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Plantin-Moretus Museum: Detail, small interior staircase with carved newel post

figure
posted on 2017-06-30, 00:00 authored by G. Massiot & cie
Baroque ornament became characteristic on the houses of the wealthy, but it was generally applied to existing Renaissance structures. Often the decoration on larger h\u00F4tels was concentrated around a courtyard, presenting an unobtrusive fa\u00E7ade to the outside world. Fine examples are the pure Renaissance Plantin-Moretus House. In a 34-year career Christoph Plantin printed ca. 2540 editions covering religion, law, history, science, languages and humanistic texts. The Officina Plantiniana (his press, which had been continued by his son-in-law Jan Moretus) was finally sold to the city of Antwerp in 1867 by Edward Moretus-Plantin and opened as the Plantin-Moretus Museum in 1876. It contains the two oldest surviving printing presses in the world and complete sets of dies and matrices. It also has an extensive library, a richly decorated interior and the entire archives of the Plantin business. It is a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

History

Alt Title

Plantin-Moretus House

Date Created

1910-01-01

Date Modified

2017-06-30

Temporal Coverage

before or circa 1910

Rights Statement

To view the physical lantern slide, please contact the Architecture Library.

Cultural Context

Renaissance

Spatial Coverage

+51.218333+4.398056|Antwerp, Flanders, Belgium|Antwerp

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