Top 20 Famous Belgian people
Originally published by Lilian on January 2021 updated by Charity K on August 2022, Updated by Vanessa R on July 2023, and Updated by Ian.S on March 2024
Belgium has its fair share of famous people in the cultural, social or political domains. This country has had notable historical rulers, leading intellectuals, movie stars, and Nobel Laureates.
Most people may be familiar with these celebrities and leaders but not know they are Belgian. When you mention Belgium, some things people may associate with it are their dark chocolate, beer, and mussels.
Besides the people, this country has interesting art, UNESCO World Heritage Sites, and carnival celebrations.
Hollywood famous actors Audrey Hepburn and Jean Claude van Damme are some of the famous Belgians. There are more of them.
Let’s now look at the top 20 famous Belgian People.
1. René Magritte – Painter

Rene Magritte- Photo by Wikimedia
If you know anything about Belgian art, you have come across René Magritte’s work. One of his famous paintings is of a pipe, known as The Treachery of Images.
The Magritte Museum in Brussels holds some of his most famous works, such as The Empire of Light. His work displays a collection of ordinary objects that give new perspectives to normal things.
He used objects in his paintings that characterized his paintings. The Treachery of Images depicts a pipe that looks like a model for a cigarette store promotion.
Rene is one of the most famous Belgian surrealist painters who took over the world with his fantastic work.
2. Eddy Merckx – Professional Cyclist
There is no question about this next famous person from Belgium. Eddy Merckx is one of the greatest ever. He was born on 17 June 1945 in Meensel-Kiezegem.
Because of his stamina and resilience in the sport, Eddy earned himself the nickname “The Cannibal”. He was the strongest time trialist and climber in the world and had a few rivals.
Eddy is one of only four cyclists to have won the Tour de France five times. The other three are Jacques Anquetil, Bernard Hinault, and Lance Armstrong.
During the 1969 Tour de France, he was the overall winner of Yellow Jersey, won Green Jersey as the points winner, and secured the Polka-Dot Jersey as King of the Mountains.
3. Adolphe Sax – Musical instrument designer

Adolphe Sax – By Wikimedia
Adolphe was a Belgian musical instrument designer and musician. He is best known for inventing the saxophone. Adolphe was born in Dinant in Wallonia, Belgium.
He inherited his skills and talent from his father, Charles-Joseph Sax, who was an instrument designer.
Adolphe began making his instruments at an early age. He took part in a competition with his two flutes and a clarinet when he was 15.
While at the Royal School of Singing in Brussels, he studied the flute and the clarinet. Meanwhile, his father kept on producing orthodox musical instruments to make money.
His first invention was an improvement of the bass clarinet design which he patented at the age of twenty.
Today, the saxhorns are widely used in concert bands and orchestras. He died in 1894 in Âé¶¹APP and was interred in section 5 at the Cimetière de Montmartre in Âé¶¹APP.
4. Georges Remi Hergé – Animation creator
Georges was an influential comic master, the brains behind the lovable character of Tintin and his pal Snowy. Popularly known as Herge, his Tintin adventure series is considered art-making by a globally respected comic illustrator.
His work is immortalized at the Hergé Museum in Louvain-la-Neuve. He was also recognized by the Comic Strip Center in Brussels for his art.
Georges developed a love of cinema and was inspired by Winsor McCay’s Gertie the Dinosaur and the films of Charlie Chaplin, Harry Langdon, and Buster Keaton.
He started working on sketches as a hobby while in school. Little did he know he was going to be a global phenomenon.
5. Romelu Lukaku – Professional Footballer

Romelu Lukaku, photo by Dmitry Golubovich – Wikimedia
Romelu Lukaku is a professional footballer who plays for the Belgian national team and Serie A club Inter Milan. He previously played for Manchester United.
He was born and raised in Antwerp, Belgium. Romelu started playing football at a young age. His first club was Rupel Boom where he played aged 5.
While playing in the youth program, Romelu scored a total of 121 goals in the 68 games he played for Lierse. He moved to Anderlecht and soon became the lead scorer in the Belgian Championship.
Romelu has played for great European clubs such as Chelsea, West Bromwich Albion, and Manchester United.
