Pieter Corbeels
Pieter Corbeels was a book printer from the Austrian Netherlands a rebel when the area became part of France. He was a founder of the publishing company Brepols. He commanded part of the Brabantine forces during a revolt against the French Revolutionary regime known as the Boerenkrijg. He was executed for his role in the war.
Career
Corbeels was a corporal in the Austrian army. He fought in the rebel army of Jean-André van der Mersch, who won the Battle of Turnhout against the Austrians in 1789.After the defeat of the Brabant Revolution, he started a printing business in Leuven in 1790. He established his printing business in the Gommarushuis in the Tiensestraat in Leuven. Corbeels printed, besides the ordinary, ordered printed papers, as well as a large number of inciting leaflets and almanacs.
For this, he was arrested by the French on 28 November 1792 and transferred to Valenciennes in France. On 15 December 1792, he was released, whereupon he resumed printing. In 1793, he moved into the house called Hertog van Brabant on the Grote Markt of Leuven.
Corbeels remarried while living in Turnhout, and he left Turnhout in the summer of 1798 as a leader of the Boerenkrijg also known as the Peasants' War against the French.
Personal life
In 1796, he moved with his wife, Barbara Panz, and assistant, Philippus Jacobus Brepols, to Turnhout, where he was less impeded by the French.On 16 September 1797, his wife died, and on 31 October, he remarried to Joanna Antonia Servaes while living in Turnhout.
His widow initially continued the printing business, together with Philippus Jacobus Brepols, but in 1800, he bought the business from her. The Brepols printing business in Turnhout grew out of this.