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Émile Leon Cammaerts CBE (16 March 1878 in Saint-Gilles, Belgium – 2 November 1953, Radlett, Hertfordshire) was a Belgian playwright, poet (including war poet) and author who wrote primarily in English and French. Cammaerts translated three books by art, history and landscape expert John Ruskin and selected G. K. Chesterton Father Brown detective stories in La clairvoyance du père Brown. He became Professor of Belgian Studies at the University of London in 1933, most of his works and papers are held there in the Senate House Library.

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  • Émile Cammaerts est un poète belge né le 16 mars 1878 à Bruxelles et mort le 2 novembre 1953 à Radlett (Hertfordshire, Angleterre). Il partit à Londres en 1908. Il devint professeur d'études belges à l'Université de Londres. (fr)
  • Émile Leon Cammaerts CBE (16 March 1878 in Saint-Gilles, Belgium – 2 November 1953, Radlett, Hertfordshire) was a Belgian playwright, poet (including war poet) and author who wrote primarily in English and French. Cammaerts translated three books by art, history and landscape expert John Ruskin and selected G. K. Chesterton Father Brown detective stories in La clairvoyance du père Brown. He became Professor of Belgian Studies at the University of London in 1933, most of his works and papers are held there in the Senate House Library. Cammaerts is the author of a famous quotation (often mistakenly attributed to G. K. Chesterton) in his study on Chesterton: When men choose not to believe in God, they do not thereafter believe in nothing. They then become capable of believing in anything. (en)
  • Émile Cammaerts, född 16 mars 1878 och död 1953, var en belgisk diktare. Cammaerts överflyttade 1908 till England. Han över översatt John Ruskin till franska och författat en konsthistorisk studie över de venetianska renässanskonstnärerna av familjen Bellini (Les Bellini, 1912). Mest känd torde han dock vara för sin patriotiska lyrik under första världskriget, Chants patriotiques et auters poèmes (1915), med flera. (sv)
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  • Cammaerts,+Emile (en)
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  • Emile Cammaerts (en)
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  • Émile Leon Cammaerts (en)
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  • Émile Cammaerts est un poète belge né le 16 mars 1878 à Bruxelles et mort le 2 novembre 1953 à Radlett (Hertfordshire, Angleterre). Il partit à Londres en 1908. Il devint professeur d'études belges à l'Université de Londres. (fr)
  • Émile Cammaerts, född 16 mars 1878 och död 1953, var en belgisk diktare. Cammaerts överflyttade 1908 till England. Han över översatt John Ruskin till franska och författat en konsthistorisk studie över de venetianska renässanskonstnärerna av familjen Bellini (Les Bellini, 1912). Mest känd torde han dock vara för sin patriotiska lyrik under första världskriget, Chants patriotiques et auters poèmes (1915), med flera. (sv)
  • Émile Leon Cammaerts CBE (16 March 1878 in Saint-Gilles, Belgium – 2 November 1953, Radlett, Hertfordshire) was a Belgian playwright, poet (including war poet) and author who wrote primarily in English and French. Cammaerts translated three books by art, history and landscape expert John Ruskin and selected G. K. Chesterton Father Brown detective stories in La clairvoyance du père Brown. He became Professor of Belgian Studies at the University of London in 1933, most of his works and papers are held there in the Senate House Library. (en)
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  • Émile Cammaerts (fr)
  • Émile Cammaerts (sv)
  • Émile Cammaerts (en)
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