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Valerius de Saedeleer. Valerius de Saedeleer or Valerius De Saedeleer [1] [2] (4 August 1867 – 16 September 1941) was a Belgian landscape painter, whose works are informed by a Symbolist and mystic-religious sensitivity and the traditions of 16th-century Flemish landscape painting.
Student Village is a term often used by colleges and universities to describe residential areas on campus and may refer to: Student Village (Victoria University) John Hancock Student Village at Boston University; Turku Student Village in Finland; Cheney Student Village at Oxford Brookes University; Manchester Student Village in Manchester, England
Van Bruggen is a Dutch toponymic surname translating to "from/of [the] bridge[s]". [1] Variant names with the same origin are Ter Brugge(n), Ter Brugghen, Van de(r) Brug, Van der Brugge(n), Van der Brugghen, and Verbrugge(n). Different settlements and houses with the name (de) Brug(ge) ("the bridge") could also be at the source of each family ...
In September 2015, a multimillion-pound luxury student village in Salford opened for the University, it was named Peel Park Quarter after the park which is situated alongside. Features in the buildings included deluxe en-suite bedrooms and floor-to-ceiling windows which showcased views overlooking the park and the Manchester skyline.
The Burg, painted c. 1691-1700 by Jan Baptist van Meunincxhove, with in the background the manor of the Brugse Vrije and the old civil registry. The Burg was originally surrounded by walls and had entrance gates. It is one of the oldest parts of the city centre.
Geldolf III van Brugge en van Gruuthuse (1265/70 – c. 1335) With Geldolf III, the male line of the family was extinct; however, a daughter of Geldolf II, Catharina (or Maria, or Anna) van Brugge (1265/70 – c. 1320) married one van der Aa, likely Geerard van der Aa, lord of Grimbergen (1260–1310), and her heirs continued to bear the van ...
Media related to Grootseminarie van Brugge at Wikimedia Commons Official website 51°13′05″N 3°13′50″E / 51.2181°N 3.2305°E / 51.2181;
Deckerck, Nele, De Sint-Trudoabdij te Brugge, 1584–1796, Bruges, 1998; Sisters P. Huisman & Kristina van Wonterghem, Het Obituarium van de Sint-Trudoabdij te Odegem, te Brugge en te Male, 1149–2002, Bruges, 2002