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Karel de Bazel

Karel Petrus Cornelis de Bazel (Den Helder, 14 February 1869—Amsterdam, 28 November 1923) was a modern Dutch architect, engraver, draftsman, furniture designer, carpet designer, glass artist and bookbinding designer. He was the teacher of Adriaan Frederik van der Weij and the first chairman of the Bond van Nederlandse Architecten (BNA; the Association of Dutch Architects), beginning in 1909.[1][2]

Karel de Bazel
De Bazel drawn in 1915 by Martin Monnickendam
Born14 February 1869
Den Helder
Died28 November 1923
Amsterdam
NationalityDutch
Occupation(s)architect, engraver, engineer, furniture designer, textile designer, glass designer and bookbinding designer
BuildingsDe Bazel – Nederlandsche Handel-Maatschappij office in Amsterdam De Bazel – head office Nederlandsche Heidemaatschappij in Arnhem

Life and career Edit

Youth, Training, and Early Career, 1869–1900 Edit

Karel de Bazel was the son of Karel Pieter Cornelis de Bazel, caretaker of the Ministry of Marine, and Petronella Elisabeth Koch.[1] De Bazel came from a modest background and his formal education as a youth only extended through primary school.[2] Much later, De Bazel began his career as an apprentice to a carpenter.[1][2][3]

De Bazel took evening courses in architecture at the Koninklijke Academie van Beeldende Kunsten (Royal Academy of Visual Arts) in The Hague,[2][3] and then took a job as a draftsman at the Nieukerken architectural firm in The Hague in 1888.[1][4][2][3] In 1889, through his brother, who worked as a French translator at a publishing house in Leiden, De Bazel found work as a draftsman for prominent Dutch architect P.J.H. Cuypers in Amsterdam. During this period he executed perspective drawings of St. Vitus' Church in Hilversum and St. Bavo's Cathedral in Haarlem,[1] which so impressed Cuypers that he first promoted De Bazel to head draftsman and later his chief designer, overseeing the rest of the firm. But after De Bazel became a member of the Theosofische Vereniging (Theosophical Society) in 1894, he left Cuypers' firm, as his employer was Catholic. In 1895, De Bazel and Johannes Ludovicus Mathieu Lauweriks formed their own independent partnership.[1][2][3] Between 1897 and 1902 the duo taught courses alongside H. J. M. Walenkamp in the new Theosophical Vahânaloge they had founded in Amsterdam the previous year in drawing, art history and aesthetics; the institution operated until 1931. Here they made connections between architecture, mathematics, nature, and the cosmos.[4][2] Bazel was a member of Nederlandsche Vereeniging voor Ambachts- en Nijverheidskunst (V.A.N.K.) the Dutch Association for Craft and Craft Art.[5]

Mature architectural work, 1900–23 Edit

 
The De Bazel building, former headquarters of the Nederlandsche Handel-Maatschappij and later ABN-Amro bank, has housed the Amsterdam City Archives since 2007. Photo: bma.amsterdam.nl.
 
Interior of the Synagogue of Enschede.

In 1904 De Bazel founded the famous Amsterdam furniture studio De Ploeg with his brother-in-law Kees Oosschot and Klaas van Leeuwen. Along with Hendrik Petrus Berlage, he pioneered the Dutch architectural rationalism that would become characteristic of national practice during and after the First World War.[1] His designs also began to be influenced by Eastern architecture.

