Oxford 1968 o Siochain Seamas and Michael O Sullivan eds The Eyes of Another Race Roger Casement s Congo Report and 1903 Diary University College Dublin Press 2004 ISBN 1 900621 99 1 o Siochain Seamas Roger Casement Imperialist Rebel Revolutionary Dublin Lilliput Press 2008 Roes Aldwin 2010 Towards a History of Mass Violence in the Etat Independant du Congo 1885 1908 PDF South African Historical Journal 62 4 634 70 doi 10 1080 02582473 2010 519937 S2CID 144843155 Stanard Matthew G Selling the Congo A history of European pro empire propaganda and the making of Belgian imperialism U of Nebraska Press 2012 Vandenbreeden Jos de Puydt Raoul Maria 2005 Basilique Koekelberg monument art deco in French and Dutch Bruxelles Editions Racine ISBN 90 209 6144 6 Vanthemsche Guy 2012 Belgium and the Congo 1885 1980 Cambridge UP ISBN 978 0521194211 Vanthemsche Guy 2006 The historiography of Belgian colonialism in the Congo in C Levai ed Europe and the World in European Historiography Pisa University Press pp 89 119 online Viaene Vincent King Leopold s imperialism and the origins of the Belgian colonial party 1860 1905 Journal of Modern History 80 4 2008 741 90 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Leopold II of Belgium nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Leopold II of Belgium nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Leopold II of Belgium Archive Leopold II Royal museum of central Africa Official biography from the Belgian Royal Family website The Political Economy of Power Interview with political scientist Bruce Bueno de Mesquita with a discussion of Leopold halfway through Interview with King Leopold II Publishers Press 1906 The Crime of the Congo 1909 Sir Arthur Conan Doyle Archive org Grant Kevin 2001 Christian critics of empire Missionaries lantern lectures and the Congo reform campaign in Britain The Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 29 2 27 58 doi 10 1080 03086530108583118 S2CID 159607969 Peffer John 2008 Snap of the Whip Crossroads of Shame Flogging Photography and the Representation of Atrocity in the Congo Reform Campaign Visual Anthropology Review 24 55 77 doi 10 1111 j 1548 7458 2008 00005 x van den Braembussche Antoon 2002 The Silence of Belgium Taboo and Trauma in Belgian Memory Yale French Studies 102 34 52 doi 10 2307 3090591 JSTOR 3090591 Weisbord Robert G 2003 The King the Cardinal and the Pope Leopold II s genocide in the Congo and the Vatican Journal of Genocide Research 5 35 45 doi 10 1080 14623520305651 S2CID 73371517 Langbein John H January 1976 The Historical Origins of the Sanction of Imprisonment for Serious Crime The Journal of Legal Studies 5 1 35 60 doi 10 1086 467543 JSTOR 724073 S2CID 29172387 Gewald Jan Bart 2006 More than Red Rubber and Figures Alone A Critical Appraisal of the Memory of the Congo Exhibition at the Royal Museum for Central Africa Tervuren Belgium The International Journal of African Historical Studies 39 3 471 86 JSTOR 40034827 Pavlakis Dean 2010 The Development of British Overseas Humanitarianism and the Congo Reform Campaign Journal of Colonialism and Colonial History 11 1 doi 10 1353 cch 0 0102 S2CID 162285976 Newspaper clippings about Leopold II of Belgium in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW Leopold II of BelgiumHouse of Saxe Coburg and GothaCadet branch of the House of WettinBorn 9 April 1835 Died 17 December 1909Regnal titlesPreceded byLeopold I King of the Belgians1865 1909 Succeeded byAlbert IBelgian royaltyNew title Duke of Brabant1840 1865 Succeeded byLeopold Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Leopold II of 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