Subject: Cathedrals and lesser places Sun 08 Dec 2013, 16:36
Whatever ones faith - or denial thereof - from Cathedrals to tiny village churches most will admit to being taken by something within that impresses. It may be just the architecture and features or often it's the atmosphere that promotes soul soothing reflection. How the huge places were built and who paid for them springs to mind too. Is there a people who never had spiritual faith in anything? Take away the ritual floor show - but not the music - they still manage to inspire emotion. I recently visited a marsh church rescued by the Friends od Friendless churches. It has one service a year and I'm told its tiny box pews are jammed packed. There are also similar almost abandoned churches in the foothills of the Himalayas - but not quite...... someone possibly in secret stills tends them. They all charter episodes in our past in some way - but what is the modern progression, I wonder? Will someone one day get all whimsical about digging out an old Tesco?
Islanddawn Censura
Posts : 2163 Join date : 2012-01-05 Location : Greece
Subject: Re: Cathedrals and lesser places Sun 08 Dec 2013, 17:27
I doubt the modern buildings of all glass and concrete would survive long enough P, unlike the cathedrals and other historical buildings made of beautiful stonework.
PaulRyckier Censura
Posts : 4902 Join date : 2012-01-01 Location : Belgium
Subject: Re: Cathedrals and lesser places Sun 08 Dec 2013, 22:07
Priscilla wrote:
Whatever ones faith - or denial thereof - from Cathedrals to tiny village churches most will admit to being taken by something within that impresses. It may be just the architecture and features or often it's the atmosphere that promotes soul soothing reflection. How the huge places were built and who paid for them springs to mind too. Is there a people who never had spiritual faith in anything? Take away the ritual floor show - but not the music - they still manage to inspire emotion. I recently visited a marsh church rescued by the Friends od Friendless churches. It has one service a year and I'm told its tiny box pews are jammed packed. There are also similar almost abandoned churches in the foothills of the Himalayas - but not quite...... someone possibly in secret stills tends them. They all charter episodes in our past in some way - but what is the modern progression, I wonder? Will someone one day get all whimsical about digging out an old Tesco?
Priscilla,
that are quite some questions. Grown up between cathedrals as in Ostend, Bruges, Gent I am impressed by the Gothic pillars and the "stained" glasses." I just said to Islanddawn that one finds everything on the "net", but here some quarter of an hour to find the translation of "brandraam" in French "vitraux" (and also in our dialect). The word "brandraam" although Dutch seems not to exist in Dutch-English dictionaries. And yes it is not well known on the internet too. At the end found this: http://www.panoramio.com/photo/18297553 Not sure about the English translation too. In fact "brandraam"/"vitrail" is a window with a composition of stained glasses framed in lead. I will start a new thread about the similarities and anomalies of French, English, Dutch, German, languages. If you stay at the foot of such a pillar and look to the ceiling I felt always "insignificant?" (Dutch: "nietig" (nothing), French: "nul") and that was perhaps the purpose of the architects as the human looking up to the almighty God? I wonder for Nordmann's feelings? Some evocation of our Church of Our Lady in Bruges:
As for the feelings entering a Roman-Catholic church nowadays, Priscilla, and at my age...gone in the childhood through all the obliged! services at school and even outside in our "parochial" church (verification by our priest from the school)...in the beginning some believing in a "guiding God", but later on looking at the human endresult of a long coincidental evolution in universe...but I can understand that in India, as overhere in the time, there is still a belief and devotion to the almighty Supreme Being...
As for the evolution of the church buildings here in Belgium. I saw last week an article in the paper about the empty churches which are still to be paid by the local municipalities. Some want to sell them for whatever purpose, others want to use them for social purposes. I find the last solution the best one as the purpose of a "church" in my humble opinion has also a social goal. There is even in Bruges a former church sold and now used for touristic medieval banquets (with no table manners...)...
Kind regards from Paul. And happy, Priscilla, to have once again a "conversation" with you...
Priscilla Censura
Posts : 2772 Join date : 2012-01-16
Subject: Re: Cathedrals and lesser places Mon 09 Dec 2013, 10:12
Hello,Paul. Few of our older churches have been put to other uses - usual residential - but the plainer red brick Prebyterian inner city sort are snapped up to covert into, would you believe, curry houses. I have only been to one but found the wall monument tablets with their dedications to the long forgotten, somewhat depressing. As for the feeling monumental architecture seems to inspire, as with thrilling scenary, perhaps ones insignificant place in the grand march of time is brought to bear. As for the sub continent, in matters of faith the longer I was there and the more I learned the less I understood - so I stopped trying. However, I found there are mosques that engendered that soul-silence but, for me, not temples or ashrams.
