Harman Patil (Editor)

Saint Jacques sur Coudenberg

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Location
  
Place Royale, Brussels

Denomination
  
Catholicism

Phone
  
+32 2 502 18 25

Country
  
Belgium

Architectural type
  
Neoclassical

Saint Jacques-sur-Coudenberg

Address
  
Impasse du Borgendael 1, 1000 Bruxelles, Belgium

Architects
  
Gilles-Barnabé Guimard, Louis Montoyer, Tilman-François Suys, Jean-Benoît-Vincent Barré

Similar
  
Place Royale, Coudenberg, Chapel Church, Church of Our Blessed L, Cathedral of St Michael a

The bell rings at church of saint jacques sur coudenberg in brussels belgium


Saint Jacques-sur-Coudenberg (French) or Sint-Jacob-op-Koudenberg (Dutch) is a neoclassical church located in the historic square of Place Royale in central Brussels, Belgium.

Contents

History

The medieval abbey church that originally stood on this location was demolished by command of Charles Alexander of Lorraine during his expansive urban planning projects, despite having escaped the great fire of 1731 that destroyed the nearby Coudenberg Palace. The new church was built in line with rue Montagne de la Cour/Hofberg on its present location at the Place Royale. Construction of the facade was started by architect Gilles-Barnabé Guimard after the designs of Jean-Benoît-Vincent Barré (1775). The first stone was solemnly laid by Charles Alexander of Lorraine on February 12, 1776. The portico was finished in 1780. The nave, transept, choir and sacristy were built under supervision of Louis Montoyer in the years 1785-1786. After the consecration of the building it was in use as abbey- and parishchurch at the same time. Moreover, it was the official church of the court of the Governors of the Habsburg Netherlands. The present building was designed to serve as the Church of the Abbey of Saint-Jacques on the Coudenberg and therefore has a deep extended choir with place for choir stalls for the monks.

During the French Revolution, the abbey was suspended and the church was made into a Temple of Reason, and then later into a Temple of Law. The church was returned to Catholic control in 1802. On July 21, 1831, Prince Leopold of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha took the oath that made him H.M. Leopold I, the first King of the Belgians, on the front steps of the church. The building lost somewhat of its typical neoclassical temple-like appearance by the addition in the 19th-century of a bell tower (after the design of Tilman-François Suys) and a coloured fresco by Jean Portaels on the pediment.

References

Saint Jacques-sur-Coudenberg Wikipedia