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Stedelijk Museum Wuyts-Van Campen en Baron Caroly

Art museums and galleries in BelgiumLier, Belgium
Stedelijk museum Wuyts Van Campen Lier
Stedelijk museum Wuyts Van Campen Lier

Stedelijk Museum Wuyts-Van Campen en Baron Caroly (Dutch for ‘City Museum Wuyts-Van Campen and Baron Caroly') was a fine arts museum located in the city centre of Lier, Belgium. The permanent exhibition offered an overview of mainly Flemish, Belgian and Dutch paintings from the 16th to the 20th century. In addition, the museum holds a collection of objets d'art.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Stedelijk Museum Wuyts-Van Campen en Baron Caroly (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Stedelijk Museum Wuyts-Van Campen en Baron Caroly
Florent Van Cauwenberghstraat,

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N 51.1315 ° E 4.5679 °
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Stadsmuseum Lier

Florent Van Cauwenberghstraat 14
2500 (Lier)
Antwerp, Belgium
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stadsmuseumlier.be

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Stedelijk museum Wuyts Van Campen Lier
Stedelijk museum Wuyts Van Campen Lier
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Siege of Lier (1582)
Siege of Lier (1582)

The siege of Lier of 1582, also known as the capture of Lier or betrayal of Lier, took place between 1 and 2 August 1582 at Lier, near Antwerp (present-day in the Belgian province of Antwerp, Flemish Region, Belgium), during the Eighty Years' War and the Anglo-Spanish War (1585–1604). On 2 August the Spanish army commanded by Governor-General Don Alexander Farnese, Prince of Parma (Spanish: Alejandro Farnesio), supported by part of the States garrison (a discontent group of Scottish troops led by Captain William Semple), captured and seized the town, defeating the rest of the Dutch, English and German troops under Governor of Lier. The entire garrison was killed or captured. The news of the Spanish victory at Lier was a shock to the States-General at Antwerp, where the sense of insecurity was obvious, and many of the Protestant citizens sold their houses and fled to northern Flanders. The consequences of Semple's action were considerable because Liere was a strategic position, regarded as "the bulwark of Antwerp and the key of the Duchy of Brabant". The betrayal of Bruges in the following year by Colonel Boyd was probably prompted by his countryman's example. After a short visit to Prince Alexander Farnese at Namur, Semple was sent to Spain with a strong recommendation to King Philip II of Spain, who according to the Italian Jesuit Famiano Strada, handsomely rewarded him. The next Spanish success was on 17 November, when the Spaniards led by Johann Baptista von Taxis (Spanish: Juan Baptista de Taxis) captured Steenwijk (taken by Dutch States forces on 23 February 1581) forcing the Protestant troops to surrender.