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Interior of Notre-Dame de Reims (Our Lady of Rheims)
From Wikimedia Commons
Photo: Eric Pouhier (March 2006)
A major site for tourism in the Champagne region, France, it received half a million visitors in 2006.
Excavations have shown that the present building occupies roughly the same site as the original cathedral, founded circa 400 A.D., under the episcopacy of St Nicaise. That church was rebuilt during the Carolingian period and further extended in the 12th-Century.
Rheims Cathedral
In 1233, a long-running dispute between the cathedral chapter and the townsfolk (regarding issues of taxation and legal jurisdiction) boiled over into open revolt. Several clerics were killed or injured during the resulting violence and the entire cathedral chapter fled the city, leaving it under an interdict (effectively banning all public worship and sacraments).
Work on the new cathedral was suspended for three years, only resuming in 1236, after the clergy returned to the city and the interdict was lifted following mediation by the King and the Pope. Construction then continued more slowly.
Coronation of Charles VII in Rheims Cathedral in 1429.
Image of Joan of Arc, 1889-1890 in the Panthéon de Paris, by E. Lenepveu.
The area from the crossing Eastwards was in use by 1241, but the nave was not roofed until 1299 (when the French King lifted the tax on lead used for that purpose). Work on the West facade took place in several phases, which is reflected in the very different styles of some of the sculptures. The upper parts of the facade were completed in the 14th-Century, but apparently following 13th-Century designs, giving Reims an unusual unity of style.
PART TWO FOLLOWS
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