Lieven de Key
Lieven de Key (1560 — 17 July 1627) was a Dutch renaissance architect in the Netherlands, mostly known today for his works in Haarlem.
Biography
De Key was born in Ghent, and was already a well-known architect when the Haarlem council asked him to become city architect in 1592 to succeed Wouter den Abt. He brought to Haarlem the same Dutch renaissance style that Hendrick de Keyser brought to Amsterdam. Everything attributed to him or his followers, whether a building, a doorway, or merely a gable stone, is considered a rijksmonument today.
The reason so many buildings in Haarlem can be attributed to him is because Haarlem had suffered a severe fire in 1576 that destroyed a third of the city, and plans were underway for large city projects when he was appointed city architect. Before working in Haarlem and Leiden, De Key had worked in London from 1580-1591.[1] He died in Haarlem, aged about 77.
Buildings he designed
- Front of the city hall of Leiden[2]
- The Vleeshal in Haarlem, 1602-1603[2]
- The gymnasium in Leiden[2]
- The tower of the St. Anna church in Haarlem, which still exists, though the rest of the church was demolished and rebuilt by Jacob van Campen.
- The Waag in Haarlem, 1595 [2]
- North wing of the city hall of Haarlem, 1620[2]
- The stone entranceway to the Proveniershuis in Haarlem, 1592[2]
- The facade of the main hall of the Frans Hals Museum, 1604-1609.
- The gateway of the St. Barbara Gasthuis, 1624
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References
- Lieven de Key in the RKD
- See the Rijksmonument report for this building
- Deugd boven geweld, Een geschiedenis van Haarlem, 1245-1995, edited by Gineke van der Ree-Scholtens, 1995, ISBN 90-6550-504-0