We were sure we'd visited the great re/brown/pinkish cathedral before, and subsequent archival research confirmed that we were there, with the girls, on August 4, 1989, during our first European Family Vacation. This was long before our current appreciation of such buildings, but we were taken with it anyway. Strasbourg's cathedral is a fine Rayonnant, built entirely in the Middle Ages, with some Romanesque vestiges, and a great (if modern) astronomical clock. Its most impressive feature, I think, is its exterior sculptural program: fine high and later Medieval sculpture, miraculously well-preserved considering all the trouble this church has seen...the wars of religion, its Protestant era, Louis XIV's returning it to the Catholics, the Revolution, when it became a Temple of Reason, and, finally, WWII, when Hitler wanted to turn it into a monument to the unknown German soldier, and subsequent Allied bombs. Some of it is protected now in the museum, but the replacements are quite impressive.
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West facade; they were going to do two towers, but, for all the usual reasons, never got around to it; plus, after the first several hundred years, people came to like the asymmetry (Google photo); personally, I think |
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Usual helpful model |
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Only from the square on the south side can you see the full extent |
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West facade, north door |
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Main central door |
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Central tympanum detail, various martyrs |
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More archivolt detail |
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South door |
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Now on the south side, appreciating the buttresses |
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Exterior clock on the south transept |
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The great tower |
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Famous synagogue sculpture (sad because the synagogue has been replaced) |
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The Foolish Virgins always look so happy... |
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Back on the west side, a nice, if smallish, Judgement, with kings, popes, and all the rest lined up to enter the Jaws of Hell |
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Central tympanum: Passion |
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Last Supper |
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Medieval lap-tops were quite large |
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Famous ornament by the door; replicas available in the excellent gift shoppe |
1 comment:
We also took our kids here...1999!
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