'Notre-Dame de Reims' (''Our Lady of Rheims'') is the
cathedral of
Reims, where the
kings of
France were once crowned. It replaces an older church, destroyed by a fire in 1211 and built itself on the site of the
basilica, where
Clovis was baptized by
saint Remi,
bishop of Reims, in AD 496. The cathedral was completed by the end of the 13th century, with the exception of the Western front. That portion was erected in the 14th century after 13th century designs—the nave having in the meantime been lengthened to afford room for the crowds that attended the
coronations. The towers, 81 m tall (approx. 267 ft), were originally designed to rise 120 m (approx. 394 ft). The Southern tower holds two great bells; one of them, named “Charlotte” by the
cardinal of
Lorraine in 1570, weighs more than 10,000 kg (approx. 11 tons).
In 1875 the
French National Assembly voted £80,000 for repairs of the façade and balustrades. The façade is the finest portion of the building, and one of the great masterpieces of the
Middle Ages. German shellfire during the
First World War burned, damaged and destroyed important parts of the cathedral. Restoration work began in 1919; the cathedral was fully reopened in 1938, but work has been steadily going on since.
The three portals are laden with statues and statuettes. The central portal, dedicated to the
Virgin Mary, is surmounted by a
rose window framed in an arch itself decorated with statuary. The “gallery of the kings” above shows the baptism of Clovis in the centre and statues of his successors.
The façades of the
transepts are also decorated with sculptures—that on the North with statues of bishops of Reims, a representation of the
Last Judgment and a figure of
Jesus (''le Beau Dieu'') while that on the south side has a beautiful modern rose window with the
prophets and
apostles. Fire destroyed the roof and the spires in 1481: of the four towers that flanked the transepts, nothing remains above the height of the roof. Above the choir rises an elegant lead-covered timber belltower that is 18 m (approx. 59 feet) tall, reconstructed in the 15th century and in the 1920s.
The inside of the cathedral is 138.75 m (approx. 455 ft) long, 30 m (approx. 98 feet) wide in the
nave, and 38 m (approx. 125 feet) high in the centre. It comprises a nave with aisles, transepts with aisles, a choir with double aisles, and an
apse with ambulatory and radiating chapels. It has interesting
stained glass ranging from the 13th to the 20th century. The rose window over the main portal and the gallery beneath are of rare magnificence.
The cathedral possessed fine tapestries. Of these the most important series is that presented by
Robert de Lenoncourt, archbishop under
François I, representing the life of the
Virgin Mary. They are now to be seen in the former bishop's palace, the
Palace of Tau. The Northern transept contains a fine organ in a flamboyant
Gothic case. The choir clock is ornamented with curious mechanical figures. Famous Russian artist
Marc Chagall's work can also be admired in the cathedral through the
stained glass installed in 1974 in the axis of the apse.
The treasury, kept in the
Palace of Tau, includes many precious objects, among which the ''
Sainte Ampoule'', or holy flask, the successor of the ancient one that contained the oil with which French kings were anointed, which was broken at the
French Revolution, a fragment of which the present ''Ampoule'' contains.
Notre-Dame de Reims cathedral, the Former abbey of Saint-Remi, and the
Palace of Tau were added to the list of
UNESCO World Heritage Sites in 1991.
See also
★
List of cathedrals in France
★
List of highest church naves
External links
★ http://www.cathedrale-reims.com (in French)
★
Photos
★
360 degrees panoramas