During this period, De Bazel executed numerous designs around and for the municipality of Bussum. The first of these was De Bazel's model farm Oud Bussem (1903), located on the eponymous estate in the Gooi. This complex was founded by a wealthy student in response to an outbreak of typhus that had contaminated fresh milk that had been sold nationwide. Both Berlage and Willem Marinus Dudok praised this design, calling it De Bazel's best work. In 1921, he was commissioned by the municipality of Bussum design a new residential area, the Brediuskwartier, which remains one of the most beautiful and completely remaining examples of a residential neighborhood in the style of the Amsterdam School style in the Netherlands.[1] On 17 November 2006, the district was officially designated by the government as a protected townscape. He also designed a park and workers' housing in Bussum, and other residential districts for workers and bourgeois clients alike in Eindhoven and Dieren, and between 1913 and 1923 De Bazel also designed several blocks of workers' housing in the Spaarndammerbuurt west of the center of Amsterdam.[2]

In 1905 De Bazel also designed an octagonal-plan World Capital complex, including a Peace Palace and three academies, for the Foundation for Internationalism just outside The Hague, which, however, was never executed, except for the Peace Palace. Similarly, in 1907, he designed a new district in the foothills of Semarang in the Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia) for his friend, the colonial pharmacist and activist Hendrik Tillema. This district was supposed to be used to improve the health and living conditions of the native Javanese in the city, which caused the colonial government to oppose its implementation until it was extensively modified by Thomas Karsten a decade later to serve as a gentrified district for the city's wealth Dutch and Chinese elite instead.[6] Berlage included De Bazel's designs in his 1908 Expansion Plan for The Hague but this was never directly realized, either.[4][2][3]

Other works from this period include the building for the Nederlandse Heidemaatschappij (a Dutch environmental and infrastructure consulting and engineering firm, now called Arcadis) in Arnhem, built from 1912 to 1914, which was the first large-scale structure in the Netherlands to make use of reinforced concrete. The structure is now called the De Bazel after him.[1][2]

De Bazel also worked on the designs for a glass factory in Leerdam, which beginning in 1915 engaged several artists to design utilitarian and decorative products, among them Berlage and Frank Lloyd Wright.[1]

Late in life, De Bazel designed his most famous work, the headquarters for the Nederlandsche Handel-Maatschappij (NHM; Dutch Trading Company), built from 1919 to 1926 at Vijzelstraat 32 in Amsterdam, where he also designed much of the interior. The former office building is often colloquially referred to as De Bazel in his honor, and since 2007 has housed the Amsterdam City Archives. He also, significantly, designed the synagogue of Enschede, which was completed posthumously.[1][2]

Other design work Edit

De Bazel was also involved in designing furniture and utensils. Well-known examples of this are the cradle he made for Princess Juliana of the Netherlands in 1909 and a Pulchikast that he designed for the occasion of the marriage of Queen Wilhelmina to Prince Hendrik in 1901.[3][2]

De Bazel also designed the stamps issued in honor of the centenary of the Kingdom of the Netherlands in 1913, which depicted the queen and her three predecessors.[1][4]

Death Edit

Karel de Bazel died aboard a train from his home in Bussum to Amsterdam, ironically en route to the funeral of his fellow accomplished Dutch architect Michel de Klerk (who had died four days earlier), as a result of a lung condition. He was buried at Westerveld Cemetery in Driehuis.[1]

Works Edit

 
Karel de Bazel lying in state for his funeral, November 1923.

