Blog from Bruges
Bruges inside out
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A (photo-) blog about the beautiful Belgian town Bruges
as seen through the very two eyes of an inhabitant.
Sharp, witty,  and... always admiring.
19-05-2006
Klik hier om een link te hebben waarmee u dit artikel later terug kunt lezen.Pandreitje (3)
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This, too, is Bruges. The city of Bruges, known the world over from the postcards showing its small boats, small trees, small lanes, coaches, Halltowers, lace, chocolates, lovers, the love-ponds, Venice-of-the-North and lacemakers' bobbins.



19-05-2006, 00:00 geschreven door Blog from Bruges
Klik hier om een link te hebben waarmee u dit artikel later terug kunt lezen.Pandreitje (2)
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It took me a serious effort to get used to the sight of these houses who were set down where the "Pandreitje" stood. However, I did reconcile myself with their presence better than most and, in fact, I am able to admit they are not bad. Modern Bruges is allowed to have them.  I am not saying that I would ever want to live there (imagine having to put your trash outside on a wintry evening or early morning, when it's still pitch black...brrrr). But it does create a nagging.  Something to do with the beauty of sadness, of grayness, of, yes, modern coquetry with Bruges-la-Morte. Notwithstanding all that, I can see where these houses make for spacious, clean and comfortable living.


19-05-2006, 00:00 geschreven door Blog from Bruges
Klik hier om een link te hebben waarmee u dit artikel later terug kunt lezen.Pandreitje (Pawn lane)
Klik op de afbeelding om de link te volgen For the older citizens of Bruges, the name "Pandreitje" is synonymous with "prison". However, the prison has disappeared quite some time ago. Even doctor Lecompte did some time inside, after he had a run-in with the Order of Physicians. Imagine, this prison was about a thousand years old. From high up in the Halltower, one immediately sees the spot where the "Pandreitje" used to be. While the rest of the inner city shows uniformly red roofs, the modern building where the "Pandreitje" used to be got a blue roof, and the colour of the bricks used to plant the new building down is also in sharp contrast to the lighter colours of the environment.




19-05-2006, 00:00 geschreven door Blog from Bruges
Klik hier om een link te hebben waarmee u dit artikel later terug kunt lezen.Market
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The Market, an hour ago. Picure of a moment in time. In front, the small busses who take you on a grand tour and even bring you to the Verloren Hoek, that is, "The Lost Corner". Behind them, the coaches who take you to the Begijnhof. Every effort is done to please and inform the tourists who come to Bruges. The fact that this morning the busses seem to be more in demand than the coaches might have something to do with... the weather. And, notice too, the grandstand being put up in preparation for the coming Sacred Blood procession. Those orange things are the small chairs.



19-05-2006, 00:00 geschreven door Blog from Bruges
Klik hier om een link te hebben waarmee u dit artikel later terug kunt lezen.Kipstraat (Hen street)
Klik op de afbeelding om de link te volgen I was already out on the streets, this morning. I just cannot resist the urge. Am I then really a "Bruges streetmopper"?
This is the small Kipstreet, the subject of a quiz-question some time ago. Here is how it looked this morning.


19-05-2006, 00:00 geschreven door Blog from Bruges
18-05-2006
Klik hier om een link te hebben waarmee u dit artikel later terug kunt lezen.When you leave...
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Hildegarde was asking me : what are the origins of these words, which we find on the Barge house.
Well, no, it is not the owner of the Barge house who put them there. It was the city of Bruges. It was the "Year of Guido Gezelle", our famed poet and the motto "strong be the language of the words", also by Gezelle. A number of artists, gathered under the banner of @rtwords-@rtwords,  
were invited to express the city's image in words. The official mandate was : use language to paint the image of Bruges and bring it into its historical core. I can only surmise that Peter Verhelst, born in Bruges, is the author of the words found on the Barge house. One of his texts is also adorns the back of the seats in the Concert Hall. Moreover, it is also Verhelst who wrote the official poem of the city of Bruges (2002, cultural capital of Europe) - "On a day they appeared/they swarmed/over the city and nestled/we gave them our food/On a day, they disappeared/And yet, they stayed/We had them visit us at night/In our own, strange-coloured dreams."  Both texts do have the same tenor.


18-05-2006, 00:00 geschreven door Blog from Bruges
Klik hier om een link te hebben waarmee u dit artikel later terug kunt lezen.When I come back....
Klik op de afbeelding om de link te volgen "When you leave, will you be coming back?
When I come back, will you be here?"