Caro Censura
Posts : 1522 Join date : 2012-01-09
Subject: Re: Cathedrals and lesser places Mon 09 Dec 2013, 10:29
We were at a church in Sandwich in Kent which we liked a lot, St Peter's Church. It said it was no longer used but was still consecrated. It was still used really, just presumably not for church services. It was used for the 'social purposes' Paul mentions. A community gathering place, really. There was a long table of books for sale, and a really good variety of books they were too. But I already had too many books to read in the two weeks we had left and didn't want to carry too many home on the plane. So they all had to stay there. There was also an antique fire engine in one area, a plaque about Thomas Paine's wedding to Mary Lambert in 1759 in the church, and a plaque from Flemish descendants grateful that in the 16th century the people of Sandwich had welcomed them and allowed them the use of the church for worship. And it had attractive murals in a sort of slightly naive art style of the history of Sandwich.
It was a delightful church and we spent quite a long time there.
Triceratops Censura
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Subject: Re: Cathedrals and lesser places Mon 09 Dec 2013, 10:32
The somewhat appropriately named Soul Bar, formerly Langstane Kirk;
Temperance Virgo Vestalis Maxima
Posts : 6895 Join date : 2011-12-30 Location : UK
Subject: Re: Cathedrals and lesser places Mon 09 Dec 2013, 10:36
Priscilla wrote:
They all charter episodes in our past in some way - but what is the modern progression, I wonder?
There's a former Wesley Chapel - beautiful old building - in Bolton that is now a casino. The old chap must be spinning, as they say. Lord alone knows how planning permission was ever granted for that one, but with money all things are possible.
Islanddawn Censura
Posts : 2163 Join date : 2012-01-05 Location : Greece
Subject: Re: Cathedrals and lesser places Mon 09 Dec 2013, 15:36
Churches, crypts, Cathedrals and their surrounds, including the cemetaries were put to many uses in the past and not only that of the religious variety. They really were the beating heart of the community.
Just a few mundane uses of sacred places
- They were also used for lodging and storage, in fact cathedral floors were often sloped to make for easier cleaning of the refuse left behind by lodging pilgrims. - Places for the sick - As places of sanctuary - In times of war townspeople would move into churches, and stock them with food, guards and arms. - Church precincts and cemetaries were popular places for vending because they were exempt from secular jurisdiction and taxation. It was not unusual for wine vendors to loudly hawk their samples which they poured from pitchers that they carried around. In the 14thC, for example, the canons of Chartres were maintaining a tavern in the cloister. - They were convenient places for both secular and ecclesiastical courts. - Along with the cries of confessions and those of the sick and in pain, churches were also used as places for socialising and playing games. And there were a number of warnings against the less pious conversations that would be conducted in church. - Prostitutes conducted business within church precincts and cemetaries - Churches were also used as places for dalliance for lovers, one of the few dry and protected public places availabe to couples.
Posts : 4902 Join date : 2012-01-01 Location : Belgium
Subject: Re: Cathedrals and lesser places Mon 09 Dec 2013, 16:25
Islanddawn, thanks for the interesting reply. In your last message I was looking to a new word in my vocabulary of English: places for "dalliance" Didn't found it in my Collins paperback of 1991. Had to look on the web: "flirtation" is better known to me... Kind regards, Paul.
Islanddawn Censura
Posts : 2163 Join date : 2012-01-05 Location : Greece
Subject: Re: Cathedrals and lesser places Mon 09 Dec 2013, 17:48
Yes, dalliance is an older word Paul and not used so much anymore except in historical romance novels possibly. Today we have less elegant words like sucking face, snogging, necking et al.
Caro Censura
Posts : 1522 Join date : 2012-01-09
Subject: Re: Cathedrals and lesser places Mon 09 Dec 2013, 19:35
I looked up dalliance in my little Pocket Oxford Dictionary to see its derivation, but dismaying it wasn't there at all. I thought it sounded a little French and in the Shorter Oxford it says from dally (which didn't sound very French to me), originally from Old French dalier, to converse or chat. Used a lot in Anglo-Norman. Dalliance means flirtation but can also just mean generally talking casually, passing the time of day. But mostly today it doesn't mean anything because it's hardly used. I must use it more, since it's understood quite easily. I would use 'necking' ID, but never such abominations as sucking face or snogging. Horrible words both in connotations and sound.
