Metadata: Direction générale de la Législation civile et des Cultes. Direction de la Législation civile. Transfer 2002-2003
Collection
- Country:
- Belgium
- Holding institution:
- National Archives of Belgium
- Holding institution (official language):
- Archives Générales du Royaume
- Postal address:
- Ruisbroekstraat 2-6 / Rue de Ruysbroeck 2-6, 1000 Brussel
- Phone number:
- +32 (0)2 513 76 80
- Web address:
- http://www.arch.be/
- Email:
- archives.generales@arch.be
- Reference number:
- NAB-Brussels-510-1956
- Title:
- Direction générale de la Législation civile et des Cultes. Direction de la Législation civile. Transfer 2002-2003
- Title (official language):
- Direction générale de la Législation civile et des Cultes. Direction de la Législation civile. Versement 2002-2003
- Creator/accumulator:
- SPF Justice; FOD Justitie
- Date(s):
- 1844/1972
- Extent:
- 26.7 linear metres
- Scope and content:
- The series that is of the most importance to this guide is the “Série documentaire du service Droit de la Famille. Dossiers individuals des Changements de Nom” (i.e. individual files concerning name changes). These individual files of variable size mention the former name of the applicant, his new name (if/when granted), his motivations and the date of the published royal decree. The files concern applications submitted between 1938 and 1972. These files also inform us on the degree of integration of the applicants in Belgian society. Among the applicants, we easily recognise many surnames and first names of Jewish origin. Their requests for name change shortly before the war or in the immediate post-war were mainly for the purpose of ‘frenchifying’ their first/last name, abbreviating or simplifying it, or hiding the Jewish roots of the name.
- Administrative/biographical history:
- The Ministry of Justice is subdivided into different directorates. Its structure evolved in the course of the 19th century. It entered a relatively stable phase in 1925; it was then composed of the following five main directorates: recognised religions (cultes / erediensten), donations, bequests and foundations; prisons; Public Safety (Sûreté publique); youth protection; legislation. During the 1930s, the Sûreté publique was transferred several times to the Ministry of the Interior and then re-integrated into the Ministry of Justice. The Legislation Administration is in charge of matters regarding the acquisition or loss of nationality, and it handled naturalisation applications, declarations of nationality and of loss of nationality, name changes and attributions of family name, and residency of foreigners. The ministry of Justice also supervises the recognised religions in Belgium: six religions and one philosophical community. The ministry examines litigations, determines the organisation of the religions, manages religious buildings, fixes and supervises the payment of the salaries of the ministers of worship etc. In 1839, the Sûreté publique / Openbare Veiligheid (Public Safety) was notably charged with the control of aliens in Belgium; the administration was placed under the authority of the Ministry of Justice. Its mission included the expulsion of foreigners considered undesirable, implying the collaboration of notably the municipal administrations, the army and the judiciary. The Police des Étrangers / Vreemdelingenpolitie (Alien Police) was one of the services of the Sûreté publique. It created a sort of exhaustive database of the aliens present in Belgium: an individual file fitted with a unique S.P.-number (“Sûreté publique”) was opened for each alien entering Belgian territory. After the First World War, the Sûreté publique was split into two sections: the first one was charged with monitoring subversive elements in society and gathering intelligence of a political nature; the second section, the Alien Police, dealt with migration and the residence of aliens. In this period, the first rudiments of the status of political refugee were created. However, due to its restrictive definition, thousands of Jewish refugees from Germany were not officially recognised as political refugees. In 1977, the directorate of the Alien Police became the Office des Étrangers / Dienst Vreemdelingenzaken (Immigration Office). Finally, in 1994, the Immigration Office was transferred from the Sûreté Publique to the Ministry of the Interior. (R. Depoortere & N. Saoudi, Inventaire des archives du ministère de la Justice. Direction générale de la Législation civile et des cultes. Archives des services des Cultes, Dons, Legs et Fondations, Versement 2001, T 562, Bruxelles, ARA-AGR, 2002 ; F. Caestecker, F. Strubbe & P.-A. Tallier, Les dossiers individuels des étrangers produits par la Sûreté publique (Police des Etrangers) (1835-1943), Jalons de Recherche/Zoekwijzers n°19, Bruxelles, ARA-AGR, 2009; E. PUT, Het Ministerie van Justitie (1831-1988). Deel 1. Organisatiestructuur van de centrale administratie en de adviesorganen, Miscellanea Archivistica Studia n°6, Bruxelles, ARA-AGR, 1990.)
- Access points: locations:
- Belgium
- Subject terms:
- Assimilation, acculturation
- Migration
- Migration--Immigration
- Vital records
- Finding aids:
- R. Depoortere & N. Saoudi, Inventaire : Archives de la direction générale de la législation civile et des cultes. Bordereau de versement détaillé, s.l.n.d.
- Yerusha Network member:
- State Archives of Belgium