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The Beguinage - Bruges
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Just behind the Minnewater lies the Beguinage 'De Wijngaard' (= the
Vineyard). It is one of those typical areas in Bruges where one can find
more peace and quiet than in the sometimes busy and overcrowded streets
of the town center. The Beguinage is a group of houses around a little
garden covered with large poplar trees. It was here that during the last
seven centuries lived the beguines of Bruges. In 1937 the beguinage
became a monastery for the Benedictine sisters who still live here now.
The Beguinage of Bruges was founded in 1245 by the Countess of Flanders,
Margaretha of Constantinopel, daughter of Count Baldwin who conquered
Constantinopel (now Istambul) during the crusades. In 1299, Philip the
beautiful of France, placed the Beguinage under his own rule, thereby
withdrawing it from the influence of the town magistrate.Visitors enter
the place via a bridge over the canal. The entrance gate bears the date
1776. A lot of houses, however, are much older than that. Most date from
the 17th and 18th century. Some houses were built in the 19th century in
neo-gothic style. In the southern part is a little dead end street where
still some houses of the 15th-16th century can be found. The largest and
most impressive house is situated in the left corner behind the garden.
It was here that the 'grootjuffrouw', or 'grand-dame' lived. It was she
who ruled over the beguinage. The original church of the 13th century
was destroyed by a fire in 1584. It was rebuild in 1609 and later again
renovated in late baroque style.
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Telephone |
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| Wijngaardstraat, Brugge, Belgium |
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Tel: 050/33-00-11 |
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