Visiting Saint-Denis...

Oct 09, 2010 17:24



Once upon a time, when the Romans were martyring Christians, the Romans tried to get rid of a troublesome Parisian bishop named Denis by chopping his head off. It might have worked with most people, but Bishop Denis was more stubborn than most. He picked his head up off the ground and stalked off with it, walking with it as far as the nearby ( Read more... )

travels, history

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silverwhistle October 10 2010, 11:53:31 UTC
I've 2 lovely picture-books on Saint-Denis (have never been, and at this rate am never likely to):
François Olivier Rousseau & Patricia Canino, Corps de Pierre: Gisants de la Basilique de Saint-Denis
and
Alain Erlande-Brandenburg, L'Eglise Abbatiale de Saint-Denis: vol. 2 Les Tombeaux Royaux.
I love the Renissance cadaver tombs. I want to give Queen Claude a cuddle: poor little girl, she looks so fragile and wasted (unsurprisingly - she died in her eighth childbirth at the age of only 24, having been pretty much continually pregnant since she was 15). And Henri II and Catherine de Medici look frankly post-coital.

A pity there's no Louis XIII effigy (and never was): he was the last reasonably good-looking one.

They also have Léon de Lusignan of Armenia (originally in the Church of the Celestines in Paris), and that swine Charles d'Anjou (originally in the Church of the Jacobins in Paris) who killed our Conrad's last descendants… Quite a lot of the effigies have been moved from other churches (some of which were destroyed) in Paris.

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fajrdrako October 11 2010, 10:13:28 UTC
There was an 'unknown princess' I felt most moved by; a sweet-looking young woman who in her lifetime was a princess but who has been entirely forgotten and lost in time.

I'm sure the implication with Henri and Catherine is not accidental.

I noticed Leon of Armenia and got quite excited. Explained to my long-suffering friend why I was thrilled to see a Lusignan. She seemed to believe it.

Really, I was somewhat surprised how many of those effigies remain.

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silverwhistle October 11 2010, 10:17:50 UTC
There was an 'unknown princess' I felt most moved by

I'll have to see if she's in the books!

Really, I was somewhat surprised how many of those effigies remain.

It's interesting how many have been brought from other places. I hadn't realised until I read some of the details in the books.

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fajrdrako October 11 2010, 10:41:45 UTC
I covet those books!

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silverwhistle October 11 2010, 10:45:55 UTC
I covet having a holiday.
I feel quite sick, actually, reading your adventures. I haven't been anywhere except my parents', increasingly only for caring duties, for 5 years, and can't see myself having a holiday unless they die or I get a full-time job. The former seems more likely. Being registered as a temp, I can't go anywhere, even if my parents were to give me the money, for fear of missing out on a job. I've never, ever been to Paris, and it's killing me reading this, because I fear I never will.

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fajrdrako October 26 2010, 16:17:03 UTC
Sorry to have made you feel bad - I hope you do manage to get a real holiday sometime soon.

I'm about to register as a temp.

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silverwhistle October 26 2010, 16:58:54 UTC
The job centre told me today to try call-centres.

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fajrdrako October 26 2010, 18:51:22 UTC
That sounds depressing!

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