I cannot think of a better spot to have this text than exactly there where the greatest number of day-tourists are gathering to leave the city : where their bus is waiting to take them back home.


18-05-2006, 00:00 geschreven door Blog from Bruges
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Seen recently on television, in one of those Reality-TV programs named "Life as it is : OCMW" (Public Centre for Social Assistance). This particular sequence was filmed in Bruges and, if you happened to view it, you might remember having seen this street-musician. He could no longer pay his rent because he did not find/seek enough work and found himself with family and belongings in the street and, ultimately, had to rely on the Public Welfare organization.



18-05-2006, 00:00 geschreven door Blog from Bruges
Klik hier om een link te hebben waarmee u dit artikel later terug kunt lezen.From my archives
Klik op de afbeelding om de link te volgen Dark-weather days are a perfect occasion to delve in my archives. Taking photos when it rains does have its charm, but that is mostly lost on me



18-05-2006, 00:00 geschreven door Blog from Bruges
Klik hier om een link te hebben waarmee u dit artikel later terug kunt lezen.The Sacred Blood procession
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The most significant day in the life of Bruges is almost upon us. Let's hope the weather shall be better than what it is like today (and, listening to the weather forecast, let's also hope for the next few days). Rain is the bane of a procession with thousands of participants, all decked out in magnificent costumes. Most of these beautiful clothes can hardly be rainproofed.
This is the Stabat Mater, surrounded by a chorus of girls. The Pieta statue,  Mary holding her deceased son on her lap, symbolizes the unspeakable suffering which is also the lot of those surviving the deceased.  



18-05-2006, 00:00 geschreven door Blog from Bruges
Klik hier om een link te hebben waarmee u dit artikel later terug kunt lezen.Je t' adore
Klik op de afbeelding om de link te volgen In the words of Kate Ryan :

"je t' adore,
anyone can see it."

I am talking about Bruges.
Whom was Kate Ryan singing about, tonight?
(she was Belgium's representative at the Eurovision songfest)


18-05-2006, 00:00 geschreven door Blog from Bruges
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.
All these houses with the corbie gables are in the Sint Amands street and in the foreground is the Sint Amands square.



18-05-2006, 00:00 geschreven door Blog from Bruges
Klik hier om een link te hebben waarmee u dit artikel later terug kunt lezen.As the crow flies..
Klik op de afbeelding om de link te volgen It's rather nice to find these arrows, at every lookout of the Belfort, pointing towards cities and villages surrounding Bruges. Some are nearby, some others quite far away but the distances are all indicated,  in kilometers... as the crow flies.


18-05-2006, 00:00 geschreven door Blog from Bruges
Klik hier om een link te hebben waarmee u dit artikel later terug kunt lezen.The Port
Klik op de afbeelding om de link te volgen Few people have ever seen the Port of Bruges this way. In the distance, one can see the tower of Lissewege. There was a light fog when this photo was taken, but on a clear day, you can see as far as Zeebrugge and the sea.


18-05-2006, 00:00 geschreven door Blog from Bruges
Klik hier om een link te hebben waarmee u dit artikel later terug kunt lezen."Men at Work" in the Sint-Jacobs street.
Klik op de afbeelding om de link te volgen You have to climb 366 stairsteps to see this magnificent view of Bruges. On this photo, you can see the last phase of the improvement work being done in the St. Jakobs street. You can even see the small tower of the Bladelin Court and the Beehive, and, to the right the Ambiorix on the Eiermarkt (Egg Market).



18-05-2006, 00:00 geschreven door Blog from Bruges
Klik hier om een link te hebben waarmee u dit artikel later terug kunt lezen.The Sacred Blood procession
Klik op de afbeelding om de link te volgen Precisely one more week before we have the Sacred Blood procession once more. It is very likely that the depiction of the Golgotha will be part of the procession again. It will be symbolized by the miraculous cross of Damme. According to the legend, the cross was fished from the sea by fishermen from the city of Damme. The cross has been honoured since the year 1339 in the Notre-Dame Church of that city. 


