The year 1000 - The Netherlands in the middle of the Middle Ages - Leiden, NL - Until 17-3-2024
Posted: Sat Mar 09, 2024 11:45 am
Rijksmuseum van Oudheden
Rapenburg 28
2311 EW Leiden
The Netherlands
The year 1000 - The Netherlands in the middle of the Middle Ages
Until 17th March 2024
This major exhibition takes you on a colourful journey in time through the middle of the Middle Ages: the period 900-1100. The year 1000 brings you close to the people of the time and their ideas about the world. The exhibition passes through their villages, stops by at the imperial residence in Nijmegen, and visits Utrecht Cathedral and the treasuries of Maastricht. You will also explore Byzantium and the Rome of one thousand years ago.
From silver Viking drinking-horns to ancient chess pieces
The exhibition presents more than four hundred objects from all over the Netherlands and far beyond. They include almost every important archaeological artefact from the period 900-1100 that has been found in the Netherlands. Among the highlights are a Viking drinking-horn from the Basilica of Our Lady in Maastricht and the famous Egmond Gospels from the Royal Library of the Netherlands. The display also features swords, ship timbers, golden jewellery (including the recent treasure from Hoogwoud), coin hoards, the pectoral cross of St Servatius, the oldest chess pieces in the Netherlands, and a wooden ladder from a well.
An era of great change
The middle of the Middle Ages, the period 900-1100, can seem like a black hole in history; centuries when nothing happened. But for the region that is now the Netherlands, it was actually a time of great transformation in the climate, landscape, buildings, language and society. The centuries between 900 and 1100 saw the emergence of what is now recognisable as ‘the Netherlands’, with dykes surrounding reclaimed land, a manor after every river bend, and church towers on the horizon.
Newcomers in the Netherlands
The Netherlands was ruled by bishops and formed part of the Holy Roman Empire. These centuries also saw the large-scale exchange of knowledge between East and West: musical notation, the number 0 and chess were all new arrivals in Low Countries. At the end of the millennium, the end of the world was foretold, with solar eclipses, floods and comets seen as omens. In the end, though, nothing happened. The year 1000 tells the stories of these medieval people, of their daily lives and their expectations at the turn of the millennium.
Opening hours: Daily - 10:00 - 17:00
Admission: €14
https://www.rmo.nl/en/exhibitions/tempo ... year-1000/
Rapenburg 28
2311 EW Leiden
The Netherlands
The year 1000 - The Netherlands in the middle of the Middle Ages
Until 17th March 2024
This major exhibition takes you on a colourful journey in time through the middle of the Middle Ages: the period 900-1100. The year 1000 brings you close to the people of the time and their ideas about the world. The exhibition passes through their villages, stops by at the imperial residence in Nijmegen, and visits Utrecht Cathedral and the treasuries of Maastricht. You will also explore Byzantium and the Rome of one thousand years ago.
From silver Viking drinking-horns to ancient chess pieces
The exhibition presents more than four hundred objects from all over the Netherlands and far beyond. They include almost every important archaeological artefact from the period 900-1100 that has been found in the Netherlands. Among the highlights are a Viking drinking-horn from the Basilica of Our Lady in Maastricht and the famous Egmond Gospels from the Royal Library of the Netherlands. The display also features swords, ship timbers, golden jewellery (including the recent treasure from Hoogwoud), coin hoards, the pectoral cross of St Servatius, the oldest chess pieces in the Netherlands, and a wooden ladder from a well.
An era of great change
The middle of the Middle Ages, the period 900-1100, can seem like a black hole in history; centuries when nothing happened. But for the region that is now the Netherlands, it was actually a time of great transformation in the climate, landscape, buildings, language and society. The centuries between 900 and 1100 saw the emergence of what is now recognisable as ‘the Netherlands’, with dykes surrounding reclaimed land, a manor after every river bend, and church towers on the horizon.
Newcomers in the Netherlands
The Netherlands was ruled by bishops and formed part of the Holy Roman Empire. These centuries also saw the large-scale exchange of knowledge between East and West: musical notation, the number 0 and chess were all new arrivals in Low Countries. At the end of the millennium, the end of the world was foretold, with solar eclipses, floods and comets seen as omens. In the end, though, nothing happened. The year 1000 tells the stories of these medieval people, of their daily lives and their expectations at the turn of the millennium.
Opening hours: Daily - 10:00 - 17:00
Admission: €14
https://www.rmo.nl/en/exhibitions/tempo ... year-1000/