SENS



'Sens' is a town and commune of France, in the Yonne ''département'', of which it is a ''sous-préfecture'', in the Bourgogne ''région'', . It is crossed by the Yonne and the Vanne, which empties into the Yonne here.

Contents
History
Main sights
Administration
Miscellanea
Twin towns
See also
Notes
External links

History


Caesar mentions 'Agedincum' in the territory of the Senones[1] several times in his ''Commentarii de Bello Gallico'', and the city retains the skeleton of its Roman street-plan.[2] The site was referred to by Ammianus Marcellinus as ''Senones'' (''oppidum Senonas'') but it did not become an administrative center until after the reorganization of the Roman Empire in 375, when it was the chief town of Lugdunensis Quarta.
During the Middle Ages, its archbishops[3] held the prestigious role of Primates of Gaul and Germany. The Hôtel de Sens in Paris was their official residence in that city. Starting from 1135, the cathedral of Sens, dedicated to Saint Stephen, was rebuilt as one of the first Gothic cathedrals; there, in 1234 Louis IX of France celebrated his wedding to Marguerite of Provence. Sens witnessed the trial of Peter Abelard, Pope Alexander III sojourned for some time in the city, and there also Thomas Becket spent part of his exile.
Sens lived troublesome times during the Wars of Religion.

Main sights



The Cathedral, one of the first Gothic edifices in France.

★ Archbishops' Palace.

★ Church of St. Maurice.

★ House of Abraham.

★ Museum.

Administration


Sens is the chief-town of the arrondissement of Sens.

Miscellanea


It is the presumed birthplace of the 12th-century archicect William of Sens.

Twin towns



Chester, United Kingdom

Lörrach, Germany

Senigallia, Italy

Vyshhorod, Ukraine

See also



Senones

St. Columba of Sens

Archdiocese of Sens

Notes


1. The manuscripts of the ''Gallic War'' also give varied readings of ''Agendicum'' and ''Agetincum'' (William Smith, ed. ''A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography''); the gilded statue of "Brennus" ("leader") surmounts the ''hôtel de ville''.
2. Its Cardo (rue de la République) and Decumanus Maximus (Grande Rue) still meet at near right angles.
3. The bishop of Sens perhaps became an archbishop as early as the mid-fifth century, but the cult of the traditional founders Savinian and Potentian, not mentioned by Gregory of Tours, did not appear until the eighth century, when they were added to the lopcal recension of the Seventy Apostles. (''Catholic Encyclopedia'': Sens).

External links



Official website

archdiocese & Councils City council website (in French)

Richard Stillwell, ed. ''Princeton Encyclopedia of Classical Sites'', 1976: "Agedincum (Sens), Yonne, France"

★ Pictures of Sens Cathedral: [1], [2], [3]

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Sens Companies
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