1959 in Luxembourg
The following lists events that happened during 1959 in the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg.
Incumbents
Position | Incumbent |
---|---|
Grand Duke | Charlotte |
Prime Minister | Pierre Frieden (until 23 February) Pierre Werner (from 2 March) |
Deputy Prime Minister | Eugène Schaus (post created on 2 March) |
President of the Chamber of Deputies | Émile Reuter Joseph Bech |
President of the Council of State | Félix Welter |
Mayor of Luxembourg City | Émile Hamilius |
Events
January – March
- 1 February – Elections are held to the Chamber of Deputies. The Christian Social People's Party loses 5 seats, while the Democratic Party gains five.
- 23 February – Prime Minister Pierre Frieden dies in Zürich, twenty-two days after winning re-election.
- 2 March – Pierre Werner becomes Prime Minister, seven days after the death of his Christian Social People's Party colleague Pierre Frieden. He forms a new government in coalition with the Democratic Party, with Eugène Schaus in the new office as Deputy Prime Minister.
- 11 March – Luxembourg misses the Eurovision Song Contest for the first time: the only time before the country's withdrawal from the contest since 1993.
April – June
- 7 June – Charly Gaul wins the 1959 Giro d'Italia.
July – September
- 4 August – Nicolas Margue is appointed to the Council of State.[1]
October – December
- 30 December – Paul Wilwertz is re-appointed to the Council of State, having previously been a member from 1945 to 1954.[1]
Births
- 12 April – Andy Bausch, film director
- 18 May – Ranga Yogeshwar, scientist
- 28 September – Michel Margue, historian
- 30 September – Fernand Kartheiser, politician
- 8 October – Claude Michely, cyclist
- 12 December – Patrick Hastert, actor
- 28 December – Antoine, Prince of Ligne
Deaths
- 23 February – Pierre Frieden, politician and Prime Minister
- 7 June – Victor Prost, politician
- 22 July – Robert Bruch, linguist
- 24 September – Jean Schaack, painter
- 26 September – Ernest Hamelius, politician and banker
- 4 October – Romain Nati, Councillor of State
- 2 December – Leo Müller, politician and journalist
- 4 December – Jean-Pierre Ries, clergyman
Footnotes
- "Membres depuis 1857" (in French). Council of State. Archived from the original on 2009-11-03. Retrieved 2009-04-05.
References
- Thewes, Guy (2006). Les gouvernements du Grand-Duché de Luxembourg depuis 1848 (PDF) (in French) (2006 ed.). Luxembourg City: Service Information et Presse. ISBN 978-2-87999-156-6. Retrieved 12 December 2009.
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