Manneken-Pis
rue de l'Etuve 1000, Belgium
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Description
Venue: Manneken-Pis When: Daily
This bizarre little statue is the most popular tourist attraction in Brussels. Famously touted as a glorious example of Belgian humour and capacity for self-mockery, there remains something ridiculous about the elevation of a small, peeing boy to the status of cultural icon.
The bronze statuette stands nonchalant before the little pool on the Rue de l'Etuve into which he pees. Created in the 17th century by one J Duquesney, his air belies his dramatic life: he has been the victim of several acts of vandalism and been kidnapped by both the British (1745) and the French (1747). In 1817 he got into the clumsy hands of a French convict, who smashed him to pieces: from the fragments was built the figurine you see today.
He is naturally naked, although through the centuries the little boy has been dressed up in so many outfits that they now make up their own display in the Museum of the City of Brussels. His most recent outfits tend to be dictated by the whims of advertisers and sponsorship rather than by kings or noblemen, but this just adds a further layer of comic irony to the phenomenon of the Manneken-Pis. Or so we hope.
The statue has its own website to tell you anything else that you might need to know, and plenty that you don't....
Brussels Information
Belgian Tourist Office
Address: Rue du Marché-aux-Herbes 63, 1000 Brussels, Belgium, (UK Address: 217 Marsh Wall, London, E14 9FJ)
Email: info@belgiumtheplaceto.be
Phone: +32 (0) 2 504 0390 (for UK +44 (0) 20 7531 0390)