Architectural Edit

  • Project for Saint Bavo's Cathedral in Haarlem (1890)
  • Saint Vitus Church and ministers' residence in Hilversum (1891—92; for PJH Cuypers)[7][8]
  • De Bremstruik ("The Broomstick") villa for KJL Alberdingk Thijm, in Baarn (1900—01)[9]
  • Office building for Joannes van Woensel Kooy at Flevolaan 67, Huizen (1903) [10]
  • Hofstede dairy farm, Naarden (1904)[11]
  • Houses at Koningslaan 14 and 16, Amsterdam (1904)[12][13]
  • Moltzer-Boeke House, Wilhelminalaan 4, Alkmaar (1904—05)[14]
  • Ideal project for the "World Capital" at The Hague (1905—06)
  • Woudoord villa in Oranjewoud, Heerenveen (1908)
  • Restoration of the Rembrandt House, Jodenbreestraat 4, Amsterdam (1908—11)[15]
  • Villa at Beethovenlaan 29, Hilversum (1910)[16]
  • Heerenpoort railway station in Leiden (1911)[17]
  • CJ and J. Pabst House, Steenbergen 6, Laren (1911)[18]
  • Villa Meentwijck, Groot Hertoginnelaan 34A, Bussum (1912)[19]
  • JC Loman House, Johannes Vermeerstraat 14, Amsterdam (1912)[20]
  • Project for Rotterdam City Hall (1912—13)
  • Nederlandse Heidemaatschappij in Arnhem (1912—14)
  • House at Dam 81, Amsterdam (1913)[21]
  • De Boschkamp Farm greenhouse and coachhouse (1913)[22]
  • Villa at Oudwijkerlaan 47, Utrecht (1914)[23]
  • Steens Zijnen House, Van Lawick van Pabststraat 31, Arnhem (1916)[24]
  • Redelé villa at Parklaan 56, Eindhoven (1916)[25]
  • Workers' houses in the Spaarndammerbuurt in Amsterdam (1918—23)[26]
  • De Wyk villa for G. Mesdag, Haren (1919)[27]
  • Office building for the Nederlandsche Handel-Maatschappij in Amsterdam (1919—26)
  • New residential area, the Brediuskwartier, in Bussum (1921)
  • Sliedrecht Town Hall (1921—23)[28]
  • Synagogue of Enschede (after 1923)
  • Workers' housing complex at Rijswijkseweg 340, The Hague (1923—25)[29]

Other design work Edit

  • Stamp design for Amsterdam City Archives, ca. 1900
  • Cover for Wendingen, vol. 2, no. 1 (January 1919)

Gallery Edit

See also Edit

References Edit

Citations Edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m (in Dutch). Archived from the original on 28 November 2020. Retrieved 9 September 2022.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Bazel, Karel Petrus Cornelis de (1869–1923)" (in Dutch). Retrieved 22 May 2019.
  3. ^ a b c d e f "Karel Petrus Cornelis de Bazel". Retrieved 22 May 2019.
  4. ^ a b c d "Karel de Bazel". Le Muse. Vol. II. Novara: De Agostini. 1964. p. 132.
  5. ^ "Karel Petrus Cornelis de Bazel". RKD. Retrieved 16 December 2020.
  6. ^ Van Roosmalen, Pauline Katherina Maria (2017), "Modern Indisch Town Planning", The Life and Work of Thomas Karsten, Amsterdam: Architectura & Natura Press, pp. 265–303.
  7. ^ "Dutch National Monument Register" (in Dutch). Retrieved 22 September 2019.
  8. ^ "Dutch National Monument Register" (in Dutch). Retrieved 22 September 2019.
  9. ^ "Dutch National Monument Register" (in Dutch). Retrieved 22 September 2019.
  10. ^ "Dutch National Monument Register" (in Dutch). Retrieved 22 September 2019.
  11. ^ "Dutch National Monument Register" (in Dutch). Retrieved 22 September 2019.
  12. ^ "Dutch National Monument Register" (in Dutch). Retrieved 22 September 2019.
  13. ^ "Dutch National Monument Register" (in Dutch). Retrieved 22 September 2019.
  14. ^ "Dutch National Monument Register" (in Dutch). Retrieved 22 September 2019.
  15. ^ "Dutch National Monument Register" (in Dutch). Retrieved 22 September 2019.
  16. ^ "Dutch National Monument Register" (in Dutch). Retrieved 22 September 2019.
  17. ^ "Heritage Leiden and Environment" (in Dutch). Retrieved 22 September 2019.
  18. ^ "Dutch National Monument Register" (in Dutch). Retrieved 22 September 2019.
  19. ^ "Dutch National Monument Register" (in Dutch). Retrieved 22 September 2019.
  20. ^ "Dutch National Monument Register" (in Dutch). Retrieved 22 September 2019.
  21. ^ "Dutch National Monument Register" (in Dutch). Retrieved 22 September 2019.
  22. ^ "Dutch National Monument Register" (in Dutch). Retrieved 22 September 2019.
  23. ^ "Dutch National Monument Register" (in Dutch). Retrieved 22 September 2019.
  24. ^ "Dutch National Monument Register" (in Dutch). Retrieved 22 September 2019.
  25. ^ "Dutch National Monument Register" (in Dutch). Retrieved 22 September 2019.
  26. ^ "Dutch National Monument Register" (in Dutch). Retrieved 22 September 2019.
  27. ^ "Dutch National Monument Register" (in Dutch). Retrieved 22 September 2019.
  28. ^ "Dutch National Monument Register" (in Dutch). Retrieved 22 September 2019.
  29. ^ "Dutch National Monument Register" (in Dutch). Retrieved 22 September 2019.

