Close up view of the monumental cascade public fountain in Spa Belgium, one of the putti angels with a cup of water
Browse the collection : Spa, the Pearl of the Belgian Ardennes
Four stone slabs on both sides of the fountain are engraved with the names of 170 or more or less known foreigners who came to “take the waters” at Spa with the date of their visit. Among the first names of these “Bobelins” of the sixteenth century are Montaigne and Guicciardini; the last names are those of Leopold III and Queen Astrid and that of Poincaré.
(Statues)
Spa first became of interest to visitors in Roman times, but reached its golden age in the 18th century. Tsar Peter the Great visited the health resort in 1717 and Spa’s main fountain was renamed Pouhon Pierre le Grand as a tribute to him. Since then European princes, aristocrats and the upper middle classes have done the same, and Spa became a place of wellbeing but also a place to be seen, with the Habsburg Emperor Joseph II calling it “the café of Europe”..
In the 19th century, Spa was stylish. European artists such as J.M.W. Turner and Gustave Courbet, and writers such as Alexandre Dumas and Victor Hugo visited. Even the American writer James Fenimore Cooper made the trip, as did the new bourgeois crowd. Bathing in the mineral water became fashionable, and the town reinvented itself as a “thermal city” not only focused on health but also on the new concept of well-being.
(Washington Post)
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