The museum was established to house the collection of the Société Archéologique. Some of the driving forces behind the start of the museum were art historian
William Henry James Weale and architect
William Curtis Brangwyn. The museum displays both the interior of a house of a rich family as it would have been in the late Middle Ages and a collection of everyday tools and utensils. On display are furniture,
bobbin lace, objects in gold and silver, weapons, musical instruments, and ceramics. The most famous object in the collection is the painted terracotta bust of
Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor from 1520, attributed to
Conrat Meit. Another highlight is the collection of Flemish tapestries from the 16th and 17th century. The museum regularly holds exhibitions, such as "Masterpieces of Bruges Tapestry" in 1987 and "Love and Devotion" in 2013, centered on the
Gruuthuse manuscript. File:Gruuthuse, busto di carlo V in terracotta, 1520 ca. 01.JPG|Terracotta bust of
Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor, c. 1520 File:Gruuthuse, arazzo con storia di david, 1550-1599 ca.JPG|Mid-16th-century tapestry ==References==