Notre Dame de Paris
- For other uses, see Notre Dame.
Notre Dame de Paris, often known simply as Notre Dame in English, is a Gothic cathedral on the eastern half of the Île de la Cité in Paris, France, with its main entrance to the west. It is still used as a Roman Catholic cathedral and is the seat of the Archbishop of Paris. Notre Dame de Paris is widely considered one of the finest examples of French Gothic architecture. It was restored and saved from destruction by Viollet-le-Duc, one of France's most famous architects. Notre Dame translates as "Our Lady" from French.
Notre Dame de Paris was one of the first Gothic cathedrals, and its construction spanned the Gothic period. Its sculptures and stained glass show the heavy influence of naturalism, giving them a more secular look that was lacking from earlier Romanesque architecture.
Notre Dame de Paris was among the first buildings in the world to use the flying buttress. The building was not originally designed to include the flying buttresses around the choir and nave. After the construction began and the thinner walls (popularized in the Gothic) grew ever higher, stress fractures began to occur as the walls pushed outward.
At the end of the 18th century, during the French Revolution, many of the treasures of the cathedral were either destroyed or plundered. The statues of biblical kings of Judea (erroneously thought to be kings of France) were beheaded. Many of the heads were found during a 1977 excavation nearby and are on display at the Musée de Cluny. Only the great bells avoided being melted down, and the cathedral was dedicated first to the Cult of Reason, and to the Cult of the Supreme Being. The church interior was used as a warehouse for the storage of forage and food.
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Construction
In 1160, having become the "parish church of the kings of Europe", Bishop Maurice de Sully deemed the current Parisian cathedral unworthy of its lofty role, and had it demolished shortly after he assumed the title of Bishop of Paris. According to legend, de Sully had a vision of a glorious new cathedral for Paris, and sketched it in the dirt outside of the original church. To begin the construction, the bishop had several houses demolished and had a new road built in order to transport materials for the new church.
Construction began in 1163, during the reign of Louis VII, and opinion differs as to whether Bishop Maurice de Sully or Pope Alexander III laid the foundation stone of the cathedral. However, both were at the ceremony in question. Bishop de Sully went on to devote most of his life and wealth to the cathedral's construction.
Construction of the west front, with its distinctive two towers, began circa 1200, before the nave had been completed. Over the construction period, numerous architects worked on the site, as is evidenced by the differing styles at different heights of the west front and towers. Between 1210 and 1220, the fourth architect oversaw the construction of the level with the rose window and the great halls beneath the towers. The towers were completed around 1245, and the cathedral was completed around 1345.
Timeline of construction
- 1160 Maurice de Sully (named Bishop of Paris), orders the original cathedral to be demolished.
- 1163 Cornerstone laid for Notre Dame de Paris — construction begins
- 1182 Apse and choir completed.
- 1196 Nave completed. Bishop de Sully dies.
- 1200 Work begins on western façade.
- 1225 Western façade completed.
- 1250 Western towers and north rose window completed
- 1250 – 1345 Remaining elements completed
During the Paris Commune in 1871, the cathedral was nearly burned by the Communards — some accounts suggest that indeed a huge mound of chairs was set on fire in its interior. Whatever happened, Notre Dame survived the Commune essentially unscathed.
