Church of Our Lady of the Chapel
The Church of Our Lady of the Chapel, or the Chapel Church, is a Catholic church in the Marolles/Marollen district of Brussels, Belgium. It is dedicated to Our Lady of the Chapel.
The church, in a Romanesque-Gothic transitional style, was built between the 12th and 13th centuries above an earlier chapel. Following a fire in 1405, its nave was rebuilt in the Brabantine Gothic style and enlarged with side chapels. Its Baroque slate bell tower dates from the 18th century. The complex was designated a historic monument in 1936.
The church is located on the Place de la Chapelle/Kapelleplein, between the Rue Haute/Hoogstraat and the Rue de la Chapelle/Kapellestraat. This site is served by Brussels-Chapel railway station.
History
Early history
The presence of a chapel in this place is testified by a charter dated 1134 and signed by Godfrey I, Count of Louvain, in which he donated a chapel erected extra oppidum Bruxelli to the Benedictine monks of the Abbey of the Holy Sepulcher of Cambrai, who immediately founded a priory there. The monks' privileges were extended in 1195 by Henry I, Duke of Brabant, who designated the chapel as capella beatae Mariae extra muros oppidi Bruxellensis sita. These mentions of outside the walls are part of the elements that have led certain historians to consider the construction of Brussels' first city walls as having preceded the generally accepted period at the beginning of the 13th century.File:Cantagallina veduta in Brusel.jpg|thumb|left|The Chapel Church,, as drawn by Remigio Cantagallina. Note the spire, the crossing tower and the side aisle.
Nothing remains of the original chapel, which was probably under the choir of the current church, whose construction began around 1210 with a Romanesque nave. In parallel with the development of the neighbourhood outside the walls, it was enlarged and acquired the status of parish church, despite the opposition of the chapter of St. Gudula, very keen to keep the income granted to it as a mother church. The creation of this second parish indicates that, already at that time, a large population had settled along the old Roman road, which would become the Rue Haute/Hoogstraat, beyond the ramparts and the Steenpoort.
The southern part of the transept and the Chapel of the Holy Cross were built around 1215–1225 in a Romanesque-Gothic transitional style. They were followed by the northern part of the transept and its two chapels around 1250. The choir, perhaps the finest achievement of 13th-century architecture in Brussels, reflects a transitional style of French influence. The building was surmounted by a tower at the crossing of the transept and the nave. The work was completed in the course of the 13th century.
Damage and restoration
Dedicated to Our Lady, the church enjoyed significant success and a hesitant destiny. In 1405, a fire destroyed the non-vaulted parts, in particular the central nave, which was covered with a flat ceiling. The nave was rebuilt in the Brabantine Gothic style and enlarged with side chapels. In 1574, the church was ransacked by Calvinists who destroyed its furnishings. Reformed in 1579, it returned to Catholic worship in 1585. In 1695, part of the structure was damaged during the bombardment of Brussels by the French army as part of the War of the Grand Alliance. It was restored from 1699 to 1708. On that occasion, the spire of the west tower was replaced by the current Baroque slate bell tower, designed by the local architect. In 1751, a sacristy was built to the south of the choir. The church closed in 1797, under the French regime, and reopened in 1803.The church has been restored several times: starting in 1866, continuing in the 1930s, and again in 1989, during which time an archaeological reconstruction aimed at restoring the original state of the different building phases. It was designated a historic monument on 5 March 1936. Nowadays, it is the parish church of the Polish Catholic community in Brussels. In a side chapel, an icon of Our Lady of Częstochowa is venerated.
Description
The Chapel Church has had a turbulent history made up of successive phases of partial destruction, fire, looting, shelling and rebuilding, alterations and restorations, making it a milestone in the transition from the Romanesque style to the Gothic. It is traditionally listed, alongside the Cathedral of St. Michael and St. Gudula and the Church of Our Lady of Victories at the Sablon, as one of the three Gothic churches still standing in central Brussels.The church is built of stone from the Gobertange quarry, which is located in present-day Walloon Brabant, approximately south-east of the church's site.