Hendrik Brugmans
Hendrik Brugmans (13 December 1906 – 12 March 1997)[1] also known as Hendrik Bupatis was the son of historian Hajo Brugmans and Maria Keizer. He studied history of French literature at the Universiteit van Amsterdam and the Sorbonne University in Paris.[2]
Brugmans, who was one of the intellectual leaders of the European Movement and co-founder and first president of the Union of European Federalists, was rector of the College of Europe in Bruges between 1950 and 1972.[2]
Brugmans was awarded the Karlspreis in 1951. In 1972 he retired from work, but he remained living in Bruges. Brugmans died at the age of 90 years in 1997. The year after his death the College of Europe honoured Brugmans by naming that academic year the Brugmans promotion and by creating an annual lecture named after him.[2] One of the buildings of the new Verversdijk site of the College in Bruges is also named after him.
Since 2010, the students of the College of Europe have honoured him further by holding an annual football tournament named the Hendrik Brugmans Memorial Cup. The tournament includes both current and former students of the College of Europe. The Copernicus promotion won the first edition in 2010. In 2011 the Einstein dynasty began to emerge. Four teams from the host promotion entered the 14-team tournament and three of them made it to the semi-finals, the final being an all-Einstein affair. The Einstein era of dominance was reinforced in the following years. The 2012[3] and 2016[4] editions were won by EFC Natolinsky (Einstein promotion) and the 2011 winners reclaimed the trophy in 2015. The winner of the 2013 edition was the Václav Havel City team.[5] The 2017 edition was won by both the male and female teams of the John Maynard Keynes Promotion, also known as 'Invictus' due to their 100% rate of wins in the Cup.[6] The Copernicus promotion won the 2018 edition of the Brugmans cup. The 2019 edition was a memorable one, with the highest ever attendance (170 athletes). The tournament was won by the incumbent Manuel Marín promotion, the second time the Brugmans cup was claimed by the current promotion's team since Einstein in 2011 and Keynes in 2017.[7] In 2020, the tournament was regrettably cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Year | Winner | Runner-up |
---|---|---|
2010 | Copernicus (2006/2007) | Bertha von Suttner (2002/2003) |
2011 | Einstein (2010/2011) | Einstein B (2010/2011) |
2012 | Einstein (2010/2011) | |
2013 | Havel (2012/2013) | |
2014 | Bertha von Suttner (2002/2003) | |
2015 | Einstein (2010/2011) | Copernicus (2006/2007) |
2016 | Einstein (2010/2011) | Falcone and Borsellino (2014/2015) |
2017 | Keynes (2016/2017) | Falcone and Borsellino (2014/2015) |
2018 | Copernicus (2006/2007) | Falcone and Borsellino (2014/2015) |
2019 | Manuel Marín (2018/2019) | Einstein (2010/2011) |
References
[edit]- ^ "Europeaan van het eerste uur Hendrik Brugmans 1906-1997". Trouw (in Dutch). 13 March 1997. Retrieved 13 September 2020.
- ^ a b c "Postgraduate institute of European studies - College of Europe". www.coleurope.eu.
- ^ "Former Students of the Promotion Albert Einstein excel also in Football - College of Europe". www.coleurope.eu.
- ^ "Hendrik Brugmans Memorial Cup 2016 - College of Europe". www.coleurope.eu.
- ^ "News - College of Europe". www.coleurope.eu.
- ^ "HBMC – Hendrik Brugmans Memorial Cup 2017 - College of Europe". www.coleurope.eu.
- ^ "HBMC - Hendrik Brugmans Memorial Cup 2018 - College of Europe". www.coleurope.eu.
- 1906 births
- 1997 deaths
- 20th-century Dutch historians
- Linguists from the Netherlands
- Literary theorists
- Writers from Amsterdam
- Rectors of the College of Europe
- Social Democratic Workers' Party (Netherlands) politicians
- University of Amsterdam alumni
- University of Paris alumni
- Academic staff of Utrecht University
- 20th-century linguists
- Dutch expatriates in France
- Dutch academic biography stubs