Belgium and Luxembourg (Eyewitness Travel Guides)

(WallPaper) #1

160 BELGIUM AND LUXEMBOURG REGION BY REGION


P Stadhuis
Grote Markt. Tel (016) 282317.


daily. & 8 obligatory; Apr–Sep:


11am and 3pm Mon–Fri and 3pm Sat
and Sun; Oct–Mar: 3pm daily.
Built between 1439 and 1463
from the profits of the cloth
trade, Leuven’s Stadhuis was
designed to demonstrate the
wealth of the city’s merchants.
This tall and distinctive build-
ing is renowned for its lavishly
carved and decorated façade.
A line of narrow windows rises
up over three floors beneath
a steeply pitched roof adorned
with dormer windows and


R St-Pieterskerk
Grote Markt. Tel (016) 295133.
# mid-Mar–mid–Oct: 10am–5pm
Mon; rest of year: 10am–5pm Tue–
Fri, 10am–4:30pm Sat, 2–5pm Sun.
Museum voor Religieuze Kunst
¢ 13–15 Aug. &
Across the square from the
Stadhuis rises St-Pieterskerk,
a massive church built over a
period of 200 years from the
1420s. The nave and aisles
were completed first, but
when the twin towers of the
western façade were finally
added in 1507, the foundations
proved inadequate and it soon
began to sink. With money in
short supply, it was decided
to remove the top sections of
the towers – hence the
truncated versions of today.
Inside the church, the sweep-
ing lines of the nave are
intercepted by an impres sive
1499 rood screen and a
Baroque wooden pulpit
depic t ing the conversion of St
Norbert (see p163). Norbert
was a wealthy but irreligious
German noble, who was hit
by lightning while riding. His
horse died, but he was unhurt
and this led him to devote
himself to the Church.
The church also houses the
Museum voor Religieuze Kunst
(Religious Art Museum) which
has three exquisite paintings by
Dirk Bouts (1415–75), includ-
ing his Last Supper triptych,
painted in 1468, and the gory
yet sedate Martyrdom of Saint
Erasmus. Both provide vivid

Located within easy striking distance of Brussels,
the historic Flemish town of Leuven traces its
origins to a fortified camp constructed here by
Julius Caesar. In medieval times, the town
became an important centre of the cloth trade,
but it was as a seat of learning that it achieved
international prominence. In 1425, Pope
Martin V and Count John of Brabant founded
Leuven’s university, and by the mid-1500s it
was one of Europe’s most pres tigious aca-
demic institutions, the home of such famous scholars as
Erasmus and Mercator. Today, the university exercises
a strong influence over the town, and its students give
Leuven a vibrant atmos phere. The bars and cafés flank-
ing the Oude Markt, a large square in the centre of
town, are especially popular. Adjoining the square is the
Grote Markt, a triangular open space boas ting two fine
medieval buildings, the Stadhuis and St-Pieterskerk.


P Oude Markt
This handsome, cobblestoned
square is flanked by a tasteful
ensemble of high-gabled
brick buildings. Some of these
date from the 18th century,
while others are compara-
tively new. At ground level,
these buildings house the
largest concentration of bars
and cafés in town, and as
such, attract the town’s univer-
sity students in droves.


pencil-thin turrets.
However, it is in
the exquisite quality
of its stone work
that the building
excels, with deli-
cately carved
tracery and detailed
medieval figures
beneath 300 niche
bases. There are
grotesques of every
description as well
as repre sentations of folktales
and biblical stories, all of
which are carved in an
exuberant late-Gothic style.
Within the niche alcoves are
19th-century statues depicting
local dignitaries and politi-
cians. Guided tours (in Dutch)
of the interior include three
lavish reception rooms.

Lively café society at the Oude Markt


Huge buttresses supporting the
Gothic structure of St-Pieterskerk

Leuven 8


Sculpture
at Stadhuis


The elaborate stonework and spires
of Leuven’s Gothic town hall

For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp266–7 and pp292–4

Free download pdf