PaulRyckier Censura
Posts : 4902 Join date : 2012-01-01 Location : Belgium
Subject: Re: Cathedrals and lesser places Mon 09 Dec 2013, 20:03
Priscilla wrote:
Hello,Paul. Few of our older churches have been put to other uses - usual residential - but the plainer red brick Prebyterian inner city sort are snapped up to covert into, would you believe, curry houses. I have only been to one but found the wall monument tablets with their dedications to the long forgotten, somewhat depressing. As for the feeling monumental architecture seems to inspire, as with thrilling scenary, perhaps ones insignificant place in the grand march of time is brought to bear. As for the sub continent, in matters of faith the longer I was there and the more I learned the less I understood - so I stopped trying. However, I found there are mosques that engendered that soul-silence but, for me, not temples or ashrams.
Priscilla,
thanks for the reply and about your "that engendered that soul-silence... In my former message I was perhaps a bit too harsh for myself...thinking about it...and trying to analyse myself...and if you mean by "soul-silence": the thinking about yourself and your place in the universe...for me a cathedral is a kind of a museum, a tribute to the human capabilities...but at the same time entering a church where people in silence communicate with their "God"...some strange feeling of solidarity...perhaps because we all are social beings, perhaps the essence of our mankind... And in my case...I don't need the silence or the meditation in a church...I can, as well in the silence in front of my computer screen, think about myself and the outside world...
Kind regards and with esteem for your "philosophical" message,
Paul.
Gilgamesh of Uruk Censura
Posts : 1560 Join date : 2011-12-27
Subject: Re: Cathedrals and lesser places Mon 09 Dec 2013, 23:06
Paul : You, in particular, might find this feature of the Three Ladies of the Vale of interest.
Subject: Re: Cathedrals and lesser places Tue 10 Dec 2013, 16:54
Paul: My soul silencing phrase is difficult to expand. Perhaps it can be likened to the condition in the mystical Sufic sense. Sufi means wool - a kind of cocooning - or to be more prosaic, like very good double glazing. I agree that it may be experienced everywhere but some places impose it.
Too often the breath taking awe of being at one and in harmony - for want of a better word - is fleeting - but it is possible to call up from memory something of it. And I do not mean to go all soggy romantic here about this sense of harmony because it can relate to anything. Great photographers have a knack of making tabernacles from tar drums and the silence is as profound.
Islanddawn Censura
Posts : 2163 Join date : 2012-01-05 Location : Greece
Subject: Re: Cathedrals and lesser places Tue 10 Dec 2013, 17:45
I apologise if this isn't the correct place for this P, the article deals with Monastic life in Scotland and I suppose cathedrals and lesser places could be included in that. A fascinating read about a period of Scottish history that is rarely mentioned.
When one considers that there were monasteries in Scotland for over a thousand years, we know surprisingly little about the way of life that was familiar over that long time span to the occupants and their contemporaries alike. Indeed, in many cases we scarcely know whether there was a monastery there or not. Easson’s gazetteer of the Scottish monasteries has many listed as uncertain or “supposed” foundations because the documentation for them cannot be found but one must remember that the nunnery of St. Evoca would have fallen into this category, but for a problem in the early 15th century which led to a papal rescript now preserved in the Vatican. There is, of course, a paradox in this, because the remains of all that human endeavour mislead us into thinking that the life is also familiar to us. It has been romanticised:
Most visitors to Scotland are likely to visit at least one of the great ruins, the names of Iona, Melrose, Sweetheart abbey, Lincluden, Dundrennan, Inchmahome, Holyrood, Cambuskenneth, Dryburgh, Coldingham, Crossraguel, Arbroath, Haddington are all names inextricably mixed into the history of Scotland. Yet as you wander through the smooth and antiseptic lawns of the Ministry of Works at one of the sites, where the occasional tracery of the great windows and columns of the naves rise dramatically to the sky, while the outlines of the buildings razed and ruined have been carefully restored to a uniform foot or so above the land, to create the illusion that one is walking through a manicured ground plan, or skeletal framework, what are you really seeing? Is this reality, or is it finely created myth? What relationship does it bear to the daily life of that vanished millennium?
