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Nazareth Synagogue in Paris

Nazareth Synagogue in Paris

Paris, FR

The Nazareth Synagogue in Paris was completed in 1852 by architect Jean Alexandre Thierry. This brick synagogue is still in use.

Church of Saint-Laurent

Church of Saint-Laurent

Paris, FR

According to Saint Gregory of Tours, the church was built on the traces of an ancient road. Indeed, it seems that the base of the bell tower is the oldest vestige. The choir was consecrated in 1429 and six chapels may have been added in 1548. In 1621, the priest Pierre d'Hardivilliers signed a contract for the erection of a gate and, undoubtedly, the completion of the northern collateral. The chapels on the south side were built in 1645, at the same time as a mass grave (cemetery). The vault and roof structure were completed between 1655 and 1660 and the parish was built at the beginning of the 18th century. The breakthrough of the Boulevard de Magenta decided by Haussman led to the destruction of the 17th century gate. When Boulevard Magenta was opened, the church was enlarged by a span and Simon-Claude Constant-Dufeu, applying the principles of unity of style of Viollet-le-Duc, and at the Empress's request, built the current neo-Gothic façade between 1862 and 1865. The entrance span and the spire that covers it were built in 1870.

Basilica of Saint-Denis

Basilica of Saint-Denis

Saint-Denis, FR

The basilica was built on the tomb of Saint Denis and was the burial place of the kings of France after Dagobert's death in 639. From 1135 and even before, Father Suger undertook the reconstruction of the Carolingian church. The harmonic facade, witness of the new Gothic period, was dedicated on June 9, 1140 and the chevet was consecrated in 1144. The whole thing was completed in the 13th century at the time of Saint-Louis.

Church of Saint-Louis-en-l'Île

Church of Saint-Louis-en-l'Île

Paris, FR

The Saint-Louis-en-l'Île church is a French church located on the island of Saint-Louis. The construction of the building was spread out in several stages from 1624 to 1726.

Church of Notre-Dame-des-Blancs-Manteaux

Church of Notre-Dame-des-Blancs-Manteaux

Paris, FR

The Blancs-Manteaux monastery was founded in 1258. From 1685 to 1690, the monastery and its church were rebuilt to house the novitiate of the Benedictines of Paris, home to a centre of scholarship. The convent was suppressed and the church sold in 1796, it reopened by government decree in 1800 and was purchased by the City of Paris in 1807, it changed from a monastery church to a parish church. The bombardment of August 26, 1944 damaged the stained glass windows and the organ. Since then, the instrument has been rebuilt and the stained glass windows replaced by new ones representing the great moments in the history of the Blancs-Manteaux. With the exception of the church, the presbytery is the only surviving part of the convent.

Saint-Martin-des-Champs Priory

Saint-Martin-des-Champs Priory

Paris, FR

A Merovingian funerary basilica was built on this site around the 6th and 7th centuries and renovated in the Carolingian period. The Royal Priory of Saint-Martin-des-Champs, Cluny's third daughter, was founded in 1060 and a new building was built on this presumed site of a miracle by Saint Martin. The original plan of the choir probably inspired that of the Basilica of Saint-Denis built a few years later, the church of the Conservatory would constitute the oldest testimony of Parisian Gothic. The abbey was declared a national property in 1790 and since 1798 has housed the new Conservatory of Arts and Crafts created by Abbot Gregory in 1794, whose former abbey church, abandoned for worship, serves as an exhibition room for its museum. The complex was largely refurbished under the July Monarchy and the Second Empire, under the direction of the architect Léon Vaudoyer. The Foucault pendulum has been installed in the choir.

Grand Mosque of Paris

Grand Mosque of Paris

Paris, FR

The Great Mosque of Paris is one of the largest mosques in France and the first built on the metropolitan territory. It was inaugurated in 1926 to honour the Muslim soldiers who defended France during the First World War.

Church of Saint-Nicolas-des-Champs

Church of Saint-Nicolas-des-Champs

Paris, FR

"Temple of the Hymen and Fidelity" in 1795, the church was returned to worship in 1802. It was restored in the first half of the 19th century (in 1823 and again in 1843). Altarpiece of the main altar by Simon Vouet and Jacques Sarrazin.

Church of Saint-Gervais-Saint-Protais

Church of Saint-Gervais-Saint-Protais

Paris, FR

Saint-Gervais is considered one of the first parishes on the right bank. The remains of an ancient cemetery and a vast Merovingian necropolis discovered around Saint-Gervais would explain the age of the foundation. The church was consecrated in 1420, then enlarged from 1494 until about 1620. The facade is the first of a church to use the classical vocabulary of orders in a monumental way, in accordance with the ancient fashion that prevailed in the 16th and 17th centuries. It was closed in 1793 and reopened in 1795 and shared between Catholics and theophilanthropists until the Concordat. On Good Friday, March 29, 1918, a German shell destroyed part of the nave in the middle of the mass, killing about a hundred people.

Church of Saint-Vincent-de-Paul

Church of Saint-Vincent-de-Paul

Paris, FR

The first stone was laid in 1824. The realization was entrusted to Jean-Baptiste Lepère and taken over in 1831 by his genus Jean-Ignace Hittorf. The work was slowed down by the Revolution of 1830 but the church was finally consecrated in 1844. The Chapel of the Virgin Mary was built between 1869 and 1870. It was Napoleon III who offered the sculpture of the Virgin Mary made by Carrier-Belleuse.

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