Église Saint-Ambroise (Paris)
Church of Saint-Ambroise | |
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Église Saint-Ambroise | |
48°51′39.84″N 2°22′32.03″E / 48.8610667°N 2.3755639°E | |
Location | 11th arrondissement of Paris |
Country | France |
Denomination | Roman Catholic Church |
Saint-Ambroise (French pronunciation: [sɛ̃.t‿ɑ̃.bʁwaz]) is a Roman Catholic parish church located in the 11th arrondissement in eastern Paris. It is dedicated to St. Ambrose (339-377), an Italian statesman and theologian who served as Bishop of Milan.
The church of Saint-Ambroise gave the neighborhood its name, the quartier Saint-Ambroise. The current structure replaced an earlier church of Saint-Ambroise, built in 1659, which was demolished to make room for the new boulevards built by Napoleon III. The church is 87 metres in length, and its towers are 68 metres high. It is served by the Metro station Saint-Ambroise.
The church was inscribed as a French national historic monument on 2 June, 1978.
History
The First Church
The first chapel on the site was constructed in 1659 by the religious order of the Convent of the Annonciades de Popincourt, which had first occupied the site on Rue Popincourt in 1636. They left their convent in 1782, and two new streets were opened at the site in 1783, rue Saint-Ambroise and rue de Beauharnais.
In 1797, during the French Revolution, the church was closed and declared a national property, and was sold, but not demolished. Ibn 1802 it was attached to the Parish of Saint_Maguerite. In August 1811 it was purchased by the City of Paris, which launched a program of restoration and enlargement under the direction of Etienne-Hippolyte Godde.
The church was renamed Notre-Dame de la Procession. Unlike the traditional east-west orientation of churches, it was oriented north-south to fit into neighboring streets. The church was formally blessed on 15 November 1818.
The Second Church
The old church was demolished during the rebuilding carried it in the canter of Paris by Napoleon III and Baron Haussmann. It was torn down to make room for the new Boulevard Prince Eugene (now Boulevard Voltaire). A site nearby was offered for a new church at the head of the future Boulevard at the head of the new Boulevard. The new church was and work began in 1863 on new church at the head of the new Boulevard Voltaire.
The new church was designed by the architect Theodore Ballu. who was designated by Napoleon III as the official city architect for religious buildings. His churches included the Église de la Trinité (1861–1867), the Saint-Esprit Temple on Rue Roquépine, and the Church of Saint-Joseph (1866–1875). He also directed the Saint-Jacques Tower restoration (1854–1858)[1] and the construction of the Saint-Denis church in Argenteuil (1866).
L’Eglise de la Trinité was built between 1863 and 1868. The first mass was celebrated on 21 March, 1869. The construction lasted six years and officially cost 2,217,534 francs and fifty-eight centimes. The bells were blessed on April 29, 1869 in the presence of the Empress Eugenie, who was the patroness of one of the bells.
Notable Events
-During the Paris Commune the church was briefly transformed into a meeting hall for the Proletarian Club, where speakers advocated socialism and feminism. It was also was used storage depot for munitions.
On 18 March 1996 the church was occupied by about three hundred African immigrants who demanded regularization of their immigration status. After four days, and concerns about sanitary conditions, the group was ordered to leave by public authorities. When the occupants refused to leave, early in the morning of he church was cleared by the police. The same group shortly afterwards briefly ccupied another church, église Saint-Bernard
Exterior
The church was built in an eclectic style, sometimes termed Second Empire style, which combined Neo-Romanesque elements with those of the Neo-Gothic style. A similar example of the style is the Abbey of Saint-Etienne, Caen, which joined two Romanesque-style towers with Gothic spires.
The church is built with the hard stone of the Yonne and Meuse region for the foundations, the towers and the pillars, and the stone from the quarries of Saint-Maximim for the other elements.
The church is 87 meters in length and 37 meters wide at the transept, and has two identical bell towers, each 68 meters high, close to the height of the towers of Notre Dame de Paris. The spires are octagonal, and are flanked by four pinacles and topped by two crosses of iron, and by a small form of a rooster, the symbol of the French State, which indicates the highest point of the building and is also the symbol of the French State, the owner of the Cathedral.
In front of the church a small public garden includes a sculpture honoring sixty years of Catholic Aid, donated by local residents and sculpted by G. Chance.
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The southwest facade seen from the Jardin Truillot
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The facade
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the porch and facade
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The Chevet, or end of the nave
The porch has three doorways. The tympanum of each doorway is decorated with a painting made with vitreous enamel or porcelain enamel, an ancient Byzantine technique, These were painted by Giuseppe Devers (1823-1882). They represent allegorical figures of eloquence and theology, and a figure of Saint Ambroise.
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Vitreous enamel Painting of "Eloquence" over portal
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Vitreous enamel painting of Saint Ambroise.
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Vitreous enamel Painting of "Theology"
The Interior
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The nave, looking toward the altar
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The altar
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Side aisle and arcades
The nave of the church is 87 meters long and twenty meters high. The architecture is largely Romanesque, with large cylindrical pillars topped with floral capitals, which support the arcades and the triforium.
Stained glass
The transept, where the nave meets the choir, is decorated with stained glass windows, as are the chapels.
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The transept
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The Chapel of the Holy Virgin
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"Joseph the Carpenter"
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"The Flight into Egypt"
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Window of Saint Elizabeth of Hungary
The Grand Organ
The grand organ on the tribune over the entrance was built by the firm of Merklin-Schutze in 1869. A smaller organ is located in the choir.
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Site of the main organ, over the portal
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The main organ, in the tribune (1869)
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Choir organ of St. Ambrose
Notes and citations
Bibliography
- Michaux, M.L., "Histoire et description de l'église de Saint-Ambroise", published 1883 in Paris. (on line on BnF Gallica
External links
- Article on the church on Patrimoine-histoire.fr (in French)
- Media related to Église Saint-Ambroise de Paris at Wikimedia Commons