Like other municipal museums in the Netherlands, the Lakenhal became a repository for municipal art collections. Artifacts from Leiden are on display, such as a series of stained glass windows by
Willem Thibaut commissioned for the Leiden city hall, now installed in the stairwells. On permanent display is also the old inspection room or
Staalmeesterskamer, where cloth was inspected, and the meeting hall where disputes were decided. Four large paintings depicting the cloth industry by
Isaac van Swanenburg hang in the same spots on the walls as designed. Similarly, a grand over-the-mantel piece by
Carel de Moor shows the inspectors in a massive wooden frame decorated with their family shields, flanked by a series of three historical allegories of the city of Leiden by
Abraham Lambertsz van den Tempel. The museum hosts a collection of
altarpieces and religious artifacts from before the
Protestant Reformation that were formally ceded to the state in 1572. The museum also includes a reconstructed
statie or Catholic
mission station from after the Reformation. Because the Catholic religion was banned, there was no official church, and all of the Catholic places of worship in the young Dutch Republic were called
mission stations. These were semi-hidden churches that were tolerated and taxed by the state. The collection also includes
A Pedlar Selling Spectacles (Allegory of Sight), one of a series of five,
The Senses, by
Rembrandt. The museum was closed for restoration and expansion from 2016 to 2019. On its reopening in June 2019, and until February 2020, the museum had on display a newly identified painting by Rembrandt,
Suffer little children to come unto me, showing Jesus preaching. == Organisation ==