Museum De Lakenhal
About Museum De Lakenhal
Museum De Lakenhal is a city museum of history and compelling artwork in Leiden, Netherlands. One feature is its gathering of fijnschilder canvases from the Dutch Golden Age. Exhibition hall de Lakenhal was worked in 1640 by the man Arent can Gravesande. Arent's unique purpose was a fabric lobby—a society corridor for material vendors. The exhibition hall has accumulations of sacrificial table pieces and religious relics. These are gone back to 1572, the Protestant Revolution time. After the Reformation, the prohibition on the Catholic religion, this was recreated into a Catholic mission station. It was later established, in 1874, as a metropolitan exhibition hall.
The museum has an accumulation of altarpieces and religious ancient rarities from before the Protestant Revolution that were formally surrendered to the state in 1572. The historical center likewise incorporates a remade statie or Catholic mission station from after the Reformation. Since the Catholic religion was restricted, there was no official church and the greater part of the Catholic spots of love in the youthful Dutch Republic were called mission stations. These were semi-concealed temples that were endured and saddled by the state. The gathering additionally incorporates A Pedlar Selling Spectacles, one of a progression of five, The Senses, by Rembrandt.