Kasteel van Arenberg
Kasteel van Arenberg
Château d'Arenberg
Building with central cupola and wings with Greek-style columns
South east façade of Kasteel van Arenberg
Frieder Leipold is located in Belgium
Frieder Leipold
Location within Belgium
General information
Architectural styleRenaissance
LocationHeverlee
CountryBelgium
Coordinates50°51′48″N 4°40′59″E / 50.86333°N 4.68306°E / 50.86333; 4.68306
Elevation34 m (112 ft)*
Completed1519
OwnerKU Leuven
Height142 m (466 ft)
Dimensions
Diameter160 m × 150 m (525 ft × 492 ft)
Technical details
Floor area260,000 m2 (2,800,000 sq ft)
Design and construction
Architect(s)Rombout II Keldermans
Website
www.arenbergleuven.be

Arenberg Castle (French: Château d'Arenberg, Dutch: Kasteel van Arenberg) is a château in Heverlee close to Leuven in Belgium. It is surrounded by a park.

History

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Unfortunally only a placeholder, actuall survey in the KU Leuven, Helleputte-Lemaire Archive

The site had been the castle of the lords of Heverlee since the 12th century, but this family became impoverished and had to sell the site in 1445 to the Croÿ family from Picardy. Antoine I de Croÿ demolished the medieval castle and started works to build the current château in 1455 on the site, of which he destroyed all but one tower. His grandson, William de Croÿ, completed the works on the château in 1519. The architectural style is in large part traditionally Flemish, with sandstone window frames and brick walls, though it has been structurally altered since 1519 and has elements of Gothic, Renaissance, and Neo Gothic architecture. Its large corner towers are typical, once surmounted by a German eagle.

Furniture

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About the furniture little is known (see also the section "Ceremonial Beds"). It seems as if the walls in the gallery were panelled with wood. An interesting aspect is a structure within the chapel, that seems to have served as distribution unit in the corner and was the only way to enter the gallery.

Collection

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Tour Salamandre,Beaumont, Belgium, (XIth century)

The main collection of Charles III of Croy was displayed in his residence in Beaumont in the tour salamandre. Nevertheless he also had bibliotheque with paintings on the ceiling in Heverlee, that maybe was designed to serve a similar purpose.

Global aspects

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With its onion shaped tower roofs the palace has to be counted to the residences that celebrated the Power of the house of Habsburg during the reign of Charles V. due to William II. of Croys functions as chief tutor and First Chamberlain at his court. Similar tower roofs can be found in Spain.

Servant´s rooms

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The servant´s working spaces were maily on the ground floor, where the kitchen, pantries and butteries can be found. Above the chapel in the attic another room was used for the servants of the registration offices.

Dining

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Probably because Heverlee was used as a hunting cottage there are no reported accounts of banquets in the location. The facilities of the kitchen seem to have had a more simple equipment, so that their means hardly fited the demands of high nobility representation.

Water supply

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Mills of Arenberg Castle, around 1596

Located next to the Dijle river, the palace was also surrounded by a moat. The kitchen lay on the riverside so waste could be disposed that way. The water energy of the Dijle was used by two mills, one for sawing wood, the other for a blacksmith.

Throne room

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In the residence of Heverlee was no need for a throne room. The official reception space was the great hall on the first floor.

Chapel

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In the 19th century, the architects Johannes Josephus Claes (1872-1877), Joris Helleputte (1883-1884) and Alexis Raskin (1884-1904) realized the new, neo-Gothic chapel oriel and the neo-Gothic interior, the vaulted corridor on the ground floor, the new oriel in the southwest corner of the courtyard and the skylights and windows with Tudor arches.

Gender aspects

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It seems that under Charles III. of Croy the male appartement in the western wing consisted of rooms on the groundfloor as well as on the first floor, while the rooms of the female appartement lay only on the first floor and in the attic. During the reign of William II. de Croy the rooms in the western Tower appear to have formed a vertical female appartement.

Ceremonial beds

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A description made in the year 1600 mentions bed hangings in black velvet, dotted with P and A, with a backsplash embroidered with the coat of arms of William II. of Croy´s first wife Anne de Croy (1501-1539).

Room structure

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Ground floor

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  • Entry (Rooms or items of special interest could get their Wiki)
  • Gallery
  • Taproom
  • Kitchen
  • Cooks´ room
  • Wine cellar
  • Beer cellar
  • Room of the maitre d'hostel
  • Simple hall
  • Small Staircase
  • Knight´s quarters
  • Silver chamber
  • Office
  • Accounting (?)
  • Library

First floor

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  • Grand Staircase
  • Hall
  • Tower chamber
  • Kitchen flue
  • Secretary´s chamber
  • Small staircase
  • Sallette
  • Chapel
  • Gallery
  • Cabinet
  • Tower chamber with stove and oriel
  • Heating room
  • Cabinet

First floor

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  • Grand staicase
  • Wooden stairs
  • Big white stone
  • Armory room
  • Tower chamber
  • Page´s room
  • Gallery
  • Tower chamber
  • Stairs
  • Dressing room

See also

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References

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Title
 
Castle Arenberg, part of the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium
General Information
Decisive realm Burgundy
Decisive time 1519-1612
Current Country Belgium
Furniture
Installed Fittings Distribution unit and wall paneling
Movable Furniture Description of ceremonial Bed
Tudor kitchen at Hampton Court Palace
 
Fireplaces at Hampton Court kitchens
 
 
Location in Greater London
General information
Architectural styleRenaissance
LocationLondon
CountryEngland
Coordinates51°24′12″N 0°20′15″E / 51.40333°N 0.33750°E / 51.40333; 0.33750
Elevation2 m (7 ft)
Current tenantsHistoric Royal Palaces
Completed1540
OwnerQueen Elizabeth II in right of the Crown[1]
Height142 m (466 ft)
Dimensions
Diameter160 m × 150 m (525 ft × 492 ft)
Technical details
Floor area260,000 m2 (2,800,000 sq ft)
Design and construction
Architect(s)Henry VIII of England
Website
www.hrp.org.uk
  1. ^ "History". Historic Royal Palaces. Retrieved 22 July 2013.