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Sainte-Clotilde, Paris

The Basilica of Saint Clotilde (Basilique Ste-Clotilde) is a basilica church located on the Rue Las Cases, in the 7th arrondissement of Paris. It was constructed between 1846 and 1856, and is the first example of a church in Paris in the neo-Gothic style.[1]

Sainte-Clotilde, Paris
The west front of the church
48°51′30″N 2°19′09″E / 48.858333°N 2.319167°E / 48.858333; 2.319167
Country France
DenominationRoman Catholic
Websitewww.sainte-clotilde.com
History
StatusMinor Basilica
Architecture
Functional statusActive
Heritage designationMonument historique
StyleGothic Revival
Groundbreaking1846 (1846)
Completed1857 (1857)
Administration
ArchdioceseParis

The church takes its name from Saint Clotilde, the wife of King Clovis I, the first King of the Franks. She is said to have persuaded him to convert to Christianity as a condition of their marriage in 496.[2]

The composer César Franck was organist of the church for thirty years.

History edit

The church was constructed between 1846 and 1856 on the site of an earlier Carmelite monastery. The original design was by architect Franz Christian Gau, a German-born French architect and archeologist who made his career in France. It was the first example of a church in the neo-Gothic style in Paris.[3] Work began in 1846, but Gau died in 1853; the work was continued by Théodore Ballu who completed the church in 1857. Ballu extended the front of the church by several meters to give it greater depth, and built the two towers, to give it the majesty of a small cathedral. It was opened on 30 November 1857 by Cardinal Morlot. In 1896, In 1860 Ballu was named architect of religious buildings for the city of Paris, and completed a series of other churches in the neo-Gothic style.[4]

In 1896 The church was declared a minor basilica by Pope Leo XIII, to commemorate the anniversary of the conversion of Clovis in 496.[5]

The design of the basilica was copied by the architect Léon Vautrin for the construction of the facade of the Sacred Heart Cathedral in Guangzhou between 1863 and 1888.

Exterior edit

The west front of the church is in the Flamboyant Gothic style; the spires of the two towers reach a height of seventy meters. The facade has three portals in bays with high pointed arches and sculptural decoration Statues on thrones on the west front depict Saint Clotilde and Saint Valere, the Bishop of Treves in the 3rd century, who each played an important part in the early French Christian church.[6]

The semi-circular chevet of the church, at the opposite end from the facade, is ringed by buttresses and pinnacles supporting the walls, modeled after those of a Gothic cathedral. Their presence is decorative, since the structure is built with an iron frame designed by Gustave Eiffel.[7]

Interior edit

The interior of the church is 96 meters long and 39 meters wide, the dimensions of small cathedral.[8] It has an abundance of light coming from the stained glass windows high on the walls. The outer aisles are separated from the nave by an arcade of tall classical pillars, which form poionted arches, and branch out into slender colonettes which reach upward to support the vaults of the ceiling.[9]

Like most Gothic cathedrals, the walls of the nave are divided into three horizontal levels; a gallery with high pillars and pointed arches on the ground level; a triforium, or gallery without windows, just above; and stained glass windows filling the walls on the upper level, between the triforum and the vaults.

Chapels edit

The apse of the church, behind the altar, features five chapels, accessed from the reached by the disambulatory. The most important, in the center, is the Chapel of the Virgin. The others are dedicated to Saint Joseph, Saint Remi, Saint Louis, and the Holy Cross. The decoration of the Chapel of the Holy Cross includes red banners with Chinese characters, a reminder that the design of Saint-Clotilde was the model for the Sacre-Coeur church in Canton, China.[10]

There are two other chapels facing each other on different sides of the choir; the Chapel of Saint Clotilde on one side and the Chapel of Saint Valere on the other.

