Wednesday, 28 October 2020

Windows to the World


This one is very typical of numerous Brugge windows 
decorated in sentimental style as long ago as 
last March.


On my ubiquitous daily walks this week, I suddenly noticed Windows or at least, certain windows adorned with highly individualised decoration. Once one had caught my eye, I started to look and found several with delightful features dreamed up by whoever lived behind the glass!! In truth, there weren’t SO many but it gave me a little extra task as I wandered along seeking the hazy goal of sustaining health. It’s good to have a transparent purpose!!

A beautiful example on the building
of the Guild of Sint Sebastien
.

I noticed again how many bricked-up windows there are on old houses in Brugge. And I was sensitised to bricked-up windows at Waingroves Hall where I lived with my family when the children were growing up, from 1968. Waingroves had two bricked-up windows which had undoubtedly been accomplished sometime during the years of the Window Tax in Britain. The Window Tax was a property-based tax based on the number of windows in a house and introduced during the reign of William 111 as an alternative to income tax the mere suggestion of which aroused considerable controversy. It was a significant social, cultural and architectural force in England, France, Scotland and Ireland during the 18th and 19th centuries. Presumably it must also have covered the area which is now Belgium or at the very least, Bruges. To avoid the tax, based on the number of windows above a base level specified by the Government, property owners had certain windows bricked up presumably with the intention of having the space re-glazed at a later date. It was introduced into England and Wales in 1696 and not repealed for 155 years in 1851 when popular discontent forced its removal. In France, it was established in 1798 and unbelievably, not repealed until 1926! Scotland’s Window Tax covered the much shorter period, 1748-1798. In The Wealth of Nations, Adam Smith observed that the window tax was inoffensive and easy to collect; it had originally been designed to impose tax relative to the prosperity of the tax payer, although it was eventually recognised as penalising the poor disproportionately.

A bricked-off window
with elegant decoration.


This blog now transmogrifies into a scrapbook
rather than a blog. One or two  images used before!
Images are beautifully self-arranged as I post BUT
experience shows the arrangement shifts according
to mysterious laws of unknown physics!



My favourite, one of several in
the same house. Beautiful.

Rather more terrifying!

A lovely Meet My Neighbours on Carmersstraat.

This is a glass door rather than a window.
But beautiful for all that!


This is for publicity for a recently-opened gallery
and doesn't QUITE count!




An empty pharmacie on corner
of Langerei and Goudenhandrei.


Blocked-off window used as a 
canvas to great effect.
Vervesdijk.


Beautiful stained glass set into a window
on a lovely old house on Potterierei.
In a different league from the others 
displayed here.

The same house, as above, one of three
stained glass insets into windows
on the front of the building.



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