Philippe Maes Explained

Philippus Masius or Philippe Maes, knight, (died 1627), lord of Bodeghem and Ophem, was a diplomat and public servant in the Spanish Netherlands.

Family

Philippe was the youngest son of Jacobus Maes, a member of the Council of Brabant, and Aleide de Tassis. His brothers were Engelbert, president of the Brussels Privy Council; Charles, bishop of Ypres and later bishop of Ghent; and Jean-Baptiste, who like their father sat in the Council of Brabant.

Philippe Maes's first wife, Françoise Foccant, died on 17 February 1602; his second wife, Jacqueline Vanderbeken, on 29 March 1603. Through his second wife he acquired the lordship of Ophem. His third wife was Anne Piermont. By his first two wives he had the following children:[1]

  1. Nicolas
  2. Jean-Baptiste
  3. Jacques
  4. Lancelot
  5. Marie
  6. Catherine

Career

Maes sat in the Estates General of 1598 and the Estates General of 1600 as a delegate of the States of Brabant.[2] From 1610 to 1618 he served the Archdukes Albert and Isabella as their resident envoy to the court of Pope Paul V.[3] In 1618 he was appointed president of the Lille Chamber of Accounts. At Albert's death in 1621 he was careful to see that his office and underlings took the correct steps to publicly mourn the Archduke.[4]

Maes died in Brussels on 18 October 1627 and was buried in the collegiate church of St Peter in Lille.

Notes and References

  1. Nobiliaire des Pays-Bas et du comté de Bourgogne, vol. 2 (Ghent, 1865), 1271-1272.
  2. Bram De Ridder and Violet Soen, "The Act of Cession, the 1598 and 1600 States General in Brussels and the Peace Negotiations during the Dutch Revolt", in The Twelve Years Truce (1609): Peace, Truce, War and Law in the Low Countries at the Turn of the 17th Century, ed. Randall Lesaffer (Leiden and Boston, 2014), p. 56n.
  3. Bruno Boute, Academic Interests and Catholic Confessionalisation (Leiden and Boston, 2010), p. 103.
  4. Mireille Jean, La Chambre des Comptes de Lille (1477-1667): L'institution et les hommes (Paris, 1992), p. 254.