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DBpedia 2015-10

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Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { ?s ?p "The Bruges City Hall is one of the oldest city halls in the entire Netherlands region. It is located in Burg Square, the area of the former fortified citadel in the centre of Bruges, Belgium.After a fire in the city's Belfry in 1280 the old "Guysel House", which had already fallen into disuse as the city jail, became the meeting place for the city council. In 1376 the Guysel House was identified by Count Louis as the site for a new purpose built council building. Responsibility for its construction was given Jan Roegiers, and the project was completed, eventually, in 1421. The City Hall is the earliest late Gothic monumental-style municipal council building in Flanders or Brabant: its flamboyant opulence testifies to the city's economic and political power at a time when the population of Bruges is believed already to have reached 46,000 people.The pioneering stone facade of the oldest part, which during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries was several times extended towards the south, inspired in quick succession the city halls of Brussels, Ghent, Leuven and Oudenaarde. The building's admirers highlight the effect of the "Brugian span", referring to the abundance of repeating systematically positioned niches to be filled with statues that fill the front of the building, though it is not clear that this effect was invented in Bruges.The statues under the stone baldachin-canopies on the building's facade have been renewed several times. At the time of the French Revolution in particular many of the original one were replaced. A number of genuine pieces from the replaced statue are now included in the collections of the city museum. The crenelated facade is topped off with little turrets and the roof is decorated with its own little crests and dormers. In 1766 the door on the left side of the building's facade was repositioned to make the overall effect more symmetrical. Another fire badly damaged the interior in 1887. Between 1895 and 1905 the distinguished local architect, Louis Delacenserie and the Gothic Revival champion Jean-Baptiste Bethune took the opportunity to remodel it. The lesser and greater council chamber were replaced by a single "Gothic Hall". The rich decoration of this chamber now offered competition to the elaborate exterior facade. The impressive double vaulted timber ceiling was restored and extended to cover the entire area, while the vaulting over the two eastern bays dates only from the nineteenth century. Medallions in the bosses show New Testament scenes, prophets, evangelists and saints. Decoration of the corbels supporting the roof reflect natural and seasonal themes. On the walls tapestries by Albrecht De Vriendt show scenes from the history of Bruges. Like the monumental mantle-pieces these are nineteenth century neo-gothic enhancements. The stone vault from 1766 which had covered the lower level was at the same time replaced by a quasi-historical timber structure, supported by four columns that divide the room into two halves."@en }

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