The Organ
Though several organs were installed in the cathedral over time, the earliest ones were inadequate to the building. The first noteworthy organ was finished in the early 1700s by the noted builder Clicquot. Some of Clicquot's original pipework in the pedal division continues to sound from the organ today, almost 270 years after being installed. The organ was almost completely rebuilt and expanded in the nineteenth century by Aristide Cavaillé-Coll. The position of titular organist at Notre-Dame is considered as one of the most prestigious organist posts in France, along with the titulaire post of Saint Sulpice in Paris, Cavaillé-Coll's largest instrument. The organ has 7800 pipes with 900 classified as historical. The organ has 109 stops, five 56-key manuals and a 32-key pedalboard. In December 1992 work was completed on the organ that fully computerized the organ under 3 LANs (Local Area Networks). Among the best-known organists at Notre Dame was Louis Vierne, who held this position from 1900 to 1937. Under his tenure, the Cavaillé-Coll organ was modified in its tonal character, notably in 1902 and 1932. Pierre Cochereau initiated further alterations (many of which were already planned by Louis Vierne), including the electrification of the action between 1959 and 1963 (the original Cavaillé-Coll console, which can still be seen at the organ loft as a tribute to Louis Vierne, was replaced by a new console in Anglo-American style) and the addition of further stops between 1965 and 1972, notably in the pedal division, the recomposition of the mixture stops, and finally the adding of three horizontal reed stops "en chamade". After Cochereau's sudden death in 1984, four new titular organists were appointed at Notre Dame in 1985: Jean-Pierre Leguay, Olivier Latry, Yves Devernay (who died in 1990), and Philippe Lefévre. This was reminiscent of the eighteenth century practice of the cathedral having four titular organists, each one playing for three months of the year. Beginning in 1989, another restoration to the instrument was undertaken, which was completed in 1992.
Alterations, vandalism, and restorations
In 1548, rioting Huguenots damaged features of the cathedral following the Council of Trent. During the reign of Louis XIV and Louis XV, at the end of the 17th century, the cathedral underwent major alterations as part of an ongoing attempt to modernize cathedrals throughout Europe. Tombs and stained glass windows were destroyed. The north and south rose windows were spared this fate, however.
In 1793 during the French Revolution, the cathedral was turned into a "" and many of its treasures were destroyed or stolen. Several sculptures were smashed and destroyed, and for a time Lady Liberty replaced the Virgin Mary on several altars. The cathedral's great bells managed to avoid being melted down, but the cathedral was used as a warehouse for the storage of food.
A restoration program was initiated in 1845, overseen by architects Jean-Baptiste-Antoine Lassus and Eugène Viollet-le-Duc. The restoration lasted 25 years and included the construction of a flèche (a type of spire) as well as the addition of the chimeras on the Galerie des Chimères. Viollet le Duc always signed his work with a bat, the wing structure of which most resembles the gothic vault (see Roquetaillade castle).
In 1871, a civil uprising leading to the establishment of the short-lived Paris Commune nearly set fire to the cathedral, and some records suggest that a mound of chairs within the cathedral was set alight.
In 1939, It was feared that German bombers could destroy the window;' as a result, on September 11, 1939, they were removed. They were restored at the end of the war.
In 1991, a major program of maintenance and restoration was initiated, which was intended to last 10 years but was still in progress as of 2005, the cleaning and restoration of old sculptures being an exceedingly delicate matter.
Significant events at Notre Dame
- 1185 — Heraclius of Caesarea calls for the Third Crusade from the still-incomplete cathedral.
- 1239 — The Crown of Thorns placed in the cathedral by St. Louis during the construction of Sainte-Chapelle.
- 1302 — Philip the Fair opens the first States-General.
- December 16, 1431 — Henry VI of England is crowned King of France.
- November 7, 1455 — Isabelle Romée, the mother of Joan of Arc, petitions a papal delegation to overturn her daughter's conviction for heresy.
- April 24, 1558 — Mary I of Scotland is married to the Dauphin François (later François II of France), son of Henry II of France.
- August 18, 1572 — Henry of Navarre (later Henry IV of France) marries Marguerite de Valois.
- December 2, 1804 — After the anointing by Pope Pius VII, Napoléon seizes the crown from the pontiff and crowns himself emperor, then Joséphine.
- 1900 — Louis Vierne is chosen the official Notre Dame organist after a heavy competition against the 500 most talented organ players of the era. He dies at the cathedral organ (as was his life-long wish) on June 2, 1937.
- 1909 — Joan of Arc is beatified.
- May 16, 1920 — Joan of Arc is canonized.
- August 26, 1944 — The Te Deum Mass takes place in the cathedral to celebrate the liberation of Paris. (According to some accounts the Mass was interrupted by sniping from both the internal and external galleries.)
- November 12, 1970 — The Requiem Mass of General Charles de Gaulle is held.