"Zeven glasramen sieren nu de Lady Chapel in de kathedraal van Lichfield (Engeland). Zij stellen scènes voor uit het nieuwe testament en portretten en wapenschilden van historische figuren uit de zestiende eeuw en behoren tot de best bewaarde glaswerkensembles uit de Vlaamse renaissance. Zij zijn van de hand van twee kunstenaars, Marten Tymans uit Antwerpen en Lambert Spulbergh uit Mechelen en dateren van de jaren 1532-1539. Abdis Mechtildis de Lechy liet ze maken. In 1802 werden ze door de toenmalige eigenaar verkocht aan een Engelsman op doorreis die ze grotendeels verkocht aan de anglicaanse kathedraal van Lichfield. Ook kwam glaswerk terecht in een viertal andere kerken in Engeland." (seven stained glasses, best from the Flemish renaissance, two artists, Martin Tymans from Antwerp and Lmaberth Spulbergh from Mechelen (Malines) from 1532-1539. In 1802 sold to an Englishman. He sold it to the Cathedral of Lichfield. There were also glasses sold to four other churches in England. About gothic stained glasses: https://www.google.be/search?q=vitraux+%C3%A9glise+gothique&tbm=isch&tbo=u&source=univ&sa=X&ei=39SoUqu4HYHKtQb2-YHgBw&ved=0CDAQsAQ&biw=1231&bih=731#imgdii=_
Did some research for the Lichfield Cathedral. Quite in the middle of England, if you ask me... And a spire in stone...not so easy to burn down by lightning as happened here many times with the wooden vaulted spires...
Kind regards and thank you for mentioning the Flemish artists,
Paul.
Vizzer Censura
Posts : 1851 Join date : 2012-05-12
Subject: Re: Cathedrals and lesser places Sun 21 Sep 2014, 21:14
Priscilla wrote:
Take away the ritual floor show - but not the music - they still manage to inspire emotion.
I caught part of the (somewhat melodramatically entitled) 'unity service of reconciliation' broadcast this morning by the BBC from St Giles' Cathedral in Edinburgh. This got me to thinking that, although I've been to Edinburgh on several occasions, to my shame I've never actually been inside the High Kirk. From what I saw this morning, it seemed to be rather similar in decor to various Anglican cathedrals in South Britain - which is rather ironic considering its history. I have to say that flags and banners and other trappings of secular states on display inside places of worship tend to leave me cold. So maybe I haven't missed out there.
This got me to further thinking about churches which I have visited on my travels but which have indeed left an impression on me. Staying north of the border then there is St Magnus' Cathedral in Kirkwall, Orkney which (ignoring the flags and banners etc) is a unique Romanesque building with solid, squat pillars giving it a vaguely continental appearance. And yet it wouldn't seem to fit either on the continent or in Scandinavia or indeed on neighbouring Great Britain. It can only be described as Orcadian:
Heading east to Poland then there is the Chapel of St Kinga in the Wieliczka Salt Mine just outside Cracow. One of several chapels in the mine, St Kinga's is the most spectacular. A cliche to some, maybe, but I never cease to be amazed by the thought that the pillars, the altar, the statues, the hexagonal floor tiles and even the chandeliers are all carved from salt:
Going north across the Baltic Sea to Finland next, there is the Rock Church in Helsinki. Originally conceived in the 1930s it was finally completed in 1969. Half sunken into the ground and with a glass and copper dome on top, it looks as though a flying saucer has crash landed in the middle of a square in the city. I have to say that I didn't feel particularly spiritual when I was there but the coach party of Korean tourists probably had something to do with that. It certainly is a weird place and its excellent acoustic properties mean that rather than just being used solely for religious services, it is also often the venue for music concerts:
Finally (and staying in Finland) there is the Church of St Alexander & St Nicholas in Tampere. As the name suggests, this belongs to the minority Finnish Orthodox Church. The red brick building was only built in the 1890s and yet is stunningly beautiful both outside and in. We only found it by accident, as on the final day of our trip to Finland we had an hour to kill before the bus would take us back to Vantaa International Airport in Helsinki. "Look at those spires peeking up behind the trees!" said Mrs Vizzer. And so we sidled over the road to discover a romantic gem complete with onion cupolas sitting pretty on a tiny hillock:
Gilgamesh of Uruk Censura
Posts : 1560 Join date : 2011-12-27
Subject: Re: Cathedrals and lesser places Sun 21 Sep 2014, 22:37
Paul - You are certainly correct that stone spires don't burn down easily - take a look at this one for example (once joint see with Lichfield as it happens) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coventry_Cathedral
PaulRyckier Censura
Posts : 4902 Join date : 2012-01-01 Location : Belgium
Subject: Re: Cathedrals and lesser places Sun 21 Sep 2014, 22:42
Vizzer,
I was there too in that St Kinga's chapel...together with my wife... her in a Polish wheelchair with a broken too...happened during the trip to Poland...and had to go with her to a Polish hospital...the wheelchair from the hotel and the visit with a personal female guide...extra paid arrangement...
