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Basilique Ste-Clotilde, Paris

Sainte-Clotilde, Paris
P1020476 Paris VII Basilique Saint-Clotilde rwk.JPG
The west front of the church
48°51′30″N 2°19′09″E / 48.858333°N 2.319167°E / 48.858333; 2.319167Coordinates: 48°51′30″N 2°19′09″E / 48.858333°N 2.319167°E / 48.858333; 2.319167
Country  France
Denomination Roman Catholic
Website www.sainte-clotilde.com
Architecture
Status Cathedral
Functional status Active
Heritage designation Monument historique
Style French Gothic
Groundbreaking 1846 (1846)
Completed 1857 (1857)
Specifications
Number of towers 2
Tower height 69 metres (226 ft)
Number of spires 1
Administration
Archdiocese Paris

The Basilica of Saint Clotilde (Basilique Ste-Clotilde) is a basilica church in Paris, located on the Rue Las Cases, in the area of Saint-Germain-des-Prés. It is best known for its imposing twin spires.

Construction of the church was first mooted by the Paris City Council on 16 February 1827. It was designed by architect F. C. Gau of Cologne in a neo-Gothic style. Work began in 1846, but Gau died in 1853, and the job was continued by Théodore Ballu who completed the church in 1857. It was opened on 30 November 1857 by Cardinal Morlot. The church was declared a minor basilica by Pope Leo XIII in 1896.

This neo-gothic basilica is marked by its two towers 69 meters high.

The interior is clear and there are stained glass windows by Thibaut (a 19th century glassmaker), 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, his condemnation to death, decapitation and the appearance of Saint Martial.

The building dominates the Samuel-Rousseau square where one can see chestnut trees.

The basilica was copied by the architect Leon Vautrin for the construction of the facade of the Cathedral of the Sacred Heart of Canton between 1863 and 1888.

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.


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Wikipedia

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