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Jean Joseph Delplancq

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Jean Joseph Delplancq
DioceseDiocese of Tournai
SeeNotre-Dame de Tournai
Appointed1829
PredecessorVacant (1819–1829)
SuccessorGaspard-Joseph Labis (1835–1872)
Previous post(s)Dean of Hannut
Orders
OrdinationJune 1791
Consecration25 October 1829
Personal details
Born(1767-01-30)30 January 1767
Died27 July 1834(1834-07-27) (aged 67)
Tournai, Province of Hainaut, Kingdom of Belgium
EducationCollège de Roeulx
Alma materOld University of Leuven
MottoDeus mihi adjutor

Jean Joseph Delplancq (1767–1834) was a 19th-century bishop of Tournai and one of the founders of the Catholic University of Leuven.

Life

Delplancq was born in Thieu on 30 January 1767.[1] He was educated at the college in Le Rœulx and at the Old University of Leuven.[1] He was ordained to the priesthood in 1791, was appointed parish priest in Ville-en-Hesbaye in 1803, and in 1827 became dean of Hannut.[1] The diocese of Tournai had been vacant since 1819, and in 1829 he was appointed to the see. He was consecrated as bishop of Tournai on 25 October 1829.[1] After the Belgian Revolution of 1830 had guaranteed freedom of association and freedom of education, he established schools run by the De La Salle Brothers in Tournai, Peruwelz and Mons.[1] He was among the founders of the Catholic University of Mechelen in 1834 (moved to Leuven in 1835), convincing his fellow bishops that it would be best to seek papal approval before pressing ahead with the foundation.[1] He died in Tournai on 27 July 1834.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Aloïs Simon, "Delplancq, Jean Joseph", in Biographie Nationale de Belgique, vol. 30 (Brussels, 1958), 327-328.