Kind regards from Paul.
PaulRyckier Censura
Posts : 4902 Join date : 2012-01-01 Location : Belgium
Subject: Re: Cathedrals and lesser places Sun 21 Sep 2014, 23:13
Gilgamesh of Uruk wrote:
Paul - You are certainly correct that stone spires don't burn down easily - take a look at this one for example (once joint see with Lichfield as it happens) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coventry_Cathedral
Gil, yes even the Coventry bombing didn't destroyed the stone spire...or was it some irreal fear of the German bomber scad to destroy the spire...or was it the more realistic consequense of its lesser surface on the ground than the rest of the buildings...
Kind regards and have still a message for you on the "elephant" thread...
Paul.
Gilgamesh of Uruk Censura
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Subject: Re: Cathedrals and lesser places Thu 02 Oct 2014, 22:13
Posts : 4902 Join date : 2012-01-01 Location : Belgium
Subject: Re: Cathedrals and lesser places Thu 02 Oct 2014, 22:31
What an amazing heart-warming (wanted to put it first between "" because I translated it directly from Dutch and see now in the dictionary that the word also exists in English) story that is, Gil. Thank you again for comforting my night...
Kind regards and with esteem, Paul.
ferval Censura
Posts : 2602 Join date : 2011-12-27
Subject: Re: Cathedrals and lesser places Fri 03 Oct 2014, 00:07
Very sadly, Paul, 3 of the Stations of the Cross carvings were stolen from the chapel in August. The daughter of Domenico Chiocchetti has offered to help find replacements.
Triceratops Censura
Posts : 4377 Join date : 2012-01-05
Subject: Re: Cathedrals and lesser places Fri 03 Oct 2014, 09:38
Another Scottish island church, the Abbey on Iona, which in olden days was a royal burial ground;
Posts : 5119 Join date : 2011-12-30 Location : Pyrénées-Orientales, France
Subject: Re: Cathedrals and lesser places Sun 09 Nov 2014, 09:45
Here's a type of religious building that I'd never heard of before - a conjuratory or exconjuratory (conjurador or comunidor in Catalan, esconchurador in Aragonese):
It's a small building from which ceremonies were conducted to bless the fields and generally protect the crops against bad weather such as storms, hail, excessive rain or drought, but also sometimes to ward off other calamities like epidemics or plagues of pests.
According to wiki they were usually attached to a church or hermitage, sometimes as part of the church tower, and were built in a symmetrical way, with large windows open to the four cardinal points. They were common in the ancient villages of the Pyrenees especially in Aragon. The remaining ones are nearly all in Spain but two survive in France, the one pictured above is at Serralongue about 20kms from me, where it sits in relative isolation on the little hill above the village:
The one at Serralongue was built in the mid 14th century ... so at a time of repeated crop failures, outbreaks of 'murraine' in cattle and of course the Black Death.
Gilgamesh of Uruk Censura
Posts : 1560 Join date : 2011-12-27
Subject: Re: Cathedrals and lesser places Sun 09 Nov 2014, 23:48
Hmm. The building is new to me, but the purpose sounds very like that of "rogation days"
FrederickLouis Aediles
Posts : 71 Join date : 2016-12-13
Subject: Re: Cathedrals and lesser places Wed 14 Dec 2016, 01:43
The Cathedral of St. Louis of Blois is in Blois, France. To celebrate the church's elevation to cathedral status in 1697, King Louis XIV presented the organ console in 1704. The new see thereupon took the dedication to Saint Louis. American bombardment during the Second World War destroyed most of the glass work in the cathedral. On December 22, 2000, new stained-glass windows were dedicated.