- May 31, 1980 — After the Magnificat of this day, Pope John Paul II celebrates Mass on the parvis in front of the cathedral.
- January 1996 - The Requiem Mass of François Mitterrand, is held.
- August 10, 2007 - The Requiem Mass of Jean-Marie Cardinal Lustiger, archbishop emeritus of Paris, is held.
The cathedral is renowned for its Lent sermons founded by the famous Dominican Jean-Baptiste Henri Lacordaire in the 1840s. In recent years however an increasing number have been given by leading public figures and state-employed academics. Many of their audience however are foreigners and as such obliged to a devoir de réserve.
For reasons of security luggage is not permitted inside the cathedral.
Photo gallery
Statue of St. Joan of Arc inside Notre Dame. |
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Miscellaneous trivia
- Under the 1905 French law on the separation of Church and State, Notre Dame remains state property like all cathedrals built by the Kingdom of France, but its use is granted to the Roman Catholic Church.
- France's "Point zéro", the reference point for distances along the highways starting in Paris, is situated in the square in front of the cathedral. Tradition hold that tourists who stand on Point zéro will one day return to Paris. A picture of Point zéro, actually a stone in the ground
Notre Dame de Paris in the media
- During the early 19th century, the cathedral was in a state of disrepair, and city planners began to contemplate tearing it down. French novelist Victor Hugo, an admirer of the cathedral, wrote his novel The Hunchback of Notre Dame (titled in French Notre Dame de Paris) in part to raise awareness of the cathedral's heritage, which sparked renewed interest in the cathedral's fate. A campaign to collect funds to save the cathedral followed, culminating in the 1845 restorations.
- The cathedral was featured in the film Before Sunset.
- In the video game Onimusha 3: Demon Siege, feudal era Japanese samurai Samanosuke Akechi visited Notre Dame and gained his second Oni-Weapon in this saga: Kuugatou (Nodachi), after being flung into the future. However, the cathedral was infested with demons and apparently underground is a complex filled with an arcane presence and design.
- The videogame Timesplitters 2 contained a level set entirely within Notre Dame, although it does not appear to scale or to have any elaborate architectural similarity.
- The cathedral can be built as a monument in Sim City 3000.
- The cathedral was featured in the film Amélie.
- The cathedral was featured in the film Van Helsing.
- The cathedral was featured in the Disney animated film The Hunchback of Notre Dame, loosely based on Victor Hugo's book.
See also
- List of tallest structures in Paris
- Roman Catholic Church
- Cathedral
- Gothic architecture
- Flying buttress
- The Virgin Mary
- Maîtrise Notre Dame de Paris
References
- Jacobs, Jay, ed. The Horizon Book of Great Cathedrals. New York, New York: American Heritage Publishing, 1968.
- Janson, H.W. History of Art. 3rd Edition. New York, New York: Harry N. Abrams, Inc., 1986.
- Myers, Bernard S. Art and Civilization. New York, New York: McGraw-Hill, 1957.
- Michelin Travel Publications. The Green Guide Paris. Hertfordshire, UK: , 2003.
External links
- Official site of Notre Dame de Paris
- Satellite view of Notre Dame de Paris at WikiMapia
- Radio Notre Dame, Mass in French from the cathedral on Sundays 12:30 Eastern Standard Time
- Notre Dame de Paris historic overview
- Government tourism page on the cathedral
- Video tour of the most vivid examples of medieval Parisian stone carving - the grotesques of Notre Dame
- Stained glass Madonna with fleur-de-lis at Notre Dame de Paris
- Maps and aerial photos for Coordinates:
- Satellite image from WikiMapia or Google Maps
- Street map from Multimap or GlobalGuide
- Aerial image from TerraServer
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Arc de Triomphe • Basilica of the Sacré Cœur • Cathedral of Notre Dame • Centre Georges Pompidou • Champs-Élysées • Conciergerie • Eiffel Tower • Grand Palais • Jardin du Luxembourg • Les Invalides • Louvre • Musée d'Orsay • Opéra Garnier • Père Lachaise Cemetery |