Cloth Hall - Belfry - Museum

Beschrijving

As an example, but certainly also as a manifestation of its power and wealth, the city built its public buildings in stone in the 13th century. And it did so with ambition: the Ypres cloth hall and belfry are among the most impressive civic buildings in Europe in the 13th century! Construction began around 1200. First, the belfry was built and completed in 1230. Then came the halls that served as a covered marketplace. We know that the enormous structure was not fully completed until 1304. The complex of the cloth hall is 132 meters long (south side), with a built area of approximately 2,500 m² and comprises 48 doors. The Cloth Hall served as a covered sales and storage place for cloth at the (now vaulted) waterway, the Ieperlee. The construction of the halls was completed in 1304. In this building, the cloth underwent its last official check, after which the cloth merchants could finally stack and sell it. During World War I, the building was completely destroyed, except for a piece of the tower and a few walls. Above the 'Donkerpoort', under the coat of arms, the statue of Our Lady of Thuyne, patroness of the city, is displayed. The first floor of the Cloth Hall can be visited via the In Flanders Fields Museum.

The Cloth Halls of Ypres (Lakenhalle of Ypres in Dutch) are one of the largest Gothic civil buildings in Europe. The original building was constructed between 1200 and 1304. The belfry, standing at a height of 70 meters, dominates the Grand Place in Ypres, Belgium. The cloth halls were used as a trading place for the cloth industry. In each door opening on the ground floor, cloth was sold. The city of Ypres was renowned in the Middle Ages for its quality cloth. The building was completely destroyed during World War I and rebuilt after the conflict. The architects, including Jules Coomans, opted for a faithful reconstruction of the building based on surveys conducted before and during the war. The current halls are therefore a replica of the medieval building. The original stones are still visible at the base of the halls; these are the largest. The higher one goes, the smaller the stones become. The reconstruction work was completed in 1967. The largest part of the building houses the In Flanders Fields Museum dedicated to World War I.

Vertaald door OpenAI

BE | | Publiek | DeensDuitsFransItaliaansNederlandsSpaans

Contactgegevens

Adres: Ieper

Statistieken

Op zoek naar routes die hier langs komen?

Nabijgelegen routes
Advertentie

Activiteiten om te doen in de omgeving Toon alles

Selecteer hieronder één van de populairste activiteiten of verfijn je zoekopdracht.

- RouteYou Selections -

Ontdek de mooiste en meest populaire routes in de buurt, zorgvuldig gebundeld in passende selecties.

Advertentie

Bezienswaardigheden in de buurt Toon alles

Selecteer hieronder één van de populairste categorieën of laat je inspireren door onze selecties.

- RouteYou Selections -

Ontdek de mooiste en meest populaire bezienswaardigheden in de buurt, zorgvuldig gebundeld in passende selecties.

Bestemmingen in de buurt

Advertentie

Plan je route

Met RouteYou kan je eenvoudig zelf aangepaste kaarten maken. Stippel je route uit, voeg waypoints of knooppunten toe, plan bezienswaardigheden en eet- en drinkgelegenheden in en deel alles met je familie en vrienden.

Routeplanner

Routeplanner

Deze bezienswaardigheid op jouw website

<iframe src="https://plugin.routeyou.com/poiviewer/free/?language=nl&amp;params.poi.id=2162064&amp;params.language=en" width="100%" height="600" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>


Meer dan 10.100.000 routes


Meer dan 15.000.000 gebruikers


Meer dan 4.500.000 trekpleisters

Adres

Kerkstraat 108

9050 Gentbrugge, België

Volg ons

Download de gratis app

Contact

Marketing en verkoop

sales@routeyou.com

Algemene vragen

Neem contact op met ons klantenserviceteam of bezoek ons helpcentrum.

© 2006-2026 RouteYou - www.routeyou.com