Art and Decoration edit

The artwork and decoration of the church was designed to recreate the spirit of a medieval Gothic cathedral. The art and decoration of Saint-Clotilde, like other Paris churches of the time, was commissioned and funded by the Paris prefecture of the French government. Competitions were announced, artists submitted sketches of their projects, and the winners were selected by the Commission of Fine Arts of the Paris prefecture. The result was fewer examples of originality or stylistic innovation, but a very high level of artistic quality and craftsmanship.[11]

The interior features works of several of the most prominent Paris artists of the mid-19th century. It presents stained glass windows by Thibaut, paintings by Jules Eugène Lenepveu, sculptures by James Pradier and Francisque Joseph Duret. A series of sculptures by Jean-Baptiste Claude Eugène Guillaume representing the conversion of Valerie of Limoges, her condemnation to death, decapitation and the appearance of Saint Martial.

Paintings and frescoes edit

Sculpture edit

Both the exterior and interior featured very fine sculpture inspired by the sculpture of Gothic cathedrals. The architects François-Chrétien Gau and then Théodore Ballu recreated the Gothic style of the 14th century. They were particularly inspired by the decoration of the Saint-Ouen Abbey, Rouen.

The exception to the Gothic revival sculpture is the series of seven bas-reliefs on the left aisle of the church, "Stations of the Cross", by James Pradier These were created by James Pradier (1792-1852), one of the most prominent French sculoptors of the 19th century. The works of Pradier include the figures of "Fame" in the spandrels of the Arc de Triomphe, decorative figures at the Madeleine, and twelve "Victories" around the tomb of Napoleon inside the dome of the Invalides. While the other decoration of the interior is neo-Gothic, Pradier refused to compromise and his bas-relefs are in his own distinctive neo-classical style. After his death, those on the right aisle were made by his pupil Francisque-Joseph Duret (1804-1865) following the style of Pradier.[12]

Following the Gothic tradition, some of the sculpture, like "Sainte Clothilde", (1854), was made of stone painted and gilded, with the addition of enamel and glass. It was made by sculptor Eugène Guillaume and painter Alexandre Denuelle.

Wood Carving edit

The wood carving of the choir stalls and the pulpit, like the other decoration of the church, was designed to capture the spirit of the Gothic art of the 14th century. They were designed by Theodore Ballu.[13]

Stained glass edit

The stained glass of the church, like the other decoration, was commissioned and designed by capture the spirit of a 14th-century Gothic church. While they used medieval subjects, the glass artists used more modern techniques to paint on the glass with enamel pigments,which were then fired to fuse with the glass. This allowed the artists tp create windows which resembled paintings, with greater realism and three-dimensional effects.

Many of the windows were created by the collaboration of artist d'Amaury Duval, and master glass maker Antoine Lusson (fils).

The Rectors and Vicars of Sainte-Clotilde edit

Abbot Arthur Mugnier, nicknamed the "confessor of the duchesses," and who left a diary, was one of the vicars.

Abbé Henri Chaumont, vicar of the parish from 1869 to 1874, in 1872 with Caroline Carré de Malberg founded the Society of the Daughters of Saint Francis de Sales, whose mother-house moved to Lorry-lès-Metz.

Abbé Albert Colombel was first vicar in 1914.

Abbé Bernard Bouveresse, a member of the Resistance, was parish priest and rector of Sainte-Clotilde from the post-war period to his death.

In 1993, the rector of Sainte-Clotilde, the abbot Alain Maillard de La Morandais was appointed chaplain of the parliamentarians.

In 1992, Cardinal Jean-Marie Lustiger, Archbishop of Paris, created the Pastoral Service for Political Studies. In 1995, he entrusted the direction to Father Antoine de Vial, who received the Pontifical Prelature in 2001.

From 2005 to 2012, Father Matthieu Rougé held both positions.

In September 2012, Father Laurent Stalla-Bourdillon, former vicar of the church of Saint-Germain-des-Prés, was appointed rector of the Sainte-Clotilde church and director of SPEP.

