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The Arskrippana (formerly Krippana) is a museum featuring nativity scenes. It is located on the German-Belgian border in the province of Liège, and is part of the Ardenner Cultur Boulevard (de). With its 2,500 m2 of exhibition space, the Krippana GmbH facility in Bullange is the largest nativity scene exhibition in Europe. The museum, under the aegis of the Bishop of Liège, displays Nativity scenes ranging from ancient to modern, monumental to tiny.

History
The museum opened in 1976 in a former dairy in the Eifel village of Höfen. Over the years, the building housing the crib collections became too cramped. A new museum was built and inaugurated in 1989. The Arskrippana Museum, under the aegis of the Bishop of Liège, is now located in Bullange (Hergersberg 1, B - 4760 Büllingen), near Manderfeld on the Belgian side, and very close to Losheim on the German side, close to the Belgian-German border, on the borders of the Verviers region and Germany.

In December 1997, Krippana exhibited two hundred nativity scenes, some of them grandiose, such as the one set against a backdrop of ancient Rome, measuring almost ten meters on a side, others tiny, such as the world's smallest nativity scene, measuring no more than four millimeters. Another is made up of 27,380 matches.

In December 2008, an exhibition entitled "Crèches de Noël en verre" (Christmas cribs in glass) featured 80 works by international glass artists: copies of the St. Stephen's Chapel in the Cologne Cathedral, Tiffany-style Nativity scenes.

In December 2012, the Arskrippana presents over 500 nativity scenes and art objects from all over the world: monumental nativity scenes, miniature nativity scenes that can only be seen with a magnifying glass, made of plaster, wood, metal, ceramics, pebbles and various other materials.

The Arskrippana Museum of Religious Art, Europe's largest exhibition of nativity scenes, features Christmas cribs from churches, cathedrals, abbeys, basilicas, chapels and convents from all over the world, spread over an area of more than 2,500 m2, and offers "an original world tour of Nativity scenes".

This exhibition of sacred and popular art features ancient and modern nativity scenes from a wide variety of cultures and backgrounds. The majority of the collections are on loan, and are renewed each year. The idea of exhibiting cribs in a place where the public can see them all year round came from the brothers Hans and Hubert Scheins, founders of the museum, and Friedrich Jansen, exhibition organizer, members of the Aachen Crib Friends Association. After the death of Hubert Scheins and Friedrich Jansen, Anna Balter decided to carry on the tradition. "We really want to play on interculturality and discovery, it's not the religious aspect that comes first." (Julia Hanf, Ars Krippana).

Nativity scenes from Spain, Italy, Provence (France), Brazil, Germany, Malta, Belgium, the Netherlands, Mexico, Taiwan, Singapore..., nativity scenes from the ends of the earth, Stavelot or Banneux, as well as mechanical nativity scenes and an open-air nativity scene with live animals, are all on display at Arskrippana.

Various temporary exhibitions dedicated to a particular cult or liturgical theme are held throughout the year.