Thomas Braun


Thomas Braun was a Belgian lawyer and French-language poet. He also published under the pen names Bonissart, Brunissart and Ranhissart.

Life

Braun was born in Brussels on 8 September 1876, the son of Senator Alexandre Braun and Fanny Marcq. He was educated at the Institut Saint-Louis in Brussels, spending his vacations in the Ardennes at Bagimont. He took the candidature in law at the Faculté Saint-Louis in Brussels, spent some time in Bonn, and completed his studies at the Catholic University of Louvain.
Even before graduating, he was publishing verse and prose under a variety of pen names in a wide range of periodicals, including L'Avenir du Luxembourg, L'Avenir social, La Justice sociale, Le Luxembourg, La Belgique, the Journal de Bruxelles, L'Etudiant, La Famille, La Petite revue belge, Chasse et pêche, and La Revue vélocipédique belge. In 1895 he went to Paris to meet Joris-Karl Huysmans.
He was a founding member of L'Escholier and the Société Générale Bruxelloise des Etudiants Catholiques, and a regular contributor to new reviews such as Le Drapeau, Durendal, and Le Spectateur catholique. From 1898 onwards he was very active in the legal profession. He co-authored two legal works, one on trademarks and one on patents. In 1900 he married Marguerite Van Mons. They lived in Brussels, with a summer home in the Ardennes at Maissin. During the First World War he was an active defence lawyer for Belgians brought before the tribunals established by the forces of occupation. After his first wife's death in 1919 he married Hélène Moeller. He was elected to the Académie royale de langue et de littérature françaises de Belgique in 1939, but was installed only in 1946. He was among the founders of the Académie Luxembourgeoise.
He died in Ixelles on 11 September 1961.

Writings

;Poetry
;Law