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Porte Notre Dame de Cambrai dans le Nord

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Patrimoine urbain
Porte-de-ville
Nord

Porte Notre Dame de Cambrai

    Porte Notre-Dame
    59400 Cambrai
Porte Notre-Dame de Cambrai
Porte Notre-Dame de Cambrai
Crédit photo : Camster2 - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1700
1800
1900
2000
1677
Taking Cambrai by Louis XIV
18 avril 1914
Historical monument classification
Fin du XIXe siècle
Dismantling of fortifications
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Porte Notre-Dame : classification by official journal of April 18, 1914

Key figures

Louis XIV - King of France Sun symbol added after 1677.

Origin and history

The Notre Dame Gate, also known as the Valenciennes Gate, is a vestige of the fortifications of Cambrai, in the northern department. It consists of a vaulted passage surmounted by a floor housing a guard room, all covered by a roof pierced with skylights. Its exterior façade, adorned with diamond dot bosses, features a niche housing a statue of Virgin and Child. Four rows of columns, initially crowned with pinnacles (two of which disappeared), frame the building. A carved pediment represents a soldier surrounded by flags, surmounted by a sun, symbol of Louis XIV, added after the capture of Cambrai by French troops in 