Place Royale (Brussels)

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File:Place Royale 01.JPG
The statue of Godfrey of Bouillon erected in the middle of Place Royale

The Place Royale (French, "Royal Square") or Koningsplein (Dutch, "King's Square") is a historic square near the center of Brussels, Belgium.

History

The square itself is built on the former site of the Baliënplein, which was the main market square adjacent to the former palace of Coudenberg. The palace burned down, however, during a fire that took much of the original royal complex on the night of February 3, 1731. Construction of the new buildings around the square took from 1773 to 1780, using the design of French architect Barnabé Guimard, who received that commission in 1769. The square is almost an exact replica of the Place Royale in Reims.[1]

During the Belgian Revolution in 1830, a barricade was erected across the eastern exit of the square next to the current BELvue Museum, facing the Brussels Park.[2] Two cannon were also positioned on it.

In 1831, the coronation of King Leopold I, Belgium's first king, was held in the place. The funerals of King Leopold III and Prince Charles, prince-regent between 1944 and 50, were also held in the square.

In 2014, the heritage organization Beliris announced plans to restore the buildings and atmosphere on the square. Final plans will be provided in 2016 and work may begin in 2017.[3]

Layout

Looking south across the Place Royale towards the Brussels Palace of Justice in the background
Place Royale, fronted by the Church of Saint Jacques-sur-Coudenberg.

The principal building on the square is the Church of Saint Jacques-sur-Coudenberg, consecrated in 1787, and designed by Barré and Guimard. On the western side of the square is the main building of the Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium, next to the Magritte Museum while on the south-east side is the BELvue Museum. At the center of Place Royale is a statue of Godfrey of Bouillon, the leader of the first crusade in 1096, riding on horseback. It was sculpted by Eugène Simonis in 1848 to replace the statue of Prince Charles Alexander of Lorraine that had been melted down for the metal during the French Revolution. Rue de Namur/Naamsestraat enters the square from the south, rue de la Régence/Regentschapstraat from the southwest, and Mont des Arts from the northwest.

See also

External links

References

  1. Fletcher, B: Sir Banister Fletcher's a History of Architecture, p. 821. Architectural Press (1996)
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