44 Route 4. YPRES. Halles. 36 M. Ypres. — Hotels. Hor. pz 1a Cuarenrente (Pl. a; ©, 3), 12 R. at 2!/2-3'/2, B. 4, D. 3's fr. (incl. wine), good, Hér. pr L’Erke-RoyaLe (Pl. b; C, 3), unpretending, both in the Grand* Place; Hér. DE France (Pl. c; A, 4), Hor. pes Brasseurs (Pl. d; A, 4), both in the Boul. Malou, opposite the station. — Café du Sultan, Aux Trois Suisses, both in the Grand Place (Bavarian beer). — Post-Office (Pl. C, 4), Rue de Lille 68. Ypres, Flem. Yper (65 ft.), an old town on the Yperlée (now vaulted over), with 17,400 inhab., who are chiefly occupied in the manufacture of Valenciennes lace, possesses broad and clean streets and imposing old buildings of the 13-14th centuries. It was for- merly the capital of West Flanders. The cloth-making industry here dates back to 1073, and about 1247 Ypres is said to have been the wealthiest and most powerful commercial town in Flanders, with a population of 200,000 and upwards of 4000 looms in con- stant activity. A succession of popular risings and the great plague of 1347 led to the decay of the industry, while the siege of the town and burning of the suburbs by the English and the burghers of Ghent in 1383 caused the last of the weavers to migrate. The devastations of the iconoclasts (1566) and the soldiers of Alva, and the capture of the city by the Gueux (1578) and Alexander Farnese (1584) reduced the population to 5000. During the 17th cent. Ypres was four times taken by the French (1648, 1649, 1658, 1678) and it belonged to France until 1715, The bishopric founded in 1559 was suppressed in 1801. The fortifications were removed in 1855. From the railway-station (Pl. A, 4) we first follow the Rue de la Station (Statie-Straat) to the N.E. and then turn to the left into the Rue du Temple, near which, to the N. beyond the Church of St. Nicholas (P1. B, 3), is an old brick tower, a relic of the Abbey of Thérowanne, which was transferred to Ypres in 1559. — The Rue au Beurre (Boter-Straat), with its picturesque gabled houses (Nos. 22 & 20, on the left), leads to the N.E. to the Marché-Bas (Neermarkt; p. 46) and the Gran’ Pracs or Groorzr Manxr (Pl. C, 3). Here, to the left, stand the so-called — “Halles (Pl. B, ©, 3), the most considerable edifice of its kind in Belgium, begun by Count Baldwin IX. of Flanders (p. 215) in 1200 and completed in 1304. The three early-Gothic facades of the Halle des Drapiers or Cloth Hall proper have three stories and are flanked by corner-turrets. The statues in the niches of the top story (Counts of Flanders on the S. and W., celebrated natives of Ypres on the N.) were destroyed by the French in 1793 but replaced by new ones in 1854-75. The edifice has been under restoration since 1908. On the S. side, in the centre of the main facade (433 ft. in length), rises the massive square Belfry (230 ft.), with turrets at the angles. The E. side of the Halles is bounded by the so-called Nieuwerk, a charming Renaissance structure erected in 1620-24, probably from designs by Jan Sporeman (ca. 1575); its groundfloor consists of an open hall (20 ft. wide), supported by columns.