- List of Ministers for Justice of Luxembourg
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The Minister for Justice (French: Ministre de la Justice) is a position in the Luxembourgian cabinet. Among other competences, the Minister for Justice is responsible for the Grand Ducal Police, prisons, extradition, gambling, and the smooth operation of the judiciary.[1]
The position of Minister for Justice has been in continuous existence since the promulgation of Luxembourg's first constitution, in 1848. Originally, justice was within the remit of the Administrator-General for Foreign Affairs, Justice, and Religion (Administrateur général des Affaires étrangères, de la Justice et des Cultes), but justice was separated from this office on 23 September 1853.[2]
Since 24 March 1936, the title of Minister for Justice has been an official one, although the position had been unofficially known by that name since its creation. From the position's creation until 28 November 1857, the Minister went by the title of Administrator-General.[3] From 1857 until 1936, the Minister went by the title of Director-General.[4]
List of Ministers for Justice
Minister Party Start date End date Prime Minister Gaspard-Théodore-Ignace de la Fontaine None 1 August 1848 2 December 1848 G T I de la Fontaine Jean-Jacques Willmar None 2 December 1848 23 September 1853 Jean-Jacques Willmar François-Xavier Wurth None 23 September 1853 24 May 1856 Charles-Mathias Simons Charles-Gérard Eyschen None 24 May 1856 29 November 1857 Guillaume-Mathias Augustin None 29 November 1857 23 June 1859 Charles-Mathias Simons None 23 June 1859 15 July 1859 Édouard Thilges None 15 July 1859 26 September 1860 Michel Jonas None 26 September 1860 9 September 1863 Baron de Tornaco Bernard-Hubert Neuman None 9 September 1863 31 March 1864 Henri Vannérus (first time) None 31 March 1864 3 December 1866 Léon de la Fontaine None 3 December 1866 17 June 1867 Henri Vannérus (second time) None 17 June 1867 26 December 1874 Emmanuel Servais Alphonse Funck None 26 December 1874 20 April 1876 Baron de Blochausen Paul Eyschen None 20 April 1876 20 February 1885 20 February 1885 22 September 1888 Édouard Thilges 22 September 1888 3 March 1915 Paul Eyschen Victor Thorn (first time) None 3 March 1915 12 October 1915 12 October 1915 6 November 1915 Mathias Mongenast Jean-Baptiste Sax None 6 November 1915 24 February 1916 Hubert Loutsch Victor Thorn (second time) None 24 February 1916 19 June 1917 Victor Thorn Léon Moutrier LL 19 June 1917 28 September 1918 Léon Kauffmann Auguste Liesch LL 28 September 1918 15 April 1921 Émile Reuter Guillaume Leidenbach PD 15 April 1921 14 April 1923 Joseph Bech PD 14 April 1923 20 March 1925 Norbert Dumont PRS 20 March 1925 16 July 1926 Pierre Prüm 16 July 1926 27 December 1936 Joseph Bech Étienne Schmit PRL 27 December 1936 5 November 1937 René Blum POS 5 November 1937 6 April 1940 Pierre Dupong Victor Bodson (first time) POS 6 April 1940 23 November 1945 LSAP 23 November 1945 1 March 1947 Eugène Schaus (first time) GPD 1 March 1947 3 July 1951 Victor Bodson (second time) LSAP 3 July 1951 23 December 1953 23 December 1953 29 March 1958 Joseph Bech 29 March 1958 2 March 1959 Pierre Frieden Pierre Werner CSV 2 March 1959 3 January 1967 Pierre Werner Jean Dupong CSV 3 January 1967 6 February 1969 Eugène Schaus (second time) DP 6 February 1969 15 June 1974 Robert Krieps (first time) LSAP 15 June 1974 16 July 1979 Gaston Thorn Gaston Thorn DP 16 July 1979 22 November 1980 Pierre Werner Colette Flesch DP 22 November 1980 20 July 1984 Robert Krieps (second time) LSAP 20 July 1984 14 July 1989 Jacques Santer Marc Fischbach CSV 14 July 1989 26 January 1995 26 January 1995 30 January 1998 Jean-Claude Juncker Luc Frieden CSV 30 January 1998 23 July 2009 François Biltgen CSV 23 July 2009 Present day Footnotes
- ^ (French) "Ministère de la Justice". Service Information et Presse. 10 November 2005. Archived from the original on 2006-08-24. http://web.archive.org/web/20060824073022/http://www.gouvernement.lu/ministeres/mini_justice.html. Retrieved 2006-08-29.
- ^ (French)/(German) "Mémorial A, 1853, No. 73" (PDF). Service central de législation. http://www.legilux.public.lu/leg/a/archives/1853/0732309/0732309.pdf#page=5. Retrieved 2006-08-29.
- ^ (French)/(German) "Mémorial A, 1857, No. 49" (PDF). Service central de législation. http://www.legilux.public.lu/leg/a/archives/1857/0492911/0492911.pdf#page=4. Retrieved 2006-08-29.
- ^ (French)/(German) "Mémorial A, 1936, No. 25" (PDF). Service central de législation. http://www.legilux.public.lu/leg/a/archives/1936/0250604/0250604.pdf#page=1. Retrieved 2006-08-29.
References
- Thewes, Guy (July 2003) (in French) (PDF). Les gouvernements du Grand-Duché de Luxembourg depuis 1848 (Édition limitée ed.). Luxembourg City: Service Information et Presse. ISBN 2-87999-118-8. http://www.gouvernement.lu/publications/download/gouvernements_1848_2.pdf. Retrieved 2006-08-29.
- (French)/(German) "Archives of Mémorial A". Service central de législation. http://www.legilux.public.lu/leg/a/index.php. Retrieved 2006-08-29.
Administrative Simplification • Agriculture, Viticulture, and Rural Development • Civil Service and Administrative Reform • Communications and the Media • Cooperation and Humanitarian Action • Culture • Defence • Economy and Foreign Trade • Equality of Opportunity • Higher Education and Research • Family and Integration • Finances • Foreign Affairs • Health • Housing • Interior and the Grand Region • Justice • Middle Class and Tourism • National Education and Vocational Training • Relations with Parliament • Religion • Social Security • Sport • Sustainable Development and Infrastructure • Treasury • Work, Employment, and ImmigrationCategories:- Ministers for Justice of Luxembourg
- Lists of government ministers of Luxembourg
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