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The Churches of Paris, S. Sophia Beale. NOTRE- DAME FROM THE QUAI DE BERCY. THECHURCHES OF PARISFROM CLOVIS TO CHARLES XBYS. SOPHIA BEALEAuthor of "A complete and Concise Handbook to the Museum of the.

Louvre" etc. With Illustrations by the Author from Original Sketches. Photographs and Engravings. LONDONW. H. ALLEN & CO LIMITED1. WATERLOO PLACE SW——1.

All rights reserved. WYMAN AND SONS, LTD., PRINTERS, LONDON AND REDHILL. DEDICATEDTO ONEWHOSE HELP WAS INVALUABLEBUT WHO IS NOWTO USONLY A MEMORY. La nef vagant dessus la mer galicque. Porte dedens soy richesse inestimable. Justice y est pour patron magnificque. Raison y sert de Lieutenant notable,Gens de scauoir par œuure treslouable.

9781436753661 143675366X A Syllabus of Medieval History, 395-1300 (1905), Dana Carleton Munro 9781585168729 1585168726 La Palabra Eterna-RV 1960, American Bible Society. En poursuivant votre navigation sur ce site, vous acceptez l’utilisation de cookies pour mesurer notre audience et vous proposer des contenus et publicités. THE ENCYCLOPÆDIA BRITANNICA A DICTIONARY OF ARTS. E. Mascart, Traité de magnétisme terrestre. a native of South Africa, is known as Natal mahogany. Reception Kathy McCabe from news.com.au described. 9th Festival de la Canción Mediterránea de Barcelona with her song. to run for political office.

RÉception de sa majestÉ alphonse xiii À barcelone. St Dominic Biography. Saint Dominic Rosary, Life. As You Are Movie Watch Online. Histoire de I'Eglise, vol.

Sont galliotz qui lamenent a port,Marchans y ont tresasseure support. Prebstres, Bourgeois, nobles, Clercz et gen- darmes. Icelle nef de se'fertile apport,Cest de Paris le beau blazon des armes."PREFACE. IN a book of this kind, it is difficult to prevent oneself becoming a guide, more or less complete. Dates and facts, architectural details and descriptions, all savour of the handbook; but having determined to keep to the historical and archaeological, rather than the architectural side of the churches, I have tried to rake up quaint and legendary lore, and so add to the interest of an ordinary guide book. I would also pray my readers to bear in mind that, as the work is not intended to be an architectural treatise, I have simply walked in the paths of Viollet- le- Duc and Guilhermy, whenever I have been compelled to describe the technical details of the churches. My thanks are due to the Editor of the American Architect, for his courtesy in allowing me to build these ecclesiastical monographs upon the foundation of some articles which have appeared from time to time in a condensed form in the Boston (U.

S. A.) paper; and also to the Editor of the Magazine of Art, for a similar kindness. I should also like to acknowledge my indebtedness to the following authors and their works: "Histoire de la Sainte- Chapelle." Morand."Histoire de Saint- Denis." Dom Millet."Histoire de Saint- Eustache." L'abbé Koenig."Inscriptions du Diocèse de Paris." F. Guilhermy."Itinéraire Archéologique de Paris." F. Guilhermy."l'Église Saint Julien- le- Pauvre." A. Le Brun."Monographie de l'Église Royale de Saint- Denis." F.

Guilhermy."Sacred and Legendary Art." Anna Jameson."The Early British Church." J. Yeowell. CONTENTS. THE CHURCHES OF PARIS. SAINT- ANTOINE DES QUINZE- VINGTS.

Saint Louis, always careful in helping his suffering subjects, founded this hospital for the blind in 1. Louvre, now traversed by the Rue de Rivoli. In 1. 78. 0 the hospital was transferred to the Faubourg Saint- Antoine, and took up its abode in the old dwelling place of the Black Musketeers, whose chapel also served as a parish church. It is a little building of no beauty nor interest, although a few inscriptions relating to pious foundations still remain in the chapel, the oldest being dated 1. One of these tells us of the institution, in 1.

Mass by one Marie Lambert, maid to the queen mother. It was to be said at 4 a. Bread of Life. LES CARMES DÉCHAUSSÉESThe old church of the barefooted Carmelites in the Rue de Vaugirard was commenced in 1. S. Joseph in 1. 62. It is now served by the Dominicans. The crypt is the only interesting part of the church, and is a curiosity, as it contains innumerable bones piled up on every side, the remains of the ghastly September massacres of 1.

The frescoes painted by a Liège artist, Bartholet Flamaël, are very much esteemed. Some of the chapels are richly decorated in the gaudy style of the 1. The altar is embellished by a 1.

Last Supper. A few epitaphs still remain: that of Cardinal de Beausset, the historian of Fénelon and Bossuet; one of Cardinal de la Luzerne; and a marble, covering the heart of Archbishop Affre, who was shot on a barricade in 1. LA SAINTE- CHAPELLE. The origin and foundation of this most lovely example of mediæval art is so much a part of S. Louis' life that it may not be out of place to give some account of the Saint's character and habits before proceeding to describe the history of the chapel. THE SAINTE- CHAPELLE FROM THE PONT SAINT- MICHEL. Louis IX. was pious and practical, and inconvenienced his courtiers as much by his punctuality and the assiduity with which he conducted his business, as by his religious duties. These he considered a part of his daily work, hearing all the canonical offices with the same regularity as he attended to the grievances of his subjects.

Often, like our own George Herbert, was he found prostrate before the altar wrapped in prayer. Even Gibbon allowed that he united the virtues of a king, a hero, and a man—he might have added those of a just judge and a lawgiver; and Voltaire sums up his character as follows: "Il n'est guère donné à l'homme de pousser la vertu plus loin." When his more worldly friends cavilled at his austerities, he made his case good by retorting: "Si je passais deux fois autant de temps à jouer, ou à courir les bois, pour m'occuper de la chasse, personne n'en parleroit." As in the case of nearly all exceptionally good men, he probably owed everything to the extreme care that his mother had bestowed upon his education—a care which he repaid by a life- long devotion to her memory. Of good Queen Blanche's character we get a glimpse in the following touching anecdote. It is related that one day at Court, the Queen noticed a beautiful youth with long, fair hair, and asking his name, was answered, "Prince Herman, the son of the sainted Elizabeth of Hungary." On hearing this, Queen Blanche rose from her seat, and, gazing at the boy, said to him, "Fair youth, thou hadst a blessed mother; where did she kiss thee?" Whereat Herman, blushing, placed his finger on his forehead between his eyes, and the Queen, reverently pressing her lips upon the spot, looked up to Heaven and breathed the invocation: Sancta Elisabetha, Patrona nostra dulcissima, ora pro nobis. That a mother so imbued with admiration for the sainted Elizabeth should have a son who walked in the Hungarian queen's steps, is not very remarkable in those ages of faith. S. Louis' faith was simple, loving, and inextinguishable; and so it came about that when he heard of the Emperor Baldwin II.'s financial difficulties, he decided to purchase the relics which had been given more than once, it is said, as pledges for temporary loans.