Musée de la Cloche et du Carillon Klokken- en Beiaardmuseum | |
![]() the museum in 2005 | |
Established | 1992 |
---|---|
Dissolved | 2013 |
Location | Tellin |
Coordinates | 50°4′54.12″N 5°13′10.67″E / 50.0817000°N 5.2196306°E |
Type | Camponology (Bell) museum |
Owner | municipality of Tellin |
Website |
www |
The Bell and Carillon Museum (French: Musée de la Cloche et du Carillon; Dutch: Klokken- en Beiaardmuseum) was a museum from 1992 to 2013 in Tellin in the Belgian Ardennes.
The museum was established in a bell foundry that was in service between 1830 and 1970. Beside bells and carillons it showed other objects, like weather-vanes that had been on church towers. There was also a documentary film shown on the process of molding. [1]
The exploitation of the museum cost the municipality 35,000 euro on a yearly base. As a result it was decided on 28 February 2013 to close the museum at the end of the year. [2] The year after the museum was obtained by the artisan and clock renovator Olivier Baudri that based its atelier there, [3] with the goal to reopen the museum in the future. [4]
It has since been reopened and usually is open 3 days a week (Wed, Fri, Sat) for a total of 13 hours. It is closed during Winter (Mid November to March) [5]
Musée de la Cloche et du Carillon Klokken- en Beiaardmuseum | |
![]() the museum in 2005 | |
Established | 1992 |
---|---|
Dissolved | 2013 |
Location | Tellin |
Coordinates | 50°4′54.12″N 5°13′10.67″E / 50.0817000°N 5.2196306°E |
Type | Camponology (Bell) museum |
Owner | municipality of Tellin |
Website |
www |
The Bell and Carillon Museum (French: Musée de la Cloche et du Carillon; Dutch: Klokken- en Beiaardmuseum) was a museum from 1992 to 2013 in Tellin in the Belgian Ardennes.
The museum was established in a bell foundry that was in service between 1830 and 1970. Beside bells and carillons it showed other objects, like weather-vanes that had been on church towers. There was also a documentary film shown on the process of molding. [1]
The exploitation of the museum cost the municipality 35,000 euro on a yearly base. As a result it was decided on 28 February 2013 to close the museum at the end of the year. [2] The year after the museum was obtained by the artisan and clock renovator Olivier Baudri that based its atelier there, [3] with the goal to reopen the museum in the future. [4]
It has since been reopened and usually is open 3 days a week (Wed, Fri, Sat) for a total of 13 hours. It is closed during Winter (Mid November to March) [5]