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Old medieval buildings
Old medieval buildings










old medieval buildings

If You liked this collection but have problems with the price, you can send us a OFFER PRICE up to 50%. The spectacle brings tens of thousands of visitors to the city each year.100 OLD MEDIEVAL HISTORICAL BUILDINGS PACK 4K GameReady 1 to 100 More than 1,700 participants march through the town center on foot, horseback, or in carts, enacting Biblical scenes and accompanied by brass bands. The procession, inscribed by UNESCO on its List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity, takes place each spring on Ascension Day, 40 days after Easter.ĭuring the event, officiants from the Brotherhood of the Holy Blood carry a vial believed to hold cloth stained with the blood of Christ through the streets. The city has also preserved its religious and cultural traditions, the most famous of which is the Procession of the Holy Blood. The medieval structures blend harmoniously with the neo-Gothic buildings and facades constructed in the late 19th century, preserving the town’s Old World atmosphere. Enterprising visitors can climb 366 steps for a panoramic view. Its bells-now a 47-bell carillon-have been a feature of the city for centuries. Many of the town’s original Gothic structures remain, including the imposing 13th-century belfry overlooking Market Square. Today, visitors flock from around the world to float down the city’s historic canals and under its picturesque stone bridges alongside flocks of swans, to tour its cobblestone streets in horse-drawn carriages, and to sip hot chocolate and beer at sidewalk cafes. As a result, Brugge got a new lease on life as a tourist hub. The city was spared from major damage in the two World Wars, leaving its architectural heritage intact.

old medieval buildings old medieval buildings

But its fortunes changed again with the 20th century. By the 1500s, Antwerp had supplanted Brugge as a trading center.īy the mid-1800s, the city was one of the poorest in Europe. Ultimately the passage became unnavigable, and Brugge was cut off from the sea. The Zwin inlet, which connected Brugge to the North Sea and had first opened after a storm in the 12th century, began to fill up with silt. Over the years, however, the city’s fortunes turned. The city became known also as a center of the Flemish Primitives painting school and home to masters including Jan van Eyck and Hans Memling. The area’s wealth was further boosted by the thriving Flemish textile industry. It represents one of the best-preserved examples of a medieval European settlement.įirst settled by Vikings in the early Middle Ages, the town’s strategic location on the North Sea helped it become a major commercial center, where traders from northern and southern Europe met, bringing a hodgepodge of languages and cultural influences. Brugge’s historic center has retained its character through the centuries and is now designated a UNESCO World Heritage site. The city in northwestern Belgium’s Flanders region was once a major nexus of trade in medieval Europe, and of art and architecture during the Renaissance. A visitor to the historic center of Brugge, commonly spelled Bruges, can easily imagine a time when this picturesque Flemish town was bustling with merchants and traders from all corners of Europe, a place where bankers rubbed shoulders with painters and holy men.












Old medieval buildings