RELICS OF PAST AGE.
TREASURES FROM YPKES. lii the offices of the Belgian Consul in Melbourne are two quaintlycarved oak figures, brought as souvenirs in the Great War from the ruined Cathedral of Saint-Martin at Ypres, and now, restored by some unknown soldier who had brought them overseas, soon to be replaced in the niche from which for so many centuries they have watched the march of history.
What little dramas and big tragedies had those figures known since the cathedral was started in 1221. They knew Ypres when, in the 14th century, it rivalled Bruges and Ghent, and, one of the most important manufacturing towns in Flanders, boasted a population of 200,000, and 4000 looms. They had seen it gradually dwindle to only 17,000 inhabitants, with the famous Gothic doth Hall the sole remnant of its once flourishing industry. And then, 600 years later, came the ruthless invasion that destroyed the famous Cloth Hall, and even shattered the beloved cathedral, whose treasures w r ere scattered far and wide. The Consul, Mr R. Vanderkelen, will take the statues back to Ypres with him shortly.
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Bibliographic details
Pahiatua Herald, Volume XLI, Issue 12569, 9 February 1934, Page 2
Word Count
185RELICS OF PAST AGE. Pahiatua Herald, Volume XLI, Issue 12569, 9 February 1934, Page 2
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