Norbert Metz

Jean-Joseph Norbert Metz (2 February 1811 – 28 November 1885) was a Luxembourgish politician and engineer. With his two brothers, members of the powerful Metz family, Charles and Auguste, Metz defined political and economic life in Luxembourg in the mid-nineteenth century.[1]

Metz was one of the leading 'quarante huitards':[2] the radical liberals responsible for the promulgation of Luxembourg's constitution in 1848. He was appointed by the King to the Assembly of the States in 1842, representing the canton of Capellen.[3] He was then elected to represent Capellen on the Constituent Assembly, in 1848.[4] Pro-Belgian and anti-German Confederation,[5] after the first elections, Metz was appointed Administrator-General for Finances and Administrator-General for Military Affairs.

On 21 May 1834, he married the 21-year-old Marie-Barbe-Philippe-Eugénie Tesch, who had three children before dying on 29 January 1845.[6] He remarried to Tesch's eighteen-year-old cousin, Marie-Suzanne-Albertine Tesch on 7 November 1850.[7]

One of his children was Émile Metz.

Rue Norbert Metz in Dudelange
  1. ^ Mersch (1963), p. 429
  2. ^ Thewes (2006), p. 16
  3. ^ Mersch (1963), p. 485
  4. ^ (in French and German) "Mémorial A, 1848, No. 38" (PDF). Service central de législation. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2009-09-05.
  5. ^ Thewes (2006), p. 17
  6. ^ Mersch (1963), p. 373
  7. ^ Mersch (1963), p. 373

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