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Royal Museum of the Armed Forces and Military History

Royal Museum of the Armed Forces and Military History
Musée Royal de l’Armée et d’Histoire Militaire (French)
Koninklijk Museum van het Leger en de Krijgsgeschiedenis (Dutch)
Brussel Legermuseum R04.jpg
The entrance to the northern Bordiau hall.
Royal Museum of the Armed Forces and Military History is located in Brussels
Royal Museum of the Armed Forces and Military History
Location within Brussels
Established June 28, 1923
Location Cinquantenaire Park 3
Brussels B-1000
Belgium
Coordinates 50°50′26″N 4°23′34″E / 50.84046°N 4.392833°E / 50.84046; 4.392833
Type Military Museum
Public transit access Schuman and Merode station
Nearest car park at museum
Website www.klm-mra.be

The Royal Museum of the Armed Forces and Military History (French: Musée Royal de l’Armée et d’Histoire Militaire, often abbreviated to MRA, Dutch: Koninklijk Museum van het Leger en de Krijgsgeschiedenis, KLM) is a military museum that occupies the two northernmost halls of the historic complex in Cinquantenaire Park in Brussels, Belgium.

At the Brussels exhibition of 1910, a section on military history was presented to the public and met with great success.

Given the enthusiasm of the population, the authorities created a military museum within the international context of extreme tension which led to the Great War. The museum was originally installed on the site of the Abbaye de la Cambre and moved to the Cinquantenaire Park in 1923.

In 1875, the Belgian architect Gédéon Bordiau made a proposal to build flats on the site of a former parade ground of the Garde Civique. The location was named "Cinquantenaire" (literally "50th anniversary") because it was planned to celebrate the half-century since the independence of Belgium in 1830 as an exhibition space.

Temporary structures were erected on the site for the World Fair of 1897 as Bordiau's work had not been finished. The construction of buildings was put on hold in 1890 for lack of funds and was eventually stopped by the death of the architect in 1904. Work resumed the following year under the direction of French architect Charles Girault and was completed with a new patron, King Leopold II. The triumphal arch that had already been planned was amended and expanded to meet the wishes of the King.

The park is set on the continuation of the Rue de la Loi which starts at the end of the Brussels Park before the royal palace. A fire destroyed the south wing of the building in 1946.


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