6. Stromae – Musician
The first song that I ever heard by Stromae was Formidable and I was instantly hooked. His birth name is Paul Van Haver and he not only sings but is a rapper, and a songwriter.
He began his career at the age of 18, they formed a rap group named Suspicion. Later, he went to the film school of Brussels where whilst studying film, released his debut EP.
Stromae signed a four-year record deal with the record label Because of Music. His album Cheese did well in the Belgian Album charts and was the 6th on the French Album chart.
Stromae has sold over 8.5 million records worldwide. He has several nominations for awards under his name such as five UK Music Video Awards, the NRJ Music Award, and the MTV Europe Music Award.
7. Carlota of Mexico – Empress

Empress Carlota of Mexico By Franz Xaver Winterhalter – Wikimedia
Carlota was a Belgian princess who became Empress of Mexico. This was after her husband accepted the Imperial Throne of Mexico and reigned as Maximilian I of Mexico.
Here is a back story to her influence, during the early 1860s, the ambitious Napoleon III initiated the French intervention in Mexico.
Her husband was chosen as the emperor and they moved from northern Italy to Mexico, then known as the New World. The couple was crowned in 1864 at the Metropolitan Cathedral.
Their new home was at the Chapultepec Castle. She took her imperial duties seriously by touring remote frontiers and writing reports on her visit.
She was loved for her diligence and service to the people.
8. Margaret of Austria, Duchess of Savoy – Political Figure
Another monarch that is famous from Belgium is Archduchess Margaret of Austria. She was Governor of the Habsburg Netherlands from 1507 to 1515 and again from 1519 to 1530.
Margaret was a central political figure of the early 16th century. She was revered as one of the greatest government administrators, political negotiators, and patrons of her time.
With her help, Emperor Charles V overcame his uncertain steps at the beginning of his reign. This made the king keep her close to his empire until her death.
She greatly contributed to culture and history. Margaret had her tomb remodeled to fit both her and her husband.
Whenever she made public appearances, cheers of Long Live Margaret filled the air.
9. Ingrid Daubechies – Physicist

Ingrid Daubechies By Wikimedia
Baroness Ingrid Daubechies is a physicist and mathematician. She is well-known for her work with wavelets in image compression. She has published a study on the mathematical methods that enhance image-compression technology.
Ingrid is a member of the National Academy of Engineering, the National Academy of Sciences, and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. She was named as a MacArthur Fellow in 1992.
With several prestigious awards in her name, she became the third woman since 1924 to give the Josiah Willard Gibbs Lecture sponsored by the American Mathematical Society in 2005. Her talk was on “The Interplay Between Analysis and Algorithm”.
10. Victor Horta – Architect
Victor Horta is a renowned Belgian architect who greatly contributed to the Art Nouveau movement within Western architecture.
He beautifully crafted his designs by incorporating stunning techniques for the 19th century.
His architectural vision is envisioned through the prominent buildings and townhouses that are still visible to this day. Some of his works within Brussels are now distinguished as UNESCO World Heritage Sites.
11. Django Reinhardt – Guitarist
Reinhardt was born on 23 January 1910 in Liberchies, Pont-Ã -Celles, Belgium, into a Belgian family of Manouche Romani descent. His father, Jean Eugene Weiss, domiciled in Âé¶¹APP with his wife, went by Jean-Baptiste Reinhardt, his wife’s surname, to avoid French military conscription.
His mother, Laurence Reinhardt, was a dancer. The birth certificate refers to “Jean Reinhart, son of Jean Baptiste Reinhart, artist, and Laurence Reinhart, housewife, domiciled in Âé¶¹APP”.
Some authors have repeated the claim that Reinhardt’s nickname, Django, is Romani for “I awake”; however, it may also simply have been a diminutive, or local Walloon version, of “Jean”. Reinhardt spent most of his youth in Romani encampments close to Âé¶¹APP, where he started playing the violin, banjo, and guitar.
He became adept at stealing chickens. His father reportedly played music in a family band comprising himself and seven brothers; a surviving photograph shows this band including his father on piano.
Reinhardt was attracted to music at an early age, first playing the violin. At the age of 12, he received a banjo guitar as a gift. He quickly learned to play, mimicking the fingerings of musicians he watched, who would have included local virtuoso players of the day such as Jean “Poulette” Castro and Auguste “Gusti” Malha, as well as his uncle Guiligou, who played violin, banjo, and guitar.