Bibliography Edit

  • Renato De Fusco (1999). Mille anni d'architettura in Europa. Bari: Laterza. ISBN 978-88-420-4295-2.
  • A.Jansen; Ch. van Herck (1942). J.P. van Baurscheit I en II, Antwerpsche beeldhouwers uit de 18e eeuw in het Jaarboek 1942 van de Koninklijke Oudheidkundige Kring van Antwerpen (in Dutch). Anversa: Jaarboek 1942 Koninklijke Oudheidkundige Kring van Antwerpen.
  • Emilio Lavagnino (1956). L'arte moderna dai neoclassicisti ai contemporanei. Torino: UTET.
  • Werner Muller; Gunter Vogel (1997). Atlante d'architettura. Storia dell'architettura dalle origini all'età contemporanea. Tavole e testi. Milano: Hoepli.
  • Nikolaus Pevsner; John Fleming; Hugh Honour (2005). Dizionario di architettura. Torino: Einaudi.
  • R. Sirjacobs (2008). Antwerpen Sint-Pauluskerk en Schatkamer. Vijftig hoogtepunten (in Dutch). Anversa.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • V. Vercelloni (1969). Dizionario enciclopedico di architettura e urbanistica. Roma.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • David Watkin (1990). Storia dell'architettura occidentale. Bologna.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)

External links Edit

  • Karel Petrus Cornelis de Bazel
  • Gemeentearchief Amsterdam
  • Gemeentemuseum Den Haag

