Belgium and Luxembourg (Eyewitness Travel Guides)

(WallPaper) #1
BRUSSELS 59

Simple Gothic shapes on the restored side of the Église St-Nicolas


LUXURIOUS LACE

Lace (dentelle in French, kant in Dutch) has always been a
luxury product, as it is a hugely labour-intensive accessory.
Belgian lace has had a high reputation since the bobbin lace
technique was introduced from Italy in the 17th century.
Patterns are created by manipulating dozens of threads, each
attached to a wooden bobbin, around pins embedded in a
cushion. Lace has been used for clothes, shawls and church
vestments, as well as table and bed linen. Historically, it was
made by women of all social classes – by the nobility as a
pastime, by nuns and
béguines in convents,
and by ill-paid cottage
workers exploited by
unscrupulous middle-
men. During the 19th-
century love-affair with
lace, there were perhaps
50,000 lace-makers in
Belgium. Despite com-
petition from machine-
made lace, handmade
Belgian lace is still
produced and carries a
certificate of provenance. A display of delicately patterned lace

La Bourse 5


R Antoine Dansaert, 1000 BRU. City
Map 1 C2. Tel (02) 5091373. @ 46,
48, 86, 95. q Bourse. v 3, 4, 31,
32, 33. ¢ No longer open to the
public. Bruxella 1238 (02) 2794355.
# 1st Wed of month; can be visited
by appoint ment at other times. &
8 obligatory, 10:15am (English),
11 :15am (French), 2pm (Dutch).

Brussels’s Stock Exchange,
La Bourse, is one of the city’s
most impressive buildings,
and it dominates the square
of the same name. Designed
in Palladian style by architect
Léon Suys, the building was
constructed between 1867
and 1873. Among its most
notable features are the
ornate carv ings on each
façade. The great French
sculptor, Auguste Rodin
(1840 – 1917), is rumoured to
have crafted four caryatids
inside, as well as the statues
repre senting Africa and Asia
in allegorical groups on the
roof. Beneath the col onnade
are two beautifully detailed
winged figures repre senting
good and evil which were
carved by Flemish sculptor
Jacques de Haen (1831–
1900). Once the scene
of frantic trading, La
Bourse today houses
the offices of Euronext,
the owners of
the Belgian
Stock Exchange,
and all financial
activity is now
via computers.
On its northern side are some
archaeo logical remains from
medieval Brussels, exhibited
at Bruxella 1238. Discovered
unexpect edly during road-
works in 1998, these include
the remains of a 13th-century
Franciscan convent, a church
and the grave of Duke John I
of Brabant who was buried
here in 1294.
A small museum has been
built on the site, where inter-
ested visitors can see the
relics of social and religious
life in 13th-century Brussels
on display. To protect the
remains from degradation,
the area is accessible only by
guided tours, starting from the
Musée de la Ville de Bruxelles
in the Maison du Roi.

Église St-Nicolas 4


Rue au Beurre 1, 1000 BRU. City
Map 2 D2. Tel (02) 5138022. @ 29,
38, 46, 47, 63, 65, 66, 71, 86, 88.
q Bourse, De Brouckère. v 3, 4, 31,
32, 33. # 8am–6:30pm Mon–Fri,
9am–6pm Sat, 9am–7:30pm Sun and
public holidays. ¢ during services.


A market church was built on
this site at the end of the 12th
century, but, like much of the
Lower Town, it was damaged
in the 1695 French bombard-
ment. A cannon ball lodged


Allegorical statues crowning the
roof line of La Bourse

itself into an interior pillar and
in 1714, the bell tower finally
collapsed. Several res toration
pro jects were plan ned but
none came to fruition until
1956, when the west side of
the build ing was given a new
Gothic-style façade.
Dedicated to St
Nicolas, the patron saint
of mer chants, this low-
lit atmos pheric church
is known for
its choir stalls,
dating from
1381, which
depict the
story of St
Nicolas on medal lions. The
unusual angle of the chapel is
reportedly to avoid the flow
of an old stream.

sub-aqua wetsuit – each one
donated by a visiting dignitary
since the tradition began
some three centuries ago.

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