Explore Religious Heritage Across Europe

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Church Notre-Dame du Finistère

Church Notre-Dame du Finistère

Bruxelles, BE

The church Notre-Dame du Finistère was built in the 15th century as a small chapel. The church was rebuilt at the beginning of the 17th century as the area was urbanized, but the present building is a third reconstruction, started in 1708 and completed in 1730. Since then, the upper part of the façade was built and crowned with an octagonal dormer window in 1828 and a statue of the Virgin Mary surrounded by the 12 stars of the Apocalypse was fixed there in 1857.

Notre-Dame du Bon Secours

Notre-Dame du Bon Secours

Brussels, BE

The Church of Our Lady of Good Help, in the centre of the city of Brussels, is a baroque religious building dating from the 17th century. On this site was a small chapel mentioned as early as the 12th century, which was replaced in the 13th century by a church dedicated to Santiago de Compostela. The reconstruction of the church in the 17th century corresponds to the discovery of a statue of the Virgin Mary at this location, which quickly became an object of veneration and gave the church its present name.

St. Elizabeth's Church

St. Elizabeth's Church

Schaerbeek, BE

St. Elizabeth's Church is a neo-gothic church that was built between 1913 and 1916 according to the plans of the architect Florent Van Roelen. The Polish community of Brussels celebrates mass there.

Tower of the former St. Catherine's Church

Tower of the former St. Catherine's Church

Bruxelles, BE

This tower is the last remnant of St. Catherine's Church which preceded the present church. The former Church of St. Catherine was a Gothic church built in the 14th and 15th centuries. The church was later enlarged by a choir in the 17th century. In the same century, from 1629 to 1664, the baroque bell tower was built. The bell tower was restored between 1913 and 1930.

Sainte-Catherine Church

Sainte-Catherine Church

Brussels, BE

The present Church of Saint Catherine of Brussels was built on the site of a dock in the old port of Brussels between 1854 and 1874. The building, of French Gothic inspiration, replaces an old 14th century church that had become too small. Twice the church has been threatened with demolition: in the 1950s in favour of an open-air car park, in 2011, as a project to transform the building into a covered market is under study. In 2014, the church was finally placed under the responsibility of the priests of the Brotherhood of the Holy Apostles.

Saint-Jean-Baptiste-au-Béguinage

Saint-Jean-Baptiste-au-Béguinage

Brussels, BE

The church of Saint-Jean-Baptiste-au-Béguinage is a Catholic religious building in the Italian-Flemish Baroque style. It was built from 1657 after the Gothic church of the beguinage was plundered by the Calvinists in 1579. The beguinage houses that once stood around the church were destroyed in the 19th century. The church was restored after a fire destroyed its roof structure in 2000.

St. Roch Church

St. Roch Church

Bruxelles, BE

St. Roch Church, consecrated in 1995, replaces an old building from the 19th century. The new church has the peculiarity of having been built in a former industrial shed. In 1862, a church had been built in the northern district of the city of Brussels, but it was heavily damaged during the bombing of the port of Brussels in 1943 and was then demolished in 1971.

Church of Our Lady of Laeken

Church of Our Lady of Laeken

Brussels, BE

A Gothic church, whose choir is still visible in the cemetery, has existed in Laeken since the 13th century. The old church was destroyed in 1872-3 to make way for the new church of Our Lady of Laeken, which was commissioned by Leopold I to house the remains of his wife Queen Louise-Marie of Orléans. Since then, this splendid neo-gothic church has served as a necropolis for the Belgian royal family.

Collegiate Church of Saints Peter and Guidon

Collegiate Church of Saints Peter and Guidon

Anderlecht, BE

The Collegiate Church of Saints Peter and Guidon is a Brabant Gothic style church built in the 14th century. The first church was in Romanesque style, as can be seen in the crypt (11th century). The present building was built between 1350 and 1527, the square tower dating from 1517. Jean van Ruysbroeck, architect (with others) of the Brussels City Hall tower, was responsible for the work between 1479 and 1485. Between 1843 and 1847, the church underwent serious restoration work under the direction of the architect Jules-Jacques Van Ysendyck. In 1898, the square tower was surmounted by a spire.

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