Reinhardt was able to make a living playing music by the time he was 15, busking in cafés, often with his brother Joseph. At this time, he had not started playing jazz, although he had probably heard and had been intrigued by the version of jazz played by American expatriate bands like Billy Arnold’s.
He received little formal education and acquired the rudiments of literacy only in adult life
After parting from his wife and son, Reinhardt traveled throughout France, getting occasional jobs playing music at small clubs. He had no specific goals, living a hand-to-mouth existence, spending his earnings as quickly as he made them.
He was in the company of his new girlfriend Sophie Ziegler. She had a nickname Naguine who was a distant cousin to Django.
12. Paul Beliën – Journalist
He was born in 1959 in Belgium. He is a known journalist, author, and founder of the conservative blog The Brussels Journal.
Paul is a master of law with specializations in European and social security from the University of Ghent. He has a Ph.D. in international studies from the University of Buckingham. He is vice president of the International Free Press Society and a senior editor at the Hudson Institute. He has written in a large number of international publications.
He is an advocate of Flemish independence, and free trade and is an opponent of abortion, euthanasia, and gay marriage. He is a strong Americophile and has been actively opposed to immigration into Europe by Muslims. Beliën published a book about the political history of Belgium, and what he sees as parallels in the creation of the European Union in A Throne in Brussels.
He is married to Alexandra Colen, a former member of the Belgian Federal Parliament, and the political party Vlaams Belang. They have homeschooled all of their children.
In 2005 Beliën published A Throne in Brussels: Britain, the Saxe-Coburgs, and the Belgianization of Europe. The book explains Belgian history through the life and acts of the country’s six kings. Contrary to mainstream historians, Paul depicts an artificial state, called into existence by the Belgian revolution of 1830, and led by rather ruthless kings and a corrupt political elite ever since.
The book touches on controversial subjects such as Leopold II’s brutal colonization of the Congo, the relation to Nazi Germany in World War II, and the numerous Belgian political scandals in recent decades, including the pedophile Marc Dutroux affair.
He suggests that the real father of Queen Victoria’s husband Albert, Prince Consort, was King Leopold I of Belgium, Albert’s maternal uncle, rather than Ernst I, Duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, as is otherwise believed.
Beliën warns that the European Union based on multi-ethnic Belgium as a model will be an artificial construct without any national consciousness, prone to corruption and elitarian government.
13. Brigitta Callens – Model
She was born on September 28, 1980, in Oudenaarde, East Flanders, Belgium. She became Miss Belgium in 1999 and also represented her country as Miss World in the same year.
Brigitta “Gitta” Callens was born in Oudenaarde, a small town in the Flemish Ardennes. She was a ballerina for 8 years when she was a young girl.
She spent her childhood in Oudenaarde and moved to Ghent, during her teens to study languages.
After she won the Miss Belgium contest in 1999 at the age of 18, she became a successful international model and signed a contract with Stafford Miller to lend her face for the Sensodyne International campaign.
She worked for a long time as a model and make-up artist in the fashion city Antwerp and created her line of jewelry, named AKINA, which is the Japanese name for the first spring flower. Later on, she started photography.
She practices Raja Yoga and studied in India (Ashram of Sri Aurobindo & Auroville), Thailand, Indonesia, New York, Âé¶¹APP, and London. She was a student at the European Academy for Natural Healthcare and trains Raja Yoga & Vedanta in her home country.
She also is a therapist and instructor of the ancient holistic massage-, relaxation- and yoga nidra-therapies.
She runs her own Yoga & Mindstyle Institute “La Maison Pure” and works for Life TV, a Belgian TV channel about Health and the Quality of Life, where she has a program about Yoga.
14. Jean-Claude Van Damme – Actor
The Muscles from Brussels was the nickname and a legacy that can’t be ignored. Before the arrival of Schoenaerts and his smooth English, Jean-Claude Van Damme was the most famous Belgian actor ever to grace American screens.
After moving to America with childhood buddy Michel Qissi, the parts in action flicks started rolling in. Films like Bloodsport (1988) Kickboxer (1989), Double Impact (1991), and Timecop (1994) showed off Van Damme’s martial arts skills and made him into a 90s heartthrob. Here’s a Friends cameo to prove it.
