

Plantin-Moretus Museum Tours and Tickets
In the 16th century Antwerp – along with Paris – was one of the leading lights of the Northern Renaissance; among the brightest stars on the city’s stage at that time was Christophe Plantin, who established a printing workshop in his imposing townhouse in 1555. As well as contributing one of the most popular fonts still in use today, Plantin developed one of the busiest and most advanced publishing houses in northern Europe, now a UNESCO World Heritage-listed museum of print and early book publishing.
After Plantin’s death in 1589, his son-in-law Jan Moretus took over the printing empire and it remained active until 1867. Today the museum is laid out as if the compositors had just downed tools; the period workshops and rooms showcase printing presses dating back to the 16th century, graphic anatomical drawings featuring dissections, a vast collection of prints by Antwerp masters dating from the 16th and 17th centuries, and a library of 30,000 rare volumes. The artist Peter Paul Rubens, another local boy made good, illustrated many of the books published by the Plantin workshop and painted some of the family portraits displayed in the museum but the masterpiece of the collection is undoubtedly the priceless 36-line Gutenberg Bible dating from 1455.
Tours and Tickets to Experience Plantin-Moretus Museum
5 results

Historical Walking Tour: Legends of Antwerp

Private tour: Highlights & History of Antwerp

Legends of Antwerp Private Walking Tour

Antwerp Scavenger Hunt and Self-Guided Walking Tour

Self-Guided Scavenger Hunt in Antwerp
- ModeMuseum (MoMu)
- Grand Market Place (Grote Markt van Antwerpen)
- Butcher's Hall (Vleeshuis)
- Rubens House (Rubenshuis)
- Museum of Contemporary Art Antwerp (M HKA)
- Het Zuid
- Royal Museum of Fine Arts Antwerp (KMSKA)
- Brabo Fountain
- FoMu (FotoMuseum)
- Museum aan de Stroom (MAS)
- Diamondland
- Diamond District
- Aquatopia
- Central Station
- Red Star Line Museum