Egmont museum
The Egmont museum (Dutch: Egmontkamer) is a museum about Lamoral, Count of Egmont in the former town hall of Zottegem in Belgium.[1]
The museum was opened in 2018 for the commemoration of the 450th anniversary of the beheading of Lamoral on Grand-Place/Grote Markt in Brussels in 1568.[2] It showcases different historical Egmont items such as paintings, etchings, coins and floor tiling from Egmont's castle.[3] Furthermore, several objects from Egmont's crypt are shown, such as the 16th-century burial plaque of his wife Sabina, the plaque dating from the rediscovery of the crypt in 1804, the embalmed hearts of Lamoral and his sons Charles and Philip and 3D prints of Egmont's and Sabina's skulls.[4][5][6]
Since 1984 the former town hall also houses a shrine containing the cleft cervical vertebra of Lamoral. Two Egmont paintings are on display: Last honours to Egmont and Horne (1882) by Louis Gallait en Egmond castle in Egmond aan den Hoef (around 1570) by Dutch master Gillis De Saen.
References
- Zottegem, Egmont's city
- Egmont en Sabina krijgen eigen kamer in stadhuis, Het Laatste Nieuws, 20 april 2018
- Majolicategels uit het kasteel van Egmont te Zottegem, www.tegels-uit-antwerpen.be
- Hart van Egmont terug thuis, De Standaard, 14 maart 2008
- Fablab reconstrueert schedel van Egmont, Nuus, 21 april 2018
- Lamarcq, D., Van Durme, L., Het scheppingsverhaal van de Zottegemse musea en erfgoedcentra, Zottegems Genootschap voor Geschiedenis en Oudheidkunde, Handelingen XX, 2021, pag. 129-131.