karel, bazel, karel, petrus, cornelis, bazel, helder, february, 1869, amsterdam, november, 1923, modern, dutch, architect, engraver, draftsman, furniture, designer, carpet, designer, glass, artist, bookbinding, designer, teacher, adriaan, frederik, weij, first. Karel Petrus Cornelis de Bazel Den Helder 14 February 1869 Amsterdam 28 November 1923 was a modern Dutch architect engraver draftsman furniture designer carpet designer glass artist and bookbinding designer He was the teacher of Adriaan Frederik van der Weij and the first chairman of the Bond van Nederlandse Architecten BNA the Association of Dutch Architects beginning in 1909 1 2 Karel de BazelDe Bazel drawn in 1915 by Martin MonnickendamBorn14 February 1869Den HelderDied28 November 1923AmsterdamNationalityDutchOccupation s architect engraver engineer furniture designer textile designer glass designer and bookbinding designerBuildingsDe Bazel Nederlandsche Handel Maatschappij office in Amsterdam De Bazel head office Nederlandsche Heidemaatschappij in Arnhem Contents 1 Life and career 1 1 Youth Training and Early Career 1869 1900 1 2 Mature architectural work 1900 23 1 3 Other design work 1 4 Death 2 Works 2 1 Architectural 2 2 Other design work 3 Gallery 4 See also 5 References 5 1 Citations 5 2 Bibliography 6 External linksLife and career EditYouth Training and Early Career 1869 1900 Edit Karel de Bazel was the son of Karel Pieter Cornelis de Bazel caretaker of the Ministry of Marine and Petronella Elisabeth Koch 1 De Bazel came from a modest background and his formal education as a youth only extended through primary school 2 Much later De Bazel began his career as an apprentice to a carpenter 1 2 3 De Bazel took evening courses in architecture at the Koninklijke Academie van Beeldende Kunsten Royal Academy of Visual Arts in The Hague 2 3 and then took a job as a draftsman at the Nieukerken architectural firm in The Hague in 1888 1 4 2 3 In 1889 through his brother who worked as a French translator at a publishing house in Leiden De Bazel found work as a draftsman for prominent Dutch architect P J H Cuypers in Amsterdam During this period he executed perspective drawings of St Vitus Church in Hilversum and St Bavo s Cathedral in Haarlem 1 which so impressed Cuypers that he first promoted De Bazel to head draftsman and later his chief designer overseeing the rest of the firm But after De Bazel became a member of the Theosofische Vereniging Theosophical Society in 1894 he left Cuypers firm as his employer was Catholic In 1895 De Bazel and Johannes Ludovicus Mathieu Lauweriks formed their own independent partnership 1 2 3 Between 1897 and 1902 the duo taught courses alongside H J M Walenkamp in the new Theosophical Vahanaloge they had founded in Amsterdam the previous year in drawing art history and aesthetics the institution operated until 1931 Here they made connections between architecture mathematics nature and the cosmos 4 2 Bazel was a member of Nederlandsche Vereeniging voor Ambachts en Nijverheidskunst V A N K the Dutch Association for Craft and Craft Art 5 Mature architectural work 1900 23 Edit nbsp The De Bazel building former headquarters of the Nederlandsche Handel Maatschappij and later ABN Amro bank has housed the Amsterdam City Archives since 2007 Photo bma amsterdam nl nbsp Interior of the Synagogue of Enschede In 1904 De Bazel founded the famous Amsterdam furniture studio De Ploeg with his brother in law Kees Oosschot and Klaas van Leeuwen Along with Hendrik Petrus Berlage he pioneered the Dutch architectural rationalism that would become characteristic of national practice during and after the First World War 1 His designs also began to be influenced by Eastern architecture During this period De Bazel executed numerous designs around and for the municipality of Bussum The first of these was De Bazel s model farm Oud Bussem 1903 located on the eponymous estate in the Gooi This complex was founded by a wealthy student in response to an outbreak of typhus that had contaminated fresh milk that had been sold nationwide Both Berlage and Willem Marinus Dudok praised this design calling it De Bazel s best work In 1921 he was commissioned by the municipality of Bussum design a new residential area the Brediuskwartier which remains one of the most beautiful and completely remaining examples of a residential neighborhood in the style of the Amsterdam School style in the Netherlands 1 On 17 November 2006 the district was officially designated by the government as a protected townscape He also designed a park and workers housing in Bussum