Willem van Steenhuys, Lord of Flers (1558–1638) was a noble magistrate and diplomat in the Spanish Netherlands.[1]

Willem van Steenhuys
Privy councillors in the funeral cortege of Archduke Albert (1622), Steenhuys at far right
councillor of the Great Council of Mechelen
In office
1601–1638
MonarchsAlbert VII, Archduke of Austria (1598–1621)
Philip IV of Spain (1621–1665)
Governors GeneralIsabella Clara Eugenia (1621–1633)
Cardinal-Infante Ferdinand of Austria (1633–1641)
Personal details
BornOctober 8, 1558
Lannoy
DiedApril 30, 1638(1638-04-30) (aged 79)
Brussels
Resting placeDominican church, Brussels
SpouseMargaretha van Cottignies
ChildrenFilip Willem van Steenhuys
ParentJan van Steenhuys
Educationcivil law

Family

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Van Steenhuys was born at Lannoy on 8 October 1558, son of Jan van Steenhuys, Lord of Linghen, and Charlotte Preys.[1]

In 1591 he married Margaretha (Marguerite) van (de) Cottignies, daughter of Lancelot, Lord of The Hague. They had the following children:

  • Maria van Steenhuys; married to Filip van Spanghen, Lord of Ter Liest.[2]
  • Filip Willem van Steenhuys, who succeeded his father and became Baron of Poederlee; further descendants.
  • Karel van Steenhuys, jurist[1]

Career

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He obtained the degree of licentiate in law and on 7 June 1601 he was appointed a councillor of the Great Council of Mechelen, on 3 May 1611 councillor and master of requests of the Brussels Privy Council, and in 1613 commissioner in fiscal cases. He was an important advisor on monetary law.[2]

In June 1617 and January 1619 he travelled to Antwerp and Leuven to investigate the publication of Corona Regia, a scandalous libel of James VI and I.[3] In 1618–1619 he undertook a mission to the King of France, and in 1620 to Ambrogio Spinola in the Rhine Palatinate. On 8 May 1622 he was appointed to the Council of State and in October of the same year he was discharged as a privy councillor and despatched to assist the Spanish delegation at the Diet of Regensburg (1623). The same year he was knighted.

He returned to Brussels in April 1623. On 1 January 1627 he was appointed to the Admiralty council.[2]

Van Steenhuys died in Brussels on 30 April 1638 and was buried in the Dominican church.[2]

References

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  1. ^ a b c Björn Volckaert, De leden van de Geheime Raad der Zuidelijke Nederlanden onder het bewind van de aartshertogen en Filips IV, 1609-1653. Een prosopografische studie on e-thesis
  2. ^ a b c d L. Bril, "Steenhuys (Guillaume de)", Biographie Nationale de Belgique, vol. 23 (Brussels, 1924), 756-758.
  3. ^ Jules Finot, Inventaire sommaire des archives départementales antérieures à 1790. Nord: archives civiles, series B, vol. 6, Chambre des Comptes de Lille, nos. 2788 à 3228 (Lille, 1888), p. 92.