Organ edit

St Clotilde is famous for the Aristide Cavaillé-Coll organ (1859, enlarged 1933 and electrified 1962) played by César Franck between 1859 and 1890, and then by the succession of famous composers who have been Organiste titulaire:[14] Franck himself told the curé of Sainte-Clotilde: "If you only knew how I love this instrument . . . it is so supple beneath my fingers and so obedient to all my thoughts!".[15] Franck's organ concerts were attended by Franz Liszt and other composers, and had an important influence on the development of church organ music in Europe.

In addition to these titular organists, Théodore Dubois served Sainte-Clotilde as choir organist from 1858 and as choirmaster from 1863 until his appointment as organist at the Madeleine in 1869.[16]

Notes and citations edit

  1. ^ [1] "Patrimoine-Histoire.fr" Site on the art and history of church (in French)
  2. ^ Dumoulin, "Églises de Paris" (2017), p. 128
  3. ^ Dumoulin, "Églises de Paris" (2017), p. 128
  4. ^ Dumoulin, "Églises de Paris" (2017), p. 128
  5. ^ Dumoulin, "Églises de Paris" (2017), p. 128
  6. ^ Dumoulin, "Églises de Paris" (2017), p. 128
  7. ^ "Basilique Sainte-Clotilde à Paris". www.patrimoine-histoire.fr.
  8. ^ "Basilique Sainte-Clotilde à Paris". www.patrimoine-histoire.fr.
  9. ^ Dumoulin, "Églises de Paris"(2017), p. 128
  10. ^ "Basilique Sainte-Clotilde à Paris". www.patrimoine-histoire.fr.
  11. ^ Dumoulin, "Églises de Paris"(2017), p. 131
  12. ^ Dumoulin, "Églises de Paris"(2017), p. 129
  13. ^ "Basilique Sainte-Clotilde à Paris". www.patrimoine-histoire.fr.
  14. ^ History& stoplist
  15. ^ *d'Indy, Vincent (1910). César Franck; a Translation from the French of Vincent d'Indy: with an Introduction by Rosa Newmarch. London: John Lane, Bodley Head. Reprinted 1965 NY: Dover. ISBN 0-486-21317-X. original French version on Wikisource quoted in d'Indy, p. 41-42, note
  16. ^ Pasler, Jann (2001). "Dubois, Théodore". In Sadie, Stanley; Tyrrell, John (eds.). The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians (2nd ed.). London: Macmillan Publishers. ISBN 978-1-56159-239-5.

Bibliography (in French) edit

  • Dumoulin, Aline; Ardisson, Alexandra; Maingard, Jérôme; Antonello, Murielle; Églises de Paris (2017), Éditions Massin, Issy-Les-Moulineaux, ISBN 978-2-7072-0683-1 (in French)

See also edit

External links edit

  • Ste-Clotilde's parish website (French)
  • [2] "Patrimoine-Histoire.fr" Site on the art and history of church (in French)

