Discover the best top things to do in North Brabant Province, The Netherlands including Museum Brigade en Garde Prinses Irene, Museum De Sigarenmaker, Salon Nune Ville, Rocksteady Militaria, Museum Ceuclum, Noordbrabants Museum, Nationaal Monument Kamp Vught, Rijtuigenmuseum Valkenswaard, preHistorisch Dorp, Museum het Gouverneurshuis.
Restaurants in North Brabant Province
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5.0 based on 43 reviews
•Ancestral home (1874) of Margot Begemann (lover of Vincent van Gogh). •19th century art salon with paintings of fellow painters of Vincent van Gogh. •19th century attic with a fully furnished servant room, and the room where a Jewish boy went into hiding during the Second World War. Apart from Saturdays, also opened on weekdays upon request (see website).
Great, unique tour. Don’t hesitate, just do it! The house holds some secrets and, due to all the details, feels very authentic. All the stories that are typically related to this house and even beyond, were told with great knowledge and enthousiasm. We were lucky to also visite the place nextdoor, where Vincent actually lived and painted. Well worth a visit!
5.0 based on 3 reviews
Specialized in German ww2 militaria,unique items from Normandy to Stalingrad,relics up to high end medals and equipment, collector since childhood,you can visit our shop and small home museum on appointment only, for the entry price you will get worth original German ww2 items you can choice yourself. Combine it with the local Concentration camp and trenches you'll spend a nice day ww2 exploring
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De collectie van het Ceuclum museum legt de nadruk op de prehistorie en de Romeinse periode. De vaste collectie wordt regelmatig met thematentoonstellingen aangevuld. Het museum is op een unieke locatie aan de Maas gehuisvest, in een ruim 500 jaar oude kerktoren. De toren kan beklommen worden en biedt op ca. 35 meter hoogte een schitterend panorama van de rivier en de Mookerheide.
4.5 based on 878 reviews
When we visited a lot of the permanent collection had been cleared for two temporary exhibitions - Loving Vincent (why we’d come to Den Bosch this time) and Garden of Earthly Delights. Both were fascinating and very well curated. Both also finish soon, but I would heartily recommend the museum on the basis of how these exhibitions were presented. Has a good restaurant, too, which always helps.
4.5 based on 253 reviews
Camp Vught National Memorial (Nationaal Monument Kamp Vught ) is located on part of the former SS camp Konzentrationslager Herzogenbusch, also known as Camp Vught (January 1943 – September 1944). The museum is spread out over several buildings and outdoor areas. A model of the camp shows the extensive size of the camp and the many buildings it included. The watchtowers, which were built a hundred meters apart, have been reconstructed. The barrack, rebuilt at half the original size, shows how the prisoners lived. The Children’s Memorial lists the names and ages of the 1,269 Jewish children who were deported in June 1943. There is also an authentic crematorium. Audiotour available Dutch/English/German/French (included); free parking. Payment at reception: only PIN/VisaCard/MasterCard/American Express.
Kamp Vough was one of the Nazi concentration camps in NL during WWII, from here thousands of Jews and NL political prisoners were deported to other Nazi camps in Poland. It is a journey into the history of humanity in one of its darkest passages. Highly recommended to go to the nearby forest where many prisioners were shot.
4.5 based on 152 reviews
The preHistorisch Dorp in Eindhoven is the replica of a prehistoric village, complete with dwellings and demonstrations of skills used by historic people. The open-air museum recreates life from this and later eras, including Roman and early medieval. Find out how the Romans lived, meet militant Batavians, visit farmers from the Iron Age and go on a hunt in the prehistoric times. At the preHistorisch Dorp, interpreters dressed in historical clothes bring the history of this province to life, going about everyday tasks and interacting with visitors in programs and workshops. These might include learning to make a fire as prehistoric people did, baking bread on a stick, or learning how to make a Roman fibula (garment pin). Prehistoric farming methods, hand weaving and spinning, metalwork, and other skills are demonstrated and discussed here. Although very engaging for children, this is an experience for all ages.
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