|
EUR 55 - 220 Hotel Val De La Cascade
This small, traditional hotel has an excellent restaurant and on-site brewery, in addition to which the rooms offer you your own private balcony and a… MoreEUR 75 - 75 O de Challes Bed and Breakfast
Situated in a tranquil green setting, this old country house features spacious landscaped gardens with an outdoor pool and barbecue terrace. O de Chal… MoreEUR 118 - 195 Romantik Hotel le Val d´Amblève
The elegant 4-star Romantik Hotel le Val d´Amblève is set in a green valley in the centre of the beautiful Ardennes. Enjoy comfort, peace and l… MoreEUR 75 - 90 Hotel O Mal Aime
The intimate hotel is located in the heart the Ardenne Bleue. The poet Guillaume Apollinaire used to live here when O Mal Aime first opened.
The hote… MoreEUR 99 - 110 Hotel L´Espion
Hotel L´Espion is located in an 18th-century mansion in Stavelot, right on the Stavelot Market Square. The hotel has its own restaurant and bar.… MoreEUR 105 - 105 Hostellerie La Maison
This 18th-century mansion is situated in Stavelot only 250 metres from the abbey. La Maison benefits from free Wi-Fi in the public areas and free park… MoreEUR 50 - 300 Hotel d´Orange
Hotel d´Orange offers 2 apartments situated in the former post office building from 1789 in the centre of Stavelot. The apartments feature a TV … MoreEUR 75 - 440 Hotel Dufays
Boutique Hotel Dufays is a charming hotel where we pride ourselves on personal attention to our guests.
We try our best to make you feel at home in t… MoreEUR 50 - 135 Auberge Saint Remacle
Auberge Saint Remacle offers simple yet functional rooms and free Wi-Fi in the historic town centre of Stavelot. The hotel is just over a 10-minute dr… More | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
The town grew up around the Abbey of Stavelot, founded ca 650, out of what had been a villa, by the legendary Saint Remaclus (Saint Remacle). The villa's lands occupied the borderland between the bishoprics of Cologne and Tongeren. The Abbey of Stavelot was secularized and demolished at the time of the French Revolution: of the church just the west end doorway remains, as a free-standing tower. Two cloisters, one secular, one for the monks survive as the courtyards of the brick-and-stone 17th century domestic ranges, now housing the Museum of the Principality of Stavelot- Malmedy, and museums devoted to the poet Guillaume Apollinaire, who was a long-term resident, and to the Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps. The foundations of the abbey church are presented as a footprint, with walls and column bases that enable the visitor to visualize the scale of the Romanesque abbey.
Stavelot was the seat of the Principality of Stavelot-Malmedy, a small independent region of the Holy Roman Empire, ruled by the abbots of Stavelot. The principality was dissolved in 1794 during the French Revolution. At the Congress of Vienna in 1815, Stavelot was added to the Kingdom of the Netherlands, contrary to Malmedy which was added to the Prussian Rhineland in 1815. In 1830 it became part of Belgium.
The key building period at the abbey of Stavelot corresponds to the rule of the abbot Poppon, the second founder of the abbey, who revived the cult of St Remaclus and died in 1048; his cult, which began almost immediately,The Vita Popponis which detailed the miracles that occured in his name specifically asserted that Stavelot might rejoice in having a saint, as Tours rejoiced in its Martin of Tours|Saint Martin. focused on his resting place in the crypt. Thietmar was the lay patron who assembled carpenters and stone masons to build the abbey churchVita Popponis, ch. The church served its dual purpose as a monastic church and as a church of pilgromage until the French Revolution. Its imposing gatehouse tower was rebuilt in 1534; its ground floor is all that remains, though the abbey church has been excavated and is presented in its plan.
In the mid-12th century the independent prince-abbot of Stavelot-Malmedy supported a group of goldsmiths' and metalworking workshops that produced champlevé enamels, among whom the name of Godefroid de Claire stands out. Abbot Wibald (ruled 1130–58) was one of the greatest patrons of the arts in the 12th century; during his rule the Stavelot Triptych of gilded copper and enamels was produced, about 1156, for the Abbey to contain two fragments of the True Cross. The binding of the Stavelot Bible, and the remaining fragments from the retable at Stavelot are among the highpoints of medieval art. The Principality of Stavelot and Malmedy was abolished in 1795. (See Malmedy.)
The town's coat-of-arms, granted in 1819, are parted fess-wise -between the founding bishop, and the wolf, which in Stavelot's founding legend, carried bricks for the building of the Abbey.
At the end of World War II, during the battle of the Bulge, the city has been the theatre of hard fights. Moreover, between the 18 and 20 December 1944, soldiers belonging to the German Kampfgruppe Peiper killed more than 100 civilians (including women and very young children) in Stavelot and the surrounding area. For this and other massacres (among others of American prisoners of war) perpetrated during the same period, Joachim Peiper|Peiper and some of his men would eventually have to face the Malmedy massacre trial where they have been convinced of having committed crimes of war.
Stavelot also has a traditional carnival, the Carnaval de la Laetare des Blancs-Moussis. On the fourth Sunday of Lent, Laetare Sunday, some 200 local men clad in white and masked with long red noses—the Blancs-Moussis— parade through town throwing confetti and beating bystanders with dried pig bladders.
This "Travel Guide" section is drawn from the Wikipedia article "Stavelot". We hope you will edit and improve it. It is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.