Oudenaarde Town Hall

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Coordinates50°50′37″N 3°36′14″E / 50.84361°N 3.60389°E / 50.84361; 3.60389
Oudenaarde Town Hall
Stadhuis van Oudenaarde (Dutch)
Oudenaarde's Town Hall
Interactive map of the Oudenaarde Town Hall area
General information
TypeTown hall
LocationOudenaarde, East Flanders, Belgium
Coordinates50°50′37″N 3°36′14″E / 50.84361°N 3.60389°E / 50.84361; 3.60389

The Town Hall (Dutch: Stadhuis) of Oudenaarde, East Flanders, Belgium, is a landmark building and the seat of that city. Built in a Brabantine late-Gothic style between 1526 and 1537, it is listed as one of the Belfries of Belgium and France, a UNESCO World Heritage Site.[1]

The building today known as the Town Hall was built by the architect Hendrik van Pede between 1526 and 1537 to replace the medieval Schepenhuis (Aldermen's House) that occupied the same site. Another older structure, the 14th-century Cloth Hall, was retained and now forms a sort of extension at the back of the Town Hall proper.

In 1999, the Town Hall was inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List as part of the Belfries of Belgium and France site, because of its representation of the civic influence of the town and its architecture.[1]

Exterior

Oudenaarde's Town Hall was a late flowering of secular Brabantine Gothic architecture, carrying on the stylistic tradition of the town halls at Leuven, Brussels, and Middelburg. Above the ground-story arcade with vaulted ceiling, the building displays typical features of its regional forerunners: a richly decorated facade with pointed-arch windows separated by canopied niches, and a steep, dormered roof surrounded by an openwork parapet. The niches, although designed to contain statues, stand empty.

Atop the central belfry tower of six stories with three terraces, a stone crown supports a gilded brass figure of Hanske de Krijger (Hans the Warrior), mythical guardian of the city. The crown on the tower and the double-headed eagles over the attic windows pay homage to a famous visitor to Oudenaarde, Emperor Charles V, who fathered Margaret of Parma here a few years before construction of the Town Hall began.

Interior

References

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