Belgium and Luxembourg (Eyewitness Travel Guides)

(WallPaper) #1
BRUGES 113

P Begijnhof
Wijngaardplein 1.
Tel (050) 360140. # daily.
The Bruges begijnhof was
founded in 1244 by Margaret
of Constantinople, Countess of
Flanders. Entered via an 18th-
century gatehouse at the end
of a bridge that runs over a
canal, this is an area of quiet
tree-lined paths faced by
white, gabled houses and
a pleasant green at the centre.
It is an enjoy able place for a
stroll and visitors can also walk
into the small church that was
built here in 1602. The nuns
who live in these houses
today are no longer béguines

Y Minnewater
Just south of the begijnhof,
Minnewater is a peaceful
park with a lake. The name
prob ably means innerwater,
but because minne is a Dutch
word for love, Minnewater
is often referred to as The
Lake of Love. Swans have
been on this site since 1488
when Maximilian of Austria
ordered that they be kept
in memory of his councillor,
Pierre Lanchals, who was
beheaded by the Bruges citi-
zens. The swan appears in
the Lanchals coat of arms.
Once a bustling harbour
connected to canals and the
sea, the Minnewater can today
be reached by the barges
that take visitors on a tour
of Bruges. It is also a popular
spot for walkers and picnick-
ers, featuring a pretty 15th-
century lock gate, sluicegate
house and the 1398 gun-
powder tower, Poedertoren.

The sluicegate house on the Southern Bridge at the Minnewater

E St-Janshospitaal and
Hans Memling Museum
Mariastraat 38. Tel (050) 448771.


9:30am–5pm Tue–Sun. & 9


7 = http://www.museabrugge.be
This site has been occupied
since the 12th century by the
St-Janshospitaal, which closed
as a working hospital only
in 1976. During Bruges’s
Burgundian Golden Age in
the 15th century, the great
German-born painter Hans
Memling (c.1433–94) created
a number of exqui site paint-
ings, commissioned specially
for the hospital chapel in
about 1479. The remark able
museum here today therefore
has two aspects. First, there
are the evocative medieval
hospital wards with antique
beds, medical instruments,
paintings and documentation
as well as an old apotheek


The soaring spire of the eclectic
Onthaalkerk Onze-Lieve-Vrouw


white walls, stark columns
and black-and-white tiled
floor has a medieval simplicity,
while the side chapels and
pulpit are lavishly decorated.
One of the church’s artistic
highlights is Michelangelo’s
1505 sculpture, Madonna
and Child, located at the end
of the southern aisle. This
marble statue was imported
by a Flemish merchant, and
was the only one of the artist’s
works to leave Italy during
his lifetime. In the choir, there
are fine paintings by Pieter
Pourbus (1523–84) including
his 1562 Last Supper and the
carved mausoleums of the
Burgundian duke Charles the
Bold and his daughter, Mary.


(pharmacy). Then, in the
open-plan site of the old
chapel, there is the small but
supreme collection of Hans
Memling’s paintings. This
includes the St Ursula Shrine,
a reliquary painted with scenes
from the legend of St Ursula,
The Adoration of the Magi and
the polyptych of The Mystic
Marriage of St Catherine
(see p102). The martyr doms
of St John the Baptist and
St John the Divine (to whom
the hospital was dedicated)
are illustrated in side-panels.

(see p61) but Benedictine
sisters who moved here in the
1930s. One of the houses is
open to visitors and dis plays
simple rustic furniture and
artifacts that illustrate the
béguines’ contemplative lives.

Warm brick tones in an inner courtyard of the St-Janshospitaal
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