FrederickLouis Aediles
Posts : 71 Join date : 2016-12-13
Subject: Re: Cathedrals and lesser places Thu 15 Dec 2016, 22:38
Saint Nicholas Cathedral was consecrated in 1912 in memory of Tsarevich Nicholas Alexandrovich (1843-1865), Emperor Alexander II's son and heir, who died at Nice, France on April 24, 1865. In 1896, the Dowager Empress Marie Feodorovna and her son, Nicholas II, organized the construction of a new cathedral. The construction of the cathedral was financed from the private purse of Tsar Nicholas II.
Nielsen Triumviratus Rei Publicae Constituendae
Posts : 595 Join date : 2011-12-31 Location : Denmark
Subject: Re: Cathedrals and lesser places Sat 17 Dec 2016, 15:37
FL,
When giving a lot of facts, it is often advisable to name from where one quote.
Priscilla Censura
Posts : 2772 Join date : 2012-01-16
Subject: Re: Cathedrals and lesser places Mon 19 Dec 2016, 19:19
FL - this site likes cited facts to be of interest and flavoured with opinion. I'm not saying that I am good at this and that my opinion counts for much but at least I can be sure of annoying people for the right Res Hist reasons and even get a response.
FrederickLouis Aediles
Posts : 71 Join date : 2016-12-13
Subject: Re: Cathedrals and lesser places Tue 20 Dec 2016, 22:56
Reims Cathedral is located in Reims, France. Several of the French sovereigns had their coronations here. Would you like to have your coronation occur at Reims Cathedral? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mkp8xG0mKyk
Priscilla Censura
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Subject: Re: Cathedrals and lesser places Tue 20 Dec 2016, 23:39
Mine was at Chartres.
Vizzer Censura
Posts : 1851 Join date : 2012-05-12
Subject: Re: Cathedrals and lesser places Sat 02 Feb 2019, 15:59
Henri IV famously said that ‘Paris is well worth a mass’ before his conversion to Catholicism and a Te Deum must surely have been sung at his coronation in Chartres Cathedral. There are portrait paintings of both he and his wife Marguerite of Valois wearing crowns, although contemporary accounts of the actual service suggest that it was only he who was crowned in the cathedral on that day.
The history of the Te Deum is fascinating though. It’s a hymn which is sung at various masses around the year and is an expression of human humility and thanks to God. It is also sung to mark great secular events such as victories, triumphs, peace treaties and coronations etc. Many composers have attempted to interpret it over the centuries from Haydn to Handel, Mozart to Mendelssohn, Verdi to Puccini, Berlioz to Dvořák, Britten to Holst, right up to Pärt and Jenkins today. In 17th and 18th century France, its popularity reached a particularly high point with the likes of Lully, Charpentier, Delalande, Desmarets and Clérambault all composing their own versions mainly in the service of Louis XIV. Marc-Antoine Charpentier alone composed four. His 1692 composition in D major is perhaps the best known of any Te Deum (although not as a Te Deum as such) because its prelude will be widely recognised as being the ‘Eurovision Anthem’.
(courtyard of the Basilica of St Ambrose, Milan)
The original hymn is traditionally attributed to St Ambrose, a 4th century Bishop of Milan, who founded a church of the martyrs in the city which was later renamed in his honour and stands to this day although varyingly rebuilt, repaired and extended in the interim. The Basilica di Sant'Ambrogio would again hear the Te Deum sung there in 1805 in the presence of Napoleon Bonaparte and the Empress Josephine. Napoleon had been crowned King of Italy earlier that day in Milan Cathedral and the coronation party had then proceeded to the lesser church for further consecration because St Ambrose’ Basilica contains the tomb of Louis II the 9th century King of Italy and Holy Roman Emperor who was the great-grandson of Charlemagne. As a Corsican of Neapolitan heritage, who had crowned himself Emperor of the French in Notre-Dame de Paris only 5 months previously, Napoleon no doubt saw honouring the memory of Louis II as reinforcing the links between France and Italy and thus further buttressing his own ambitions in that direction. The Te Deum was sung at all 3 services although (as far as I know) there are no records of which versions were used. I’d guess at Charpentier used in Paris, and maybe Jean-Baptiste Lully (an appropriately Franco-Italian composer) used in Milan Cathedral and then perhaps just Gregorian plainchant in the Basilica.
