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Conference venue
Maastricht
University
Auditorium Faculty of Economics and Business Administration
Tongersestraat 53
Maastricht, The Netherlands
How to get to Maastricht >
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| City of Maastricht |
Maastricht
is the Netherlands' southernmost city, with a charming, international
character. Positioned at the crossroads of European cultures,
languages and trade routes, Maastricht has a long and exciting
history. It is the oldest city in the Netherlands, founded
in 50BC. Romanesque churches and stately patrician houses
are made for aimless strolling or cycling: the Stokstraat
and Jeker districts are the most picturesque. The conference
location is only at walking distance from the historical
city centre.
The city's least expected claim to fame is that it saw the real-life D'Artagnan
swash his last buckle. In 1673, aged 62, the fourth musketeer was killed while
leading an attack on the city walls. Those fascinated by fortifications can trace
the history of the city's defences, from the 13th-century Helpoort to the underground
shelters used in the Second World War, on a fortification walk, brochure available
at the tourist office of Maastricht (www.vvvmaastricht.nl).
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The Vrijthof is dominated by the terracotta-red
tower of the Gothic St Janskerk, the main Protestant church
in a predominantly Catholic city. Seventy metres high, it offers
splendid views of the city, the surrounding countryside and
- a novelty in The Netherlands - hills. Next door is the rival
religion's most significant shrine, St Servaasbasiliek, an
elegant blend of rugged Romanesque and graceful Gothic. Admission
to the blissfully light, white interior costs 2,50 Euro, and
is worth every penny: the treasury houses the earthly remains
of St Servatius, first bishop of the Low Countries until his
death in AD384, as well as a host of golden reliquaries and
sacred objects.
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Bonnefanten Museum
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A
more modern addition to the city's skyline is the bulbous
dome of the Bonnefanten Museum, at Avenue Céramique
250, (www.bonnefanten.nl)
where the superb permanent collections span medieval sculpture,
old masters - including works from Amsterdam's soon-to-be-refurbished
Rijksmuseum - Arte Povera and 1970s minimalism.
The museum is housed in a building designed by the Italian
architect Aldo Rossi. Together with the Cupola on the River
Maas, it is one of Maastricht's most prominent landmarks.
Groups can tour the museum with a professional guide. The
Bonnefanten Highlights Tour provides background facts on
the building's architecture and interesting information about
special artworks in the collection. Enthusiastic museum guides
provide up-to-date information on exhibitions - an excellent
way of making your visit to the Bonnefanten Museum complete.
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Arts and Antiques |
Maastricht
certainly lives up to its reputation of being an "arty" city.
Not only because it has several academies of art and music,
it also offers a variety of museums, galleries and other
places of interest: Museum Spanish Gouvernment
the museum contains period rooms with mainly 17th and 18th
century furnishings, including furniture, silver, porcelain
and pottery, glassware and paintings; www.museumspaansgouvernement.nl
Natural History Museum
among the museum's highlights are the remains of enormous
Mosasauriers and Giant Turtles found in marlstone at the
St Pietersberg caverns. Fossils of all shapes and sizes show
how South Limburg has changed in the course of the last 300
million years.
Historical Printing Museum
The printing shop dates from about 1900 and is still in
use, making this a living museum. Besides traditional skills,
the artistic side is given ample attention. A number of display
cases with various materials and equipment present an historical
overview of the development of the art of printing. A number
of old printing presses can be set into motion. www.drukmuseum.nl
"Rondje Maastricht"
is a walk through the old inner-city past a number of antique
dealers and art galleries with an established reputation;
www.antiquesmaastricht.nl The city also has a great number of galleries where contemporary
artists exhibit their work. And on the streets... there you
will find a 'permanent exhibition' of statues by well known
Dutch sculptors.
Information on the exhibitions and
opening hours of the Gallaries you can find in the magazine "Uit in Maastricht",
available at the tourist office of Maastricht.
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St. Pietersberg
The famous 'St. Pietersberg' caves are the result of centuries
of excavation of marl, a building stone. What we now see
is an enormous labyrinth of more than 20,000 passages. The
stone-hewers have left their marks. On the walls are interesting
inscriptions, some extremely old; artists too, have been
at work here. During the many sieges Maastricht has suffered,
and also during the last world war, local inhabitants used
the passages as a shelter; some of the emergency provisions
are still to be seen. |
Euregion
Maastricht
is situated at a historical (Roman) route just like Aachen,
Liège, Hasselt and Heerlen. A brochure
about these five ancient cities is available at the tourist
office. Euregio Maas-Rhine .
More information
The tourist office is
situated in the Dinghuis, Kleine Staat 1 (www.vvvmaastricht.nl)
How to get to Maastricht > |
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