Rayonnant
Gothic.
The church is an architectural landmark as it was the first major structure
partially built in the Gothic style , although only part of the original
Gothic ambulatory at the chevet, or east end remains.
construction
masonry. The church is also important
architecturally due to the fact that it is considered the first church built
in the Rayonnant style. Among other innovative features at St. Denis
are the stained glass windows in the chevet, the rose window on the facade,
and the statue columns (now destroyed but known from Montfauchon's drawings)
flanking the portals on the west facade.
The Basilica of Saint Denis (French: Basilique de Saint-Denis, or simply
Basilique Saint-Denis) is the burial site of almost all the French
monarchs. Saved and restored by the architect Viollet le Duc, the
basilica is located in Saint-Denis, now a northern suburb of Paris.
It was not used for the coronations of kings, this role being
designated to the Cathedral of Reims; however, Queens were commonly
crowned there.
Saint Denis is a patron saint of France and, according to legend,
was the first bishop of Paris. A shrine was erected at his burial place.
There Dagobert I, king of the Franks, who reigned from 628 to 637,
founded the Abbey of Saint Denis, a Benedictine monastery. The shrine
itself was created by Eligius, a goldsmith by training. It was described
in the early vita of Saint Eligius:
Above all, Eligius fabricated a mausoleum for the holy martyr
Denis in the city of Paris with a wonderful marble ciborium over it
marvelously decorated with gold and gems. He composed a crest [at the
top of a tomb] and a magnificent frontal and surrounded the throne of
the altar with golden axes in a circle. He placed golden apples there,
round and jeweled. He made a pulpit and a gate of silver and a roof for
the throne of the altar on silver axes. He made a covering in the place
before the tomb and fabricated an outside altar at the feet of the holy
martyr. So much industry did he lavish there, at the king's request, and
poured out so much that scarcely a single ornament was left in Gaul and
it is the greatest wonder of all to this very day.
None of this work survives.
Architecture
The northwest nave of Saint Denis at sunset
The church is an architectural landmark as it was the first major
structure partially built in the Gothic style , although only part of
the original Gothic ambulatory at the chevet, or east end remains. The
narthex of the Gothic church was begun in 1136 and finished in 1140 by
the Abbot Suger (1081-1155). The choir was begun in 1140 and was
consecrated on the 11th of June 1144 after only four years of work. The
majority of the present day structure, however, is a later construction
that was begun in 1231 in the Rayonnant Gothic style. The church is also
important architecturally due to the fact that it is considered the
first church built in the Rayonnant style. Among other innovative
features at St. Denis are the stained glass windows in the chevet, the
rose window on the facade, and the statue columns (now destroyed but
known from Montfauchon's drawings) flanking the portals on the west
facade.
Burial site The abbey is where the kings of France and their
families were buried for centuries and is therefore often referred to as
the "royal necropolis of France". All but three of the monarchs of
France from the 10th century until 1789 have their remains here. The
abbey church contains some fine examples of cadaver tombs. The effigies
of many of the kings and queens are on their tombs, but during the
French Revolution, these tombs were opened by workers under orders from
revolutionary officials. The bodies were removed and dumped in two large
pits nearby. Archaeologist Alexandre Lenoir saved many of the monuments
from the same revolutionary officials by claiming them as artworks for
his Museum of French Monuments.
The bodies of the beheaded King Louis XVI, his wife Marie
Antoinette of Austria, and his sister Madame Élisabeth were not
initially buried in Saint Denis. They were buried in the churchyard of
the Madeleine and covered with quicklime. The body of the Dauphin, who
died of an illness, was buried in an unmarked grave in a Parisian
churchyard near the Temple.
