Jan van Casembroot

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Jan van Casembroot (also Jehan de Casembroot) (ca. 1525 – 14 September 1568) was a Flemish noble and poet. He was lord of Bekkerzeel, Zellik, Kobbegem, Berchem and Fenain.

Life

Jan Casembroot was born in Brugge, where he descended from an important family, originally from Piemonte. His father Lenaert Casembroot (1495-1558) was mayor of Brugge and his mother was Maria Reyvaert. He married Wilhelmina van Brockhorst, and had a daughter named Anna with her. He was secretary of Lamoral, Count of Egmont and he signed the Compromise of Nobles, in whose name he offered the Petition (Smeekschrift) to regentes Margaret of Parma on April 5, 1566, in which the nobles pleaded for religious freedom.

Jan Casembroot was a Catholic, but became a fierce opponent of Cardinal Antoine Perrenot de Granvelle. He also opposed the Beeldenstorm. Jan Casembroot was named governor of Oudenaarde by the count of Egmont, and managed to restore order in the city. In the agreement that he signed with the calvinists, he went further than the regents had stipulated in the Accord of 25 August 1566. He was arrested together with the count of Egmont on 9 September 1567, tortured and condemned to death on 9 August 1568 by the Council of Troubles led by the Fernando Alvarez de Toledo Duke of Alva, and beheaded on 14 September 1568 at Vilvoorde.

Several of his Latin poems were published, which reportedly display a humanistic sensibility.[citation needed]

References