A Religious site
Construction
The Building
It took until 1345 before the cathedral was
completed, partly because the design was enlarged during construction.
The result is an overwhelming building, 128m long (420 ft) with two 69
meter tall towers (226 ft). The spire, which reaches
90m (295 ft), was added in the 19th century by Viollet-le-Duc. The
Notre-Dame Cathedral has several large rose windows, the northern 13th
century window is the most impressive. The massive window has a diameter
of 13.1 meter.
The frontal west facade features 3 wide portals; above the portals is the Gallery of Kings - 28 statues of Judean Kings - and higher up are the famous gargoyles and grotesques. The spectacular eastern flying buttresses at the east side of the building are 15m wide.
The frontal west facade features 3 wide portals; above the portals is the Gallery of Kings - 28 statues of Judean Kings - and higher up are the famous gargoyles and grotesques. The spectacular eastern flying buttresses at the east side of the building are 15m wide.
Restoration
During the Revolution, many of the cathedral's
sculptures, gargoyles and interior was removed or demolished. Even the
gallery of Kings was severely damaged: the revolutionaries though the
statues represented
French Kings.
It wasn't until the 19th century before the Cathedral was fully restored thanks in part to the writer Victor Hugo, who with his book 'Notre-Dame de Paris', made the Parisians realise the cathedral was worth restoring. The 20 year long restoration was led by a local architect, Eugène Emmanuel Viollet-le-Duc. Viollet-le-Duc made drastic, controversial modifications to the building and even added a spire. The cathedral was restored again between 1991 and 2001, this time the historic architecture was carefully preserved.
French Kings.
It wasn't until the 19th century before the Cathedral was fully restored thanks in part to the writer Victor Hugo, who with his book 'Notre-Dame de Paris', made the Parisians realise the cathedral was worth restoring. The 20 year long restoration was led by a local architect, Eugène Emmanuel Viollet-le-Duc. Viollet-le-Duc made drastic, controversial modifications to the building and even added a spire. The cathedral was restored again between 1991 and 2001, this time the historic architecture was carefully preserved.
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