18-05-2006, 00:00 geschreven door Blog from Bruges
17-05-2006
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Georges Dumery. In Bruges, the name rings as a bell. As well it should since he... poured bells. Throughout the centuries, the Halltower was damaged by several fires. In 1741, a fire completely destroyed the belfry and Georges Dumery was commissioned to replace the 46 bells,  as well as a Victory Bell. Which he did. But not all Dumery bells are in Bruges. Damme, Antwerp and quite a few other cities are the proud possessors of Dumery bells. In Bruges, however, there is also a Dumery bell outside the Halltower, namely here, on the "Joris Dumery square", on the corner of the Boeverie street. This bell too, was rung by hand, but only in very exceptional circumstances and, for no longer than 10 minutes.


17-05-2006, 00:00 geschreven door Blog from Bruges
Klik hier om een link te hebben waarmee u dit artikel later terug kunt lezen.Prinsenhof (Princes' Court)
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Maria of Burgundy. The name still inspires respect in Bruges. And yet, her life and her achievements go back a good 500 years. During her all too short life, she did not live in Bruges all that long, and yet, this particular period in time still evokes a magical echo. That she married Maximilian of Austria is general knowledge. And so is the fact that she died on March 27, 1482, a few days after being thrown from her horse. But while in Bruges, Maria of Burgundy and Maximilian of Austria lived at the Princes Court.

In a fragment of the admirable "excellente cronike van Vlaenderen" (excellent chronicle of Flanders) we find the following anecdotal story of how Maria came to be married to Maximilian :

"On the 16th day of April 1477 there arrived in Bruges a delegation, sent by emperor Frederik III, to speak to our queen (Maria of Burgundy) and her noble counsellors. (.....) The delegates’ message and supporting letters, bearing the true seal of the emperor, announced that Maximilian, son of the emperor, wished to take Mary of Burgundy, sole daughter of the Duke Karel (Charles) as his wife. These letters had been written jointly by the emperor and Duke Karel when the latter was still alive, and the documents spelled out all provisions and conditions whereupon the two men had agreed after their discussions, which took place in the city of Neuss. These acts and letters of intention were delivered to Maria of Burgundy. Considering the far-reaching and beneficial effects on many affairs of state such an alliance would mean, Maria and her noble counsellors agreed to the marriage. The wedding took place on the 21st day of April, at 11:00 o"clock in the evening, at the Princes’ Court in Bruges. Since the traditions of the nobility demanded that the wedding had to be immediately consumed, the Duke of Beieren (Bavaria) spent the night in our noble lady’s room, in the name of Maximilian. On his right hip the Duke of Bavaria had a weapon by which he proved to Maximilian that he would help and protect the bride against all her enemies. When all this had been accomplished, wine and sweets were served and the delegation left Bruges, well pleased and full of joy to have succeeded in their mission, each according to their rank."

Don’t imagine that in 1477 the Prince’s Court looked anything as what it is now. Through the centuries, it fell in different hands, Parts were demolished, other parts were added, and there were restorations galore. And now, once again, at the treshhold of the 21st century, drastic changes are in store for the Prinsenhof domain : only the tower building and the two French neo-gothic wings dating from the end of the 19th century will be kept standing and undergo restoration.




17-05-2006, 00:00 geschreven door Blog from Bruges
Klik hier om een link te hebben waarmee u dit artikel later terug kunt lezen.Rozenhoedkaai (The Rosehat quay)
Klik op de afbeelding om de link te volgen The same restaurant which was the subject of yesterday's photo, the "Duc de Bourgogne" (the Duke of Burgundy). Today, we are looking at it from above. This is the Rozenhoedkaai. Notice the usual throng of sightseers, gathered at the corner, and see how all the elements of an idyllic Bruges picture come together here : the water lapping along the walls of the canal, the small boat, eventually a swan nearby, and a few old (or pseudo-old) houses. Then right and left a beautiful tree and behind it all, domineering a truly magnificent view, the majesty of the Halle toren (the Hall tower). Oops, they are looking at me !?!



17-05-2006, 00:00 geschreven door Blog from Bruges
Klik hier om een link te hebben waarmee u dit artikel later terug kunt lezen.Concertgebouw
Klik op de afbeelding om de link te volgen The people of Bruges use their language in a very picturesque manner and are always ready to comment upon facts and situations in the city. The building of this concert hall was barely finished when they had already a different name for it : the new Pizza Hut ( Pizza Hut ). When you are at the Albert I Park and look towards the concert hall, and compare it with the logo of the international pizza concern, you have to admit that the mocking name is not all that much amiss.



17-05-2006, 00:00 geschreven door Blog from Bruges
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