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Ste Chapelle Chapel of the King

Saint Chapelle



Ste Chapelle

Metro Cité, Châtelet

Arrondissement 1er


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Sainte Chapelle in located on the Ile de la Cité, not far from Notre Dame and mostly surrounded by the Palais de Justice.

It is open from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. every day and the price of admission is 5.50 euro.

La Ste Chapelle (French for The Holy Chapel) is a Gothic chapel on the Ile de la Cité, in the heart of Paris.

It is perhaps the purest example of high Gothic arcitecture in the world.

The reason for that can be attributed to the speed at which it was built. Begun in 1246, it was completed and consecrated on April 26, 1248, and was most likely designed by one person.

No designer-builder is directly mentioned in the archives, but the name of Pierre de Montreuil has been historically connected with the chapel.

Pierre de Montreuil had rebuilt the apse of the Abbey of Saint Denis and completed the façade of Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris.

The patron was Louis IX who had it built as the chapel for the royal palace.

The palace itself has disappeared, leaving the Ste Chapelle surrounded by the Palais de Justice.

The Palais de Justice was where important aristocrats pled their cases before the king.

At the time it was built, Ste Chapelle needed suitable relics: Christ's crown of thorns was available.

Unlike many devout aristocrats, who merely stole the relics they wanted, Louis IX bought his relics, purchased from the Latin emperor at Constantinople, Baldwin II, for the exorbitant sum of 135,000 livres.

The entire chapel, by contrast, cost 40,000 livres to build.

A piece of the True Cross was later added, and other relics as well. Thus, the building was like a precious reliquary.

Politics had much to do with the building of Ste Chapelle. The Emperor in Constantinople was, in the mind of Louis IX, only a Count from Flanders. That and the fact that the Holy Roman Empire was at this time in great disarray, Louis IX saw an opportunity to make his city the major center of Christendom.

The Royal Chapel stands squarely upon a lower chapel, which served as parish church for all the inhabitants of the palace. The Palace itself was the seat of government.

The most visually beautiful aspects of the chapel are its stained glass for which the stonework is a delicate frame. They are considered the finest examples of their type in the world. The rose windows were added to the upper chapel in the 15th century.

During the French Revolution, the chapel was converted to an administrative office, and the windows were covered by enormous filing cabinets.

These file cabinets, whether by design or fortunate accident, protected the windows from the vandalism which had destroyed the choir stalls and the rood screen inside the chapel.

The spire was also pulled down and the relics dispersed.

In the 19th century Viollet le Duc restored the Ste Chapelle to its present state. The new spire is his design.

Ste Chapelle has been a national historic monument since 1862.

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