Napoleon Bonaparte reopened the church in 1806, but the royal
remains were left in their mass-graves. Following Napoleon's first exile
to Elba, the Bourbons briefly returned to power. They ordered a search
for the corpses of Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette, the few remains, a
few bones that were presumably the king's and a clump of greyish matter
containing a lady's garter, were found on January 21, 1815, brought to
Saint Denis and buried in the crypt. In 1817 the mass-graves containing
all the other remains were opened but it was impossible to distinguish
any one from the collection of bones. The remains were therefore placed
in an ossuary in St. Denis' crypt, behind two marble plates with the
names of the hundreds of members of the succeeding French Dynasties that
were interred in the church duly recorded.
King Louis XVIII, on his death in 1824, was buried in the center
of the crypt, near the graves of Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette. The
coffins of members of the royal Family that died in between 1815 and
1830 were also placed in the vaults. Under the direction of architect
Viollet-le-Duc, famous for his work on Notre-Dame de Paris, the
monuments that were taken to the Museum of French Monuments were
returned to the church. The corpse of King Louis VII, who had been
buried at the Abbey at Saint-Pont and whose tomb had not been touched by
the revolutionaries, was brought to St. Denis and buried in the crypt.
In 2004 the mummified heart of the Dauphin, the boy that would have been
Louis XVII, was sealed into the wall of the crypt.
Tombs All but three of the Kings of France who ruled since
A.D. 496 are buried in the Saint Denis Basilica. The most prominent are:
Tomb of Charles Martel, Basilique
Saint-Denis. Charles I of Naples (or Anjou), Basilique
Saint-Denis.Clovis I (465 - 511) Childebert I (496 - 558) Arégonde (c.515 - c.573) Fredegonde (Wife of Chilperic I of Neustria)
(? - 597) Dagobert I (603 - 639) Clovis II (635 - 657) Charles Martel (686 - 741) Pippin the Younger (714 - 768) and his wife
Bertrada of Laon (726-783) Carloman I King of the Franks (c.751 - 771)
Henri I in background, Robert II, Jean I d.
1316 and Jeanne d. 1349Charles the Bald (823 - 877) (his monument was
melted down) and his wife, Ermentrude of Orléans (823 - 869) Carloman (866 - 884) Robert II the Pious (972–1031) and Constance
of Arles (c. 986 - 1032) Henry I of France (1008-1060) Louis VI of France (1081-1137) Louis VII of France (1120-1180) and
Constance of Castile (1141-1160) Philip II Augustus (1180-1223) Charles I of Naples (1226 - 1285), king of
the Two Sicilies (1266-85). An effigy covers his heart burial. Philip III the Bold (1245 - 1285) Philip IV the Fair (1268 - 1315) and
Isabella of Aragon (1247 – 1271) Leo V of Armenia (1342 - 1393) Tomb of Leon V of Armenia, in the Basilique
Saint-Denis, France.Francis I of France (1494 - 1547) Henry II of France (1519 - 1559) and
Catherine de' Medici (1519 – 1589) Francis II of France (1544 – 1560) Charles IX of France (1550-1574) (no
monument) Henry III of France (1551 -1589) (heart
burial monument) Henry IV of France (1553 - 1610) Louis XIV of France (1638 – 1715) Louis XV of France (1710 – 1774), Louis XVI of France (1754 – 1793) and Marie
Antoinette (1755 – 1793) Louis XVII of France (1785 - 1795) Louis XVIII of France (1755 - 1824)
Tomb of Philippe le Bel in the Saint Denis Basilica.
Fulrad, Abbot of Saint-Denis
Notes ^ Vita S. Eligius, edited by Levison, on-line at
Medieval Sourcebook ^ H. Honour and J. Fleming, The Visual Arts: A History. Upper
Saddle River, NJ: Pearson Prentice Hall, 2005. ISBN 0-13-193507-0
^ It has been argued (most recently by architectural historian
Dan Cruickshank in "Britain's Best Buildings" for the BBC) that Durham
Cathedral, as well as being a superb example of Romanesque architecture,
also contains the first evidence of Gothic design. The nave at Durham
contains pointed traverses and pointed arches while flying buttresses in
the form of quadrant arches are concealed over the aisles - the main
elements of Gothic, 20 years before this style was seen elsewhere in
Europe.