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The guild houses “Den Cruywagen” (tanners) and “Den Sack” (carpenters and coopers) on Brussels’ Grand Place - © Wikimedia Commons, photo by Pol Mayer

Trade guilds

As early as the 11th century, informal organizations of people with the same profession or trade began to emerge in the Low Countries. These artisans often lived together in the same streets and neighborhoods of medieval towns. In the regions that today make up Flanders, they were primarily active in the food supply, the textile sector, the construction sector, the
FAAM March 12, 2025
Visitors are drawn to an Indian elephant, 1970s - © Antwerp City Archives

Antwerp Zoo

Flanders has thirteen accredited zoos. None of them has as rich a history as Antwerp ZOO. It was founded in 1843 as the country’s very first zoo. From the very beginning, Antwerp ZOO has primarily been a place where people go to relax and watch animals in captivity
FAAM March 12, 2025
Barak 15 in Beringen - Visit Limburg, Photo Archive Visit Beringen - Photo by Jonathan Vaes

Prisoners of War in Barracks 15

In Beringen, nestled among the typical brick houses of the garden-city neighborhood, you’ll find a green wooden barracks: Barracks 15, a replica of a residential barracks from the former Baltic Camp in Beringen. During World War II, prisoners of war who were forced to work in the mines were held there. Today, Barracks 15 is a museum dedicated to migration
FAAM March 12, 2025
Double virginal by Hans Ruckers, 1581 - The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

A harpsichord for everyone at home

In 16th- and 17th-century Antwerp, one family was as pivotal to the development of keyboard instruments as the Italian Stradivarius was to stringed instruments. His family likely came from Germany, but Hans Ruckers was born in Mechelen. Around 1575, he moved to Antwerp. He built virginal and
FAAM March 12, 2025
The Royal Carillon School in Mechelen - Archive of the Royal Carillon School Jef Denyn Mechelen

Singing Towers

Matthias Vanden Gheyn was a well-known resident of Leuven in the 18th century. Yet he had a profession that wouldn’t often make the front pages today: city carillonneur. From the time of his appointment in 1745, he played the bells of St. Peter’s Church for forty years on weekly market days and on special occasions
FAAM March 12, 2025
Title page of the Antwerp Songbook, 1544 - © Wikimedia Commons

The Antwerp Songbook

In 1544, the Antwerp printer Jan Roulans published a small booklet containing the lyrics of 221 “beautiful songs, old and new, to dispel sadness and melancholy.” It included political songs, but also bawdy ones in which monks and nuns engaged in licentious behavior. The church authorities therefore deemed the booklet to be
FAAM March 12, 2025
The Mechelen Choir Book from Alamire's workshop, ca. 1515 - Wikimedia Commons, photo by Paul Hermans

Petrus Alamire, music publisher

Petrus Alamire (c. 1470–1536) was actually named Petrus Imhoff. A-la-mi-re was his musical pseudonym. In his day, that was the name for the musical note A (or la). Petrus was of German descent, but he made his name primarily in the Habsburg Netherlands as an “escripvain de libres de musicke”—a music copyist.
FAAM March 12, 2025

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