and other residential districts for workers and bourgeois clients alike in Eindhoven and Dieren and between 1913 and 1923 De Bazel also designed several blocks of workers housing in the Spaarndammerbuurt west of the center of Amsterdam 2 In 1905 De Bazel also designed an octagonal plan World Capital complex including a Peace Palace and three academies for the Foundation for Internationalism just outside The Hague which however was never executed except for the Peace Palace Similarly in 1907 he designed a new district in the foothills of Semarang in the Dutch East Indies now Indonesia for his friend the colonial pharmacist and activist Hendrik Tillema This district was supposed to be used to improve the health and living conditions of the native Javanese in the city which caused the colonial government to oppose its implementation until it was extensively modified by Thomas Karsten a decade later to serve as a gentrified district for the city s wealth Dutch and Chinese elite instead 6 Berlage included De Bazel s designs in his 1908 Expansion Plan for The Hague but this was never directly realized either 4 2 3 Other works from this period include the building for the Nederlandse Heidemaatschappij a Dutch environmental and infrastructure consulting and engineering firm now called Arcadis in Arnhem built from 1912 to 1914 which was the first large scale structure in the Netherlands to make use of reinforced concrete The structure is now called the De Bazel after him 1 2 De Bazel also worked on the designs for a glass factory in Leerdam which beginning in 1915 engaged several artists to design utilitarian and decorative products among them Berlage and Frank Lloyd Wright 1 Late in life De Bazel designed his most famous work the headquarters for the Nederlandsche Handel Maatschappij NHM Dutch Trading Company built from 1919 to 1926 at Vijzelstraat 32 in Amsterdam where he also designed much of the interior The former office building is often colloquially referred to as De Bazel in his honor and since 2007 has housed the Amsterdam City Archives He also significantly designed the synagogue of Enschede which was completed posthumously 1 2 Other design work Edit De Bazel was also involved in designing furniture and utensils Well known examples of this are the cradle he made for Princess Juliana of the Netherlands in 1909 and a Pulchikast that he designed for the occasion of the marriage of Queen Wilhelmina to Prince Hendrik in 1901 3 2 De Bazel also designed the stamps issued in honor of the centenary of the Kingdom of the Netherlands in 1913 which depicted the queen and her three predecessors 1 4 Death Edit Karel de Bazel died aboard a train from his home in Bussum to Amsterdam ironically en route to the funeral of his fellow accomplished Dutch architect Michel de Klerk who had died four days earlier as a result of a lung condition He was buried at Westerveld Cemetery in Driehuis 1 Works Edit nbsp Karel de Bazel lying in state for his funeral November 1923 Architectural Edit Project for Saint Bavo s Cathedral in Haarlem 1890 Saint Vitus Church and ministers residence in Hilversum 1891 92 for PJH Cuypers 7 8 De Bremstruik The Broomstick villa for KJL Alberdingk Thijm in Baarn 1900 01 9 Office building for Joannes van Woensel Kooy at Flevolaan 67 Huizen 1903 10 Hofstede dairy farm Naarden 1904 11 Houses at Koningslaan 14 and 16 Amsterdam 1904 12 13 Moltzer Boeke House Wilhelminalaan 4 Alkmaar 1904 05 14 Ideal project for the World Capital at The Hague 1905 06 Woudoord villa in Oranjewoud Heerenveen 1908 Restoration of the Rembrandt House Jodenbreestraat 4 Amsterdam 1908 11 15 Villa at Beethovenlaan 29 Hilversum 1910 16 Heerenpoort railway station in Leiden 1911 17 CJ and J Pabst House Steenbergen 6 Laren 1911 18 Villa Meentwijck Groot Hertoginnelaan 34A Bussum 1912 19 JC Loman House Johannes Vermeerstraat 14 Amsterdam 1912 20 Project for Rotterdam City Hall 1912 13 Nederlandse Heidemaatschappij in Arnhem 1912 14 House at Dam 81 Amsterdam 1913 21 De Boschkamp Farm greenhouse and coachhouse 1913 22 Villa at Oudwijkerlaan 47 Utrecht 1914 23 Steens Zijnen House Van Lawick van Pabststraat 31 Arnhem 1916 24 Redele villa at Parklaan 56 Eindhoven 1916 25 Workers houses in the Spaarndammerbuurt in Amsterdam 1918 23 26 De Wyk villa for G Mesdag Haren 1919 27 Office building for the Nederlandsche Handel Maatschappij in Amsterdam 1919 26 New residential area the Brediuskwartier in Bussum 1921 Sliedrecht Town Hall 1921 23 28 Synagogue of Enschede after 1923 Workers housing complex at Rijswijkseweg 340 The Hague 1923 25 29 Other