Everything about Gable Stone totally explained
Gable stones (
Dutch gevelstenen) are carved and often colourfully painted stone tablets, which are set into the walls of buildings, usually at about 4 metres from the ground. They serve both to identify and embellish the building. They may also tell us something about its owner.
They are a particularly charming feature of the urban fabric of
Amsterdam, and are also found in cities such as
Brussels,
Lille and
Copenhagen. Some 2,500 of these stones are still to be found in the
Netherlands, of which around 850 are in Amsterdam and 250 in
Maastricht. Many have been conserved by the
VVAG
(Friends of Amsterdam Gable Stones).
Gable stones came into use in the
16th century, in the days before house numbers, taking over from hanging signs as a way of simultaneously and memorably identifying and adorning a house. They normally combine a picture with an inscription, or sometimes just a date. Some illustrate the name or profession of the owner, for instance a quill pen as a badge for an author, or a ship for a sailor. Some are named after notable people (
The King of Bohemia) or faraway trading destinations (
Königsberg). Some stones act as
talismans, quoting from holy scripture. A pious motto repeatedly found on Dutch gable stones is
Nooit Volmaakt (Never Perfect), a testimony to the householder's belief that only God can achieve perfection. Going beyond practicality or superstition, some stones make a joke, usually a
visual pun.
A variation on the theme is a tablet bearing a biblical quotation or more worldy motto, but without an image. (Mediaeval builders also often carved mottos in wooden beams or painted them on plaster panels.) An interesting example is the
Dutch-language tablet in Österlånggatan in the
Hanseatic old town of
Stockholm,
Sweden. It reads:
» Gaet het wel men heeft veel vrinden
kert het luck wie kan se vinden » [Whenthings go well one has many friends
If your luck changes who can find them?]
The tradition is alive and has moved with the times – new stones are still commissioned, and for instance the Rabobank at Frederiksplein 54 in Amsterdam wistfully commemorates the introduction of the
euro with a stone entitled
De eerste en de laatste gulden (The first and the last
guilder), created by
Zutphen sculptor
Hans 't Mannetje
. Nowadays one can even buy a new gable stone off the shelf on the web!
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