The museum is housed in the so-called
Spanish Government building, one of the oldest non-religious buildings in Maastricht, facing the city's main square,
Vrijthof. The building was originally part of the ecclesiastical territory of the
chapter of the
church of Saint Servatius and was probably built for one of the chapter's
canons. In the early 16th century the house was rebuilt and enlarged. At that time the facade on the ground floor was largely blind, except for an arched gateway that led into the courtyard. The three late
Gothic windows on the first floor date from this period. Two of them show the
pillars of Hercules and the motto of
Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor: '
Plus ultra'. The third window, in the middle, carries the symbols of
Habsburg power: the
double-headed eagle with the
coat of arms of Habsburg and
Castile. A little later, an
arcade in
Liège Renaissance style was added on the side of the courtyard which bears similarity to the architecture of the main courtyard of the
Prince-Bishops' Palace in Liège. The
colonnade frieze has three sculpted
medallions with the portraits of (probably) Charles V, his wife
Isabella of Portugal and their son
Philip II of Spain, who stayed here at several occasions. It was probably here that
Alexander Farnese, Duke of Parma and Governor of the Netherlands, signed the declaration that made
William the Silent, leader of the
Dutch Revolt, an outlaw. It was during this period that the building acquired its name
Spanish Government building (Dutch: Spaans Gouvernement). In the 18th and 19th centuries the interior of the building was altered several times. It was during this time that extra windows were put in place on the ground floor. In 1766, the
Parisian printer and editor
Jean-Edmé Dufour bought the building and used it as a print shop. It was from here that many books prohibited in France were smuggled into the country. In 1913 the building was publicly sold. Part of it was demolished and replaced in 1923 by a building that is now in use as a bank (corner St Jacobstraat). The rest of the building was restored by
Victor de Stuers and presented to the city of Maastricht in order to house a local history museum (which did not happen until recently). From 1969 to 1973, and again from 2010 to 2012, thorough restorations took place. ==The museum==