design work Edit Stamp design for Amsterdam City Archives ca 1900 Cover for Wendingen vol 2 no 1 January 1919 Gallery Edit nbsp Stamp design for the Amsterdam City Archives ca 1900 nbsp Menko van Dam house in Enschede nbsp Cupboard for the Menko van Dams nbsp Competition design for Rotterdam City Hall 1912 13 nbsp Cover for Wendingen January 1919 nbsp Entrance to a villa in Enschede nbsp Synagogue in Enschede nbsp Lamp in the synagogue of Enschede nbsp Dining room for the Schuurman Gentis family nbsp Examples from glass service from the Leerdam glass factory nbsp Workers homes Van Beuningenplein Amsterdam West nbsp Identical design of workers housing in Zaandammerplein Amsterdam West nbsp Woudoord villa in Oranjewoud Heerenveen 1908 nbsp Wilhelmina stamp 1913 See also Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Karel de Bazel List of Dutch architects Modern architecture Expressionist architecture Amsterdam School Architecture of the NetherlandsReferences EditCitations Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m Karel de Bazel in Dutch Archived from the original on 28 November 2020 Retrieved 9 September 2022 a b c d e f g h i j k l Bazel Karel Petrus Cornelis de 1869 1923 in Dutch Retrieved 22 May 2019 a b c d e f Karel Petrus Cornelis de Bazel Retrieved 22 May 2019 a b c d Karel de Bazel Le Muse Vol II Novara De Agostini 1964 p 132 Karel Petrus Cornelis de Bazel RKD Retrieved 16 December 2020 Van Roosmalen Pauline Katherina Maria 2017 Modern Indisch Town Planning The Life and Work of Thomas Karsten Amsterdam Architectura amp Natura Press pp 265 303 Dutch National Monument Register in Dutch Retrieved 22 September 2019 Dutch National Monument Register in Dutch Retrieved 22 September 2019 Dutch National Monument Register in Dutch Retrieved 22 September 2019 Dutch National Monument Register in Dutch Retrieved 22 September 2019 Dutch National Monument Register in Dutch Retrieved 22 September 2019 Dutch National Monument Register in Dutch Retrieved 22 September 2019 Dutch National Monument Register in Dutch Retrieved 22 September 2019 Dutch National Monument Register in Dutch Retrieved 22 September 2019 Dutch National Monument Register in Dutch Retrieved 22 September 2019 Dutch National Monument Register in Dutch Retrieved 22 September 2019 Heritage Leiden and Environment in Dutch Retrieved 22 September 2019 Dutch National Monument Register in Dutch Retrieved 22 September 2019 Dutch National Monument Register in Dutch Retrieved 22 September 2019 Dutch National Monument Register in Dutch Retrieved 22 September 2019 Dutch National Monument Register in Dutch Retrieved 22 September 2019 Dutch National Monument Register in Dutch Retrieved 22 September 2019 Dutch National Monument Register in Dutch Retrieved 22 September 2019 Dutch National Monument Register in Dutch Retrieved 22 September 2019 Dutch National Monument Register in Dutch Retrieved 22 September 2019 Dutch National Monument Register in Dutch Retrieved 22 September 2019 Dutch National Monument Register in Dutch Retrieved 22 September 2019 Dutch National Monument Register in Dutch Retrieved 22 September 2019 Dutch National Monument Register in Dutch Retrieved 22 September 2019 Bibliography Edit Renato De Fusco 1999 Mille anni d architettura in Europa Bari Laterza ISBN 978 88 420 4295 2 A Jansen Ch van Herck 1942 J P van Baurscheit I en II Antwerpsche beeldhouwers uit de 18e eeuw in het Jaarboek 1942 van de Koninklijke Oudheidkundige Kring van Antwerpen in Dutch Anversa Jaarboek 1942 Koninklijke Oudheidkundige Kring van Antwerpen Emilio Lavagnino 1956 L arte moderna dai neoclassicisti ai contemporanei Torino UTET Werner Muller Gunter Vogel 1997 Atlante d architettura Storia dell architettura dalle origini all eta contemporanea Tavole e testi Milano Hoepli Nikolaus Pevsner John Fleming Hugh Honour 2005 Dizionario di architettura Torino Einaudi R Sirjacobs 2008 Antwerpen Sint Pauluskerk en Schatkamer Vijftig hoogtepunten in Dutch Anversa a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link V Vercelloni 1969 Dizionario enciclopedico di architettura e urbanistica Roma a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link David Watkin 1990 Storia dell architettura occidentale Bologna a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link External links EditKarel Petrus Cornelis de Bazel Gemeentearchief Amsterdam Gemeentemuseum Den Haag Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Karel de Bazel amp oldid 1179623184, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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