Reims cathedral is now considered one of the glories of Gothic architecture, built in the thirteenth century more or less to a single plan, unlike some other cathedrals that might have their construction last for generations, meaning the style kept changing.
Unlike Notre Dame, where the flying buttresses had to be added later, when the lead roof started pushing down on the walls so they started bowing out, Reims had flying buttresses from the beginning. It also has lovely sculptures, like this angel with a Mona Lisa smile.
But Reims' importance went back far before the thirteenth century. Saint Remigius, who was bishop of Reims at the end of the fifth century, baptized Clovis, king of the Franks, making him the first Christian king of the Franks and, in subsequent generations, considered the first king of France. There is a plaque today in the thirteenth-century cathedral showing the exact spot where this is supposed to have happened.
Down the street from the cathedral is the old monastery of St.-Remi, dedicated to Saint Remigius. The monastery and the cathedral have had a constant low-level dispute since the sixth century over who the saint loves best, the cathedral where he was bishop or the monastery where he was buried. St.-Remi built a new, lovely Romanesque church in the twelfth century, totally outshining the then cathedral (300 years old at the time), but then the bishop and cathedral canons built their thirteenth-century church, much bigger and snazzier, and were able to sneer.
Because Clovis was baptized at Reims, the Carolingian kings of France in the ninth-tenth centuries started being crowned there, as an effort to connect themselves with their Merovingian predecessors. French kings continued being crowned at Reims, with few exceptions. Joan of Arc had to lead an army to clear a path to Reims to get the dauphin there to be crowned. Paris really only became France's capital at the end of the tenth century, when the Capetian dynasty came to power (they'd previously been counts of Paris), and nobody wanted to break with tradition.
Reims cathedral was, deplorably, shelled during World War I (battle of the Marne and all that). However, the walls were still there and most of the outside statues (like the angel). It was rebuilt over many years, finished just in time for World War II, though fortunately it escaped damage then. Its rebuilding gave hope to those rebuilding Notre Dame of Paris, which was in fact less badly damaged (the roof went but much of the interior survived, due to a stone ceiling below the lead roof). Notre Dame will not be finished by the summer 2024 Olympics, the original goal, but it's coming right along.
The word Reims, by the way, may be hard to pronounce (it's something like "rhanz"). The British spell it Rheims and pronounce it "reemz." Just so you know.
© C. Dale Brittain 2024
For more on the medieval church, see my ebook, Positively Medieval: Life and Society in the Middle Ages. Also available in paperback.
No comments:
Post a Comment