Johann Theodor van der Noot
Johann Theodor or Jean Théodore van der Noot (1769–1843) was the first
Life
Van der Noot was born in Luxembourg on 6 April 1769, to the merchant Jean-Nicolas van der Noot and his wife Madeleine Herman. He was descended from the Brussels patrician lineage of House van der Noot.[1] A distant cousin of the last Princess Abbess of Nivelles (1776-1794), Marie Felicite Van der Noot, he graduated from Leuven University as the first of his year in Philosophy, and received Holy orders in the Catholic Church at Trier. When Luxembourg fell under French revolutionary rule, members of the clergy were obliged to take the oath to uphold the Civil Constitution of the Clergy. Van der Noot refused, and was condemned to deportation. In 1797 he escaped to Trier, secretly returning to Luxembourg the following year and living there clandestinely until 18 January 1800, when his sentence was quashed.[1]
After the
References
- ^ a b c d e Jules Vannérus, "Van der Noot (Jean-Théodore)", Biographie Nationale de Belgique, vol. 26 (Brussels, 1938), 373-374.