Édouard Poncelet Explained

Édouard Clément Antoine Poncelet (1865–1947) was a Belgian archivist and historian who served as president of the Commission royale d'Histoire.

Life

Poncelet was born to a bourgeois family in Liège on 11 December 1865.[1] After completing the candidature degree at the University of Liège in 1884 he joined the Belgian State Archive service.[1] In December 1894 he was appointed assistant conservator of the State Archives in Mons, where he subsequently became conservator. He devoted much of his time to studying cartularies and publishing editions of charters. He also had a particular interest in sigillography. A considerable part of his unpublished work as an archivist was destroyed when Mons was bombed during the German invasion of Belgium (1940).[1] He became a member of the Commission royale d'Histoire in 1920, and president in 1933. He was also a member of many other Belgian learned societies in the fields of history, antiquities, archaeology, art history and bibliography. He died on 11 March 1947.[1]

Publications

Notes and References

  1. Armand Louant, "Poncelet (Édouard-Clément-Antoine)", in Biographie Nationale de Belgique, vol. 34 (Brussels, 1967), 658-664.