(early 19th century postcard engraving of the Duomo di Milano)
PaulRyckier Censura
Posts : 4902 Join date : 2012-01-01 Location : Belgium
Subject: Re: Cathedrals and lesser places Sat 02 Feb 2019, 22:44
Yes – the idea of Gregorian chant does seem to sit oddly with Napoleon Bonaparte. The reasons behind his decision to go for overt imperialism (rather than continue with nominal republicanism) and to do so with the blessing of the Catholic Church are well worth investigating. It seems that the ill-advised judicial murder of the Duc d’Enghien in 1804 had badly backfired on Bonaparte’s regime. Any coercive benefits regarding discouraging others from plotting or rebelling against him which the execution might have achieved, were more than offset by the negative propaganda boost which it gave to his opponents among royalist and religious authorities across Europe and beyond. By becoming emperor and by seeking an even closer rapprochement with the Church than even the 1801 Concordat had envisaged, he no doubt hoped to drive wedges between and within those groupings. And to a large extent this was successful. For example the dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire a couple of years later was much easier achieved by an emperor with papal sanction than it might have been by a mere dictator of a dechristianized republic.
The choice of venue for his imperial coronation (Notre-Dame de Paris) also sent out 2 messages. Firstly it marked a break with the ancient regime tradition of being crowned in Rheims. It also broke with other candidates such as Chartres, Noyon or even Aix-la-Chapelle. The man who saw himself as the ‘new Charlemagne’, nevertheless didn’t want to be seen as his ‘successor’.
(An early photograph of Notre-Dame de Paris. Note the lack of spire which had been dismantled for safety reasons in the 1780s and would be rebuilt later in the 19th century. Also note the building on the left and the wall on the right both of which would be demolished in the 1860s to widen the square as part of Baron Haussmann’s renovation of the city)
The only other ruler of France who had been crowned at Notre-Dame was Henri Plantagenet (Henry VI of England) in 1431. And it is in this where we can see the second message. Only a couple of years after the British monarchy had finally renounced the claim to the crown of France in 1801 and formalised by the Treaty of Amiens in 1802, the 2 countries were back at war. Having crowned himself Emperor of the French at the location where an earlier English monarch had been crowned King of France, it’s only a small step to later envisaging him crowned ‘King of the British Isles’ (or some such title) in, say, York Minster (or some such location) following a successful invasion of Britain.
PaulRyckier wrote:
But I don't see immediately the relation with the Eurovision The Deum of Charpentier https://goo.gl/M9m7ob
Paul – that link seems to be broken so it’s not clear whether you’re querying the relationship of the Eurovision Anthem to the history of the Basilica di Sant'Ambrogio or whether you’re questioning if the anthem of the European Broadcasting Union is indeed taken from the Prelude of Charpentier’s Te Deum in D Major. In any event here’s a recording of that baroque fanfare:
Hope that helps.
PaulRyckier Censura
Posts : 4902 Join date : 2012-01-01 Location : Belgium
Subject: Re: Cathedrals and lesser places Sun 03 Feb 2019, 22:47
Vizzer,
for me the link still works, but it is a Russian one, perhaps the UK is more strict for Russian links ? It gives some 100 mp3 or something like that from a lot of "Te Deum"s, also the Charpentier one.
"so it’s not clear whether you’re querying the relationship of the Eurovision Anthem to the history of the Basilica di Sant'Ambrogio or whether you’re questioning if the anthem of the European Broadcasting Union is indeed taken from the Prelude of Charpentier’s Te Deum in D Major"
Of course the Prelude of Charpentier's Te Deum is the Eurovision Anthem My question was if the Gregorian music was the same of the Te Deum of Charpentier. And after a painstaking research I found this: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Te_Deum
It don't work but in the link you can let play them together and then I think you can hear that it is the same music. Hmm with a different sound? We definitely need here the expert Gil (Green George)
But Vizzer in the meantime I have learned thanks to you a lot about Napoleon that I didn't know. Thank you.
Kind regards from Paul.
