De Drie Haringen, Medieval merchant house on Brink square, Deventer, Netherlands.
De Drie Haringen is a merchant house at Brink square in Deventer, showing German and Flemish architectural features from the sixteenth century. Its facade displays a stone tablet with the inscription 'In di drie vergulde herick', and multiple floors now host rotating art exhibitions.
Herbert Dapper, a member of the merchant trading guild, purchased the property in 1567 and had it renovated in 1575 during the Hanseatic period. This rebuilding occurred when Deventer was an important trading hub between northern and central Europe.
The building's name derives from three crowned herrings, a symbol of the merchant guild that traded between this city and Scandinavia. The stone tablet on its facade reminds visitors of the maritime connections that shaped daily commerce in this region.
The house is located at Brink 55 in Deventer and welcomes visitors Wednesday through Sunday. Rotating art exhibitions fill the multiple floors, offering something different on each visit.
The cellar preserves architectural fragments salvaged from demolished historical buildings elsewhere in Deventer. These rescued pieces form a hidden collection of details from the city's past.
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