sainte, clotilde, paris, sainte, clotilde, redirects, here, municipality, quebec, sainte, clotilde, quebec, basilica, saint, clotilde, basilique, clotilde, basilica, church, located, cases, arrondissement, paris, constructed, between, 1846, 1856, first, exampl. Sainte Clotilde redirects here For municipality in Quebec see Sainte Clotilde Quebec The Basilica of Saint Clotilde Basilique Ste Clotilde is a basilica church located on the Rue Las Cases in the 7th arrondissement of Paris It was constructed between 1846 and 1856 and is the first example of a church in Paris in the neo Gothic style 1 Sainte Clotilde ParisThe west front of the church48 51 30 N 2 19 09 E 48 858333 N 2 319167 E 48 858333 2 319167Country FranceDenominationRoman CatholicWebsitewww wbr sainte clotilde wbr comHistoryStatusMinor BasilicaArchitectureFunctional statusActiveHeritage designationMonument historiqueStyleGothic RevivalGroundbreaking1846 1846 Completed1857 1857 AdministrationArchdioceseParisThe church takes its name from Saint Clotilde the wife of King Clovis I the first King of the Franks She is said to have persuaded him to convert to Christianity as a condition of their marriage in 496 2 The composer Cesar Franck was organist of the church for thirty years Contents 1 History 2 Exterior 3 Interior 3 1 Chapels 4 Art and Decoration 4 1 Paintings and frescoes 4 2 Sculpture 4 3 Wood Carving 4 4 Stained glass 5 The Rectors and Vicars of Sainte Clotilde 6 Organ 7 Notes and citations 8 Bibliography in French 9 See also 10 External linksHistory editThe church was constructed between 1846 and 1856 on the site of an earlier Carmelite monastery The original design was by architect Franz Christian Gau a German born French architect and archeologist who made his career in France It was the first example of a church in the neo Gothic style in Paris 3 Work began in 1846 but Gau died in 1853 the work was continued by Theodore Ballu who completed the church in 1857 Ballu extended the front of the church by several meters to give it greater depth and built the two towers to give it the majesty of a small cathedral It was opened on 30 November 1857 by Cardinal Morlot In 1896 In 1860 Ballu was named architect of religious buildings for the city of Paris and completed a series of other churches in the neo Gothic style 4 In 1896 The church was declared a minor basilica by Pope Leo XIII to commemorate the anniversary of the conversion of Clovis in 496 5 The design of the basilica was copied by the architect Leon Vautrin for the construction of the facade of the Sacred Heart Cathedral in Guangzhou between 1863 and 1888 Exterior editThe west front of the church is in the Flamboyant Gothic style the spires of the two towers reach a height of seventy meters The facade has three portals in bays with high pointed arches and sculptural decoration Statues on thrones on the west front depict Saint Clotilde and Saint Valere the Bishop of Treves in the 3rd century who each played an important part in the early French Christian church 6 nbsp The church viewed from the Eiffel TowerThe semi circular chevet of the church at the opposite end from the facade is ringed by buttresses and pinnacles supporting the walls modeled after those of a Gothic cathedral Their presence is decorative since the structure is built with an iron frame designed by Gustave Eiffel 7 nbsp The west front and portals nbsp The pinnacles and buttresses of the apse are decorative since the church has an iron frameInterior edit nbsp Nave and collateral aisles nbsp The Choir nbsp The main altar nbsp The right transeptThe interior of the church is 96 meters long and 39 meters wide the dimensions of small cathedral 8 It has an abundance of light coming from the stained glass windows high on the walls The outer aisles are separated from the nave by an arcade of tall classical pillars which form poionted arches and branch out into slender colonettes which reach upward to support the vaults of the ceiling 9 Like most Gothic cathedrals the walls of the nave are divided into three horizontal levels a gallery with high pillars and pointed arches on the ground level a triforium or gallery without windows just above and stained glass windows filling the walls on the upper level between the triforum and the vaults Chapels edit nbsp Chapel of the Virgin nbsp Altar in the Chapel of the Virgin nbsp Altar in the Chapel of Saint Clotilde nbsp Chapel of Saint Valere nbsp Chapel of the Holy Cross with Chinese bannersThe apse of the church behind the altar features five chapels accessed from the reached by the disambulatory The most important in the center is the Chapel of the Virgin The others are dedicated to Saint Joseph Saint Remi Saint Louis and the Holy Cross The decoration of the Chapel of the Holy Cross includes red banners with Chinese characters a reminder that the design of Saint Clotilde was the model for the Sacre Coeur church in Canton China 10 There are two other chapels facing each other on different sides of the choir the Chapel of Saint Clotilde on one side and the Chapel of Saint Valere on the other Art and Decoration editThe artwork and decoration of the church was designed to recreate the spirit of a medieval Gothic cathedral The art and decoration of Saint Clotilde like other Paris churches of the time was commissioned and funded by the Paris prefecture of the French government Competitions were announced artists submitted sketches of their projects and the winners were selected by the Commission of Fine Arts of the Paris prefecture The result was fewer examples of originality or stylistic innovation but a very high level of artistic quality and craftsmanship 11 The interior features works of several of the most prominent Paris artists of the mid 19th century It presents stained glass windows by Thibaut paintings by Jules Eugene Lenepveu sculptures by James Pradier and Francisque Joseph Duret A series of sculptures by Jean Baptiste Claude Eugene Guillaume representing the conversion of Valerie of Limoges her condemnation to death decapitation and the appearance of Saint Martial Paintings and frescoes edit nbsp Study for the fresco of The Baptism of Clovis by Desire Francois Laugee nbsp Fresco of Sainte Clotilde aiding the poor by Desire Francois Laugee nbsp Fresco of scenes from the life of the Virgin Mary by Lenepveu in the Chapel of the Virgin Second half of 19th century Sculpture edit Both the exterior and interior featured very fine sculpture inspired by the sculpture of Gothic cathedrals The architects Francois Chretien Gau and then Theodore Ballu recreated the Gothic style of the 14th century They were particularly inspired by the decoration of the Saint Ouen Abbey Rouen The exception to the Gothic revival sculpture is the series of seven bas reliefs on the left aisle of the church Stations of the Cross by James Pradier These were created by James Pradier 1792 1852 one of the most prominent French sculoptors of the 19th century The works of Pradier include the figures of Fame in the spandrels of the Arc de Triomphe decorative figures at the Madeleine and twelve Victories around the tomb of Napoleon inside the dome of the Invalides While the other decoration of the interior is neo Gothic Pradier refused to compromise and his bas relefs are in his own distinctive neo classical style After his death those on the right aisle were made by his pupil Francisque Joseph Duret 1804 1865 following the style of Pradier 12 Following the Gothic tradition some of the sculpture like Sainte Clothilde 1854 was made of stone painted and gilded with the addition of enamel and glass It was made by sculptor Eugene Guillaume and painter Alexandre Denuelle nbsp Portals and sculpture of Christ showing his wounds center include on west front nbsp Portal statues nbsp Saint Clothilde 1854 nbsp Baptismal Font nbsp Angel on benitier or holy water vessel by Theodore Lechesne nbsp Altar sculpture in Chapel of Saint Valere nbsp Stations of the Cross Christ sets out with the cross by James Pradier nbsp From the Neoclassical Stations of the Cross Christ encounters the Virgin Mary by James Pradier nbsp Sculpture of Pope Jean Paul IIWood Carving edit The wood carving of the choir stalls and the pulpit like the other decoration of the church was designed to capture the spirit of the Gothic art of the 14th century They were designed by Theodore Ballu 13 nbsp Virgin and Child in the Chapel of the Virgin by Henri Joseph de Triqueti 1804 1874 nbsp The carved choir stalls nbsp The carved pulpit in the naveStained glass edit nbsp Rose window in the left transept created by Emile Thibaut nbsp Blanche de Castille teaching future King Louis IX nbsp Crowning of the Virgin Mary nbsp An angel musician by Duval and Lusson nbsp Saint Radegonde by Duval and LussonThe stained glass of the church like the other decoration was commissioned and designed by capture the spirit of a 14th century Gothic church While they used medieval subjects the glass artists used more modern techniques to paint on the glass with enamel pigments which were then fired to fuse with the glass This allowed the artists tp create windows which resembled paintings with greater realism and three dimensional effects Many of the windows were created by the collaboration of artist d Amaury Duval and master glass maker Antoine Lusson fils The Rectors and Vicars of Sainte Clotilde editAbbot Arthur Mugnier nicknamed the confessor of the duchesses and who left a diary was one of the vicars Abbe Henri Chaumont vicar of the parish from 1869 to 1874 in 1872 with Caroline Carre de Malberg founded the Society of the Daughters of Saint Francis de Sales whose mother house moved to Lorry les Metz Abbe Albert Colombel was first vicar in 1914 Abbe Bernard Bouveresse a member of the Resistance was parish priest and rector of Sainte Clotilde from the post war period to his death In 1993 the rector of Sainte Clotilde the abbot Alain Maillard de La Morandais was appointed chaplain of the parliamentarians In 1992 Cardinal Jean Marie Lustiger Archbishop of Paris created the Pastoral Service for Political Studies In 1995 he entrusted the direction to Father Antoine de Vial who received the Pontifical Prelature in 2001 From 2005 to 2012 Father Matthieu Rouge held both positions In September 2012 Father Laurent Stalla Bourdillon former vicar of the church of Saint Germain des Pres was appointed rector of the Sainte Clotilde church and director of SPEP Organ edit nbsp Cesar Franck 1885 painted by Jeanne Rongier nbsp Grand organ of Sainte Clotilde made by Aristide Cavaille Coll 1859 St Clotilde is famous for the Aristide Cavaille Coll organ 1859 enlarged 1933 and electrified 1962 played by Cesar Franck between 1859 and 1890 and then by the succession of famous composers who have been Organiste titulaire 14 Franck himself told the cure of Sainte Clotilde If you only knew how I love this instrument it is so supple beneath my fingers and so obedient to all my thoughts 15 Franck s organ concerts were attended by Franz Liszt and other composers and had an important influence on the development of church organ music in Europe Cesar Franck 1859 1890 Gabriel Pierne 1890 1898 Charles Tournemire 1898 1939 Joseph Ermend Bonnal 1942 1944 Jean Langlais 1945 1988 Pierre Cogen and Jacques Taddei 1987 1993 Jacques Taddei 1993 2012 Olivier Penin 2012 In addition to these titular organists Theodore Dubois served Sainte Clotilde as choir organist from 1858 and as choirmaster from 1863 until his appointment as organist at the Madeleine in 1869 16 Notes and citations edit 1 Patrimoine Histoire fr Site on the art and history of church in French Dumoulin Eglises de Paris 2017 p 128 Dumoulin Eglises de Paris 2017 p 128 Dumoulin Eglises de Paris 2017 p 128 Dumoulin Eglises de Paris 2017 p 128 Dumoulin Eglises de Paris 2017 p 128 Basilique Sainte Clotilde a Paris www patrimoine histoire fr Basilique Sainte Clotilde a Paris www patrimoine histoire fr Dumoulin Eglises de Paris 2017 p 128 Basilique Sainte Clotilde a Paris www patrimoine histoire fr Dumoulin Eglises de Paris 2017 p 131 Dumoulin Eglises de Paris 2017 p 129 Basilique Sainte Clotilde a Paris www patrimoine histoire fr History amp stoplist d Indy Vincent 1910 Cesar Franck a Translation from the French of Vincent d Indy with an Introduction by Rosa Newmarch London John Lane Bodley Head Reprinted 1965 NY Dover ISBN 0 486 21317 X original French version on Wikisource quoted in d Indy p 41 42 note Pasler Jann 2001 Dubois Theodore In Sadie Stanley Tyrrell John eds The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians 2nd ed London Macmillan Publishers ISBN 978 1 56159 239 5 Bibliography in French editDumoulin Aline Ardisson Alexandra Maingard Jerome Antonello Murielle Eglises de Paris 2017 Editions Massin Issy Les Moulineaux ISBN 978 2 7072 0683 1 in French See also editList of historic churches in Paris Sacred Heart Cathedral of Guangzhou the facade of which was based on the Basilica of St Clotilde List of works by James Pradier Stations of the CrossExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Basilique Ste Clotilde Paris Ste Clotilde s parish website French 2 Patrimoine Histoire fr Site on the art and history of church in French Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sainte Clotilde Paris amp oldid 1182108629, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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