LadyinRetirement Censura
Posts : 3324 Join date : 2013-09-16 Location : North-West Midlands, England
Subject: Re: Cathedrals and lesser places Tue 09 Feb 2021, 23:46
The French member of the U3A French conversation group I attend (on Tuesday afternoons) had found an article (quite serious although it was from the Canard Enchaine) about Victor Hugo and that writer's fondness for Notre-Dame Cathedral in Paris. If the article in question is correct, V Hugo was horrified by some proposed changes to the cathedral that were mooted in the 1830s but the success of Notre Dame de Paris with its depiction of Notre-Dame in the fifteenth century helped to see off any radical plans to change the look of the cathedral. I hadn't heard that before.
Meles meles Censura
Posts : 5119 Join date : 2011-12-30 Location : Pyrénées-Orientales, France
Subject: Re: Cathedrals and lesser places Wed 10 Feb 2021, 11:39
Victor Hugo wasn't so much horrified by proposed changes to the cathedral but rather that there was a serious plan by the city authorities to demolish it completely and replace it with another building in a newer style, a fate already suffered by other medieval churches in the city. His novel Notre-Dame de Paris (The Hunchback of Notre-Dame) was written to raise awareness of the value of the cathedral and of gothic architecture in general, and thankfully in that he was successful. But amazingly, for what is now such an iconic and much-loved building, it came quite close to being knocked down.
Mind you the mid-19th century drive to modernise Paris did also benefit Notre-Dame. Starting in the 1850s when Napoleon III employed the urban planner Baron Haussmann to undertake a massive urban regeneration of Paris, many of the city’s old buildings were cleared to create boulevards and large open squares. On the Île de la Cité the cramped medieval buildings clustered tight around Notre-Dame were pulled down in order to open up a new square in front of the main facade. For the first time in many centuries Parisians could finally stand back and contemplate the cathedral in all its grandeur.
Notre-Dame in the early 1860s, after the restoration works of the 1840s but before Haussmann's urban regeneration had removed the surrounding buildings.
This 1857 view of the Île de la Cité is from Notre-Dame itself and also clearly shows the huddled mass of buildings that once surrounded the cathedral.
LadyinRetirement Censura
Posts : 3324 Join date : 2013-09-16 Location : North-West Midlands, England
Subject: Re: Cathedrals and lesser places Wed 10 Feb 2021, 18:09
Well, you have helped plug some gaps in my knowledge, MM. I'll have to see if I can find any adaptations of NDdP to ascertain whether the enclosed nature of Notre Dame Cathedral's environs pre-Hausmann is reflected. That said I've only seen the old Maureen O'Hara and Charles Laughton film where the ending (at least Esmerelda's ending) was sugar-coated as compared to the book and a faithful to the novel adaptation on TV many, many years ago. From the article we studied yesterday, Notre Dame de Paris (the novel) was not without criticism even in its early days because it was (or could be interpreted as being) negatively critical of the catholic church.
PaulRyckier Censura
Posts : 4902 Join date : 2012-01-01 Location : Belgium
Subject: Re: Cathedrals and lesser places Thu 11 Feb 2021, 13:44
LadyinRetirement wrote:
From the article we studied yesterday, Notre Dame de Paris (the novel) was not without criticism even in its early days because it was (or could be interpreted as being) negatively critical of the catholic church.
LiR, you mentioned the Catholic Church, but Victor Hugo was quite a "dissident" (as we nowadays call it) of the Second Empire of Napoléon III and on other fields too, what I don't see always emphasized in biographies of the author of le "Notre-Dame de Paris" as his Republican (the French republicans!) beliefs and yes social engagement. https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Notre-Dame_de_Paris_(roman) In Hugo's view, Napoléon III a dictator as later a Mussolini or Hitler? Perhaps just in the beginning of their "career", but not in the later "phases"?
I saw once a documentary, I don't remember if it was an English or a French one, but there I learned for the first time about his exile to Jersey (we had here a member AngloNorman. But he never referred to Victor Hugo.). I knew about his exile to Brussels. (If I have some time I will seek for that documentary)
Yes a "dissident" I would describe him. A "free thinker?", Perhaps not as his relation with a "God" appears, but certainly anti-monarchist and perhaps a "humanist"?
While searching today I found coincidentally a thesis, which exactly says all what I ever could say about that subject. It is only 39 pages long and easy to read in a short time... "Hugo's impact on the Second Empire" https://digitalcommons.liberty.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1572&context=honors From: https://www.liberty.edu/ And I learned that Hugo was in the parliament of the "Second Republic". I once made here a thread about that "Second Republic" only short lived but nevertheless important in the history of France in my humble opinion.