15. Matthias Schoenaerts – Actor
Easily the brightest Belgian star in the Hollywood firmament at the moment, Antwerp-born Matthias Schoenaerts made his silver screen debut at the age of 13. His small role in the critically acclaimed Daens in 1992, proved a sign of good things to come.
After breakthrough performances as brutish outsiders in the intensely visceral Bullhead in 2011 and the affecting romantic drama Rust and Bone in 2012, Hollywood came calling.
Recent roles alongside heavy hitters Carey Mulligan’s Far From the Maddening Crowd and Tilda Swinton’s A Bigger Splash have affirmed his fresh status as leading man material.
No wonder the upcoming reunion with Bullhead director Michael R. Roskam for the crime drama The Faithful makes for one of the most hotly anticipated Belgian releases in a while.
16. Justus Lipsius-Humanist
In 1547, Justus Lipsius was born in Overijse. He attended the Jesuit institution in Cologne before transferring to the University of Leuven in Leuven when he was sixteen. His Variarum Lectionum Libri Tres, which he dedicated to Cardinal Granvelle, was published in 1567, and it earned him a job as a Latin secretary and a trip to Rome. Lipsius produced several writings to revive the classical Stoicism. He was a professor at universities in Leuven, Leiden, and Jena. His name is on one of the three structures housing the EU Council.
17. Anna Rosalie Boch-Painter
Saint-Vaast is where Anna Boch was born in 1848. Boch was a painter who specialized in Neo-Impressionism. She used a brushwork method in some of her earlier pieces, but she is better recognized for her Impressionist style, which she favored during the majority of her career. She supported a lot of young painters, including Vincent van Gogh, whose talent she valued and who was a friend of her brother Eugène Boch. She was the only person to ever buy a painting by Vincent van Gogh while he was still alive.
18. Adolphe Sax-Belgian Inventor
Sax, who was born in 1814 in the Namur province city of Dinant, showed musical skill and a natural curiosity from an early age. He was a talented singer as well as a flautist and clarinetist. Adolphe’s passion for music was nurtured by his father Charles-Joseph, a producer of musical instruments. The new family of saxophone instruments was copyrighted by Sax in 1846 in Âé¶¹APP, where the Belgian inventor was then staying.
19. Lily Boeykens-Belgian Feminist
In 1930 in Dendermonde, Liane “Lily” Boeykens was born. In the second wave of feminism, she was a prominent figure in Belgium. Furthermore, she had a global presence. In terms of freedom and equality for women, she was a pioneer. She served as the National Council of Women’s president from 1972 to 1992 and was a founding member of the Vrouwen Overleg Komitee (VOK). On November 11, 1972, she planned the first National Women’s Day in Belgium. She passed away in Antwerp on November 22, 2005.
20. Marie Moke Pleyel
Born in Âé¶¹APP in 1811, Marie Pleyel was a Belgian pianist. His father, Jean Jacques Moke, was a Belgian language instructor from Torhout. She was a well-known virtuoso of the 19th century.
After becoming engaged to Hector Berlioz in 1830, she called off the engagement at her mother’s urging and wed Camille Pleyel, the son of Ignace Joseph Pleyel, a composer and piano maker. On the European music scene, Marie Pleyel was well-liked and was quite popular.
10 Unsung Belgian Heroes of Sports and Politics
Sometimes the most influential figures fly under the radar, their invaluable contributions going unsung or unrecognized. Here we shine a light on 10 of Belgium’s overlooked heroes – trailblazers in sports and politics who helped shape history.
Though you may not know their names, their tireless work ethic, fierce competitive spirit, and moral courage left an indelible impact. Checking into the lives of these unheralded Belgians, it becomes clear just how profoundly they changed their country and the world, one quiet act of service at a time.
Keep up with me as I share uplifting stories of athletes who overcame adversity, activists who dared to speak truth to power, and leaders guided by integrity. You’ll be amazed by their far-reaching influence and reminded that some of history’s finest moments were forged quietly, far from the limelight.
1. Stefan Everts
Stefan Everts is a retired Belgian professional motocross racer considered the most successful competitor in the history of the Motocross World Championships. During his racing career from 1988 to 2006, Everts set records by winning 10 Motocross World Championship titles and 101 total Grand Prix race victories.
His unprecedented accomplishments and longevity at the pinnacle of motocross racing earned him the Belgian National Sports Merit Award in 2003. Everts dominated the sport for over a decade through a combination of raw talent and dedication to training and preparation.
His 10 world titles across multiple engine classes remain a benchmark for motocross excellence that may never be surpassed. Beyond the record books, Everts pushed the boundaries of what was thought possible in motocross, pioneering new techniques and raising the bar for future generations of riders.
His historic career cemented his status as the greatest motocross racer of all time.
2. John Langenus
John Langenus was a pioneering Belgian football referee who oversaw matches in the first three FIFA World Cup tournaments. He refereed the historic first World Cup final in 1930 between Uruguay and Argentina.
Langenus officiated with impartiality and authority in an era when referees were still developing and codifying the laws of the game. His appointment to referee seminal early World Cup matches speaks to the respect Langenus commanded at the highest level of the sport.
He played an important role in shaping the standards and conduct expected of referees as the sport grew more popular globally. Langenus provided steady leadership enforcing rules amidst the rising tensions and attention surrounding international football competitions in the early 20th century.
His legacy as one of the foundational referees in World Cup history remains intact today.
3. Leo(nard) Tindemans
Leonard “Leo” Tindemans was a Belgian politician who served as Prime Minister of Belgium from 1974 to 1978. He was a member of the Christian Democratic and Flemish Party.
Tindemans became Prime Minister during a period of economic uncertainty and rising political tensions in Belgium. He sought to implement policies to address inflation and high unemployment through consensus building. However, conflicts between Belgium’s linguistic communities challenged the Tindemans’ cooperative approach.
He also faced disunity within his party. Tindemans struggled to effectively respond to economic problems and national unity issues as Prime Minister. After failing to broker an agreement on devolving powers to regional governments, he resigned in 1978.
Though his premiership was largely viewed as ineffective, Tindemans played an important role in shepherding Belgium through a difficult period in the 1970s marked by economic woes and growing calls for constitutional reform.
4. Victor de Laveleye
Victor Auguste de Laveleye was a Belgian liberal politician and government minister active before and during World War II. He had a doctorate in law and served on the municipal council in Sint-Gillis.
De Laveleye was president of the Liberal Party from 1936-1937 and a Liberal member of parliament representing Brussels from 1939-1945. He held cabinet positions as Minister of Justice in 1937 and Minister of Public Education from 1944-1945.
During WWII, de Laveleye was a news announcer for Radio Belgique, a BBC radio station that broadcast to occupied Belgium. His roles in government and clandestine radio made de Laveleye an important liberal voice promoting Belgian sovereignty and defiance of Nazi occupation.
As a minister and radio broadcaster, he fought totalitarianism and rallied hope during a dark period of Belgian history.
5. Jean-Michel Saive
Jean-Michel Saive is a retired Belgian table tennis player considered the greatest in his country’s history. He competed at seven consecutive Summer Olympics from 1988 to 2012, carrying Belgium’s flag at the opening ceremonies in 1996 and 2004.
Saive was ranked world #1 for over a year in the mid-1990s and won 130 medals across his career. His accomplishments include:
European singles champion in 1994, World Pro Tour winner in 2001,19 Belgian national championships, 6 European Championship Club Cup titles. Though he never won Olympic gold, Saive reached the world championship final in teams and singles play.
His exceptional longevity, consistency, and sportsmanship made him one of table tennis’ pioneering superstars. Saive was Belgium’s Sports Personality of the Year in 1991 and 1994.
After retiring in 2015, he narrowly lost an election bid to become President of the International Table Tennis Federation in 2017. With his longevity across decades of competition, Saive bridged eras in the sport’s history and established Belgium as a table tennis power.
6. Paul Henri Spaak
Paul-Henri Spaak was an influential Belgian socialist politician and diplomat who was a key founding father of the European Union. From a prominent Belgian family, he served in WWI before becoming a renowned lawyer and tennis player in the 1920s.
Spaak entered politics in 1932 with the Belgian Socialist Party and rose to become Prime Minister 1938-1939. During WWII, he was Foreign Minister of Belgium’s government-in-exile and helped negotiate the Benelux Customs Union.
After the war, Spaak briefly regained the premiership and was Foreign Minister from 1939 to 1966.
A strong supporter of multilateralism, Spaak advocated for cooperation with geopolitical rivals like the Soviet bloc. He chaired the first UN General Assembly in 1945.
Having long championed European integration, he helped establish the Council of Europe and was the first President of the European Coal and Steel Community from 1952-1954.
In 1955, Spaak led the committee that prepared the Treaty of Rome and the European Economic Community. He served as NATO’s second Secretary-General from 1957-1961.
Spaak retired from Belgian politics in 1966 but left an enduring legacy. His tireless advocacy was crucial for European institutions like the EU. Spaak remains respected for promoting unity and cooperation in the aftermath of WWII.
7. Wilfried Martens
Wilfried Martens was a prominent Belgian politician who served two terms as Prime Minister of Belgium from 1979-1981 and 1981-1992.
As a member of the Flemish Christian People’s Party, Martens played a key role in transforming Belgium into a federal state during his time as Prime Minister.
He was also one of the founding members of the European People’s Party. Martens’ lengthy tenure as Prime Minister spanned much of the 1980s and early 1990s.
8. Michel Preud’homme
Michel Preud’homme is a retired Belgian soccer player who played as a goalkeeper. He is currently the vice president and sports director for Standard Liège.
Preud’homme was considered one of the best and most consistent goalkeepers in the world during his playing career. He was the first winner of the Yashin Award for best goalkeeper at the 1994 FIFA World Cup.
At the club level, Preud’homme played for Standard Liège, Mechelen, and Benfica. With Mechelen, he won the Belgian Cup in 1987, the Cup Winners’ Cup and European Super Cup in 1988, and the Belgian league title in 1989. He also won the Portuguese Cup with Benfica in 1996. He retired as a player in 1999 at age 40.
For the Belgian national team, Preud’homme earned 58 caps between 1979 and 1994. In addition to the 1994 World Cup, he also played in the 1990 World Cup.
9. Jean-Luc Dehaene
Jean-Luc Dehaene was a prominent Belgian politician who served as Prime Minister of Belgium from 1992 to 1999. He was nicknamed “The Plumber” and “The Minesweeper” for his ability to resolve political deadlocks.
Dehaene was a member of the Christen-Democratisch en Vlaams (CD&V) party. He first attained a ministerial position in 1981. Dehaene’s first government from 1992-1995 included both Christian and Social Democrats and oversaw the creation of a new constitution that transformed Belgium into a federal state.
His second government from 1995-1999 coincided with several crises in Belgium, including the Dutroux scandal.
The Dioxin Affair shortly before the 1999 election led to a swing against the major parties, ending Dehaene’s government. After serving as Prime Minister, he remained active in Belgian and European politics.
He also served on UEFA’s financial regulatory body and managed Dexia Bank during the financial crisis. Dehaene was the last Prime Minister during the reign of King Baudouin.
10. Justine Henin
Justine Henin, a former world number one Belgian tennis player, helped establish Belgium as a force in women’s tennis alongside compatriot Kim Clijsters. Henin spent 117 total weeks ranked number one and was the year-end number one in 2003, 2006, and 2007.
She led Belgium to its first Fed Cup title in 2001. Known for her all-court style and one-handed backhand, Henin won seven Grand Slam singles titles at the French Open, US Open, and Australian Open.
She was the Wimbledon runner-up twice. Henin also won Olympic gold in 2004 and the WTA Tour Championships in 2006 and 2007, totaling 43 career singles titles. Regarded as one of the greatest female players ever, Henin retired in 2011 due to injury.
In 2016 she became the first Belgian tennis player inducted into the International Tennis Hall of Fame.
These Belgian unsung heroes demonstrate that integrity and moral courage speak louder than fame. Their quiet resolve to lift others through sports, activism, and ethical leadership is inspiring.
They made invaluable contributions without seeking accolades. Rediscovering these overlooked change-makers who shaped their nation reminds us that progress is often achieved steadily, far from the limelight.
As we reflect on their stories, may we all find ways, big and small, to contribute to the greater good – not for recognition, but because it is right. The humble work ethic and selfless spirit of these trailblazers serve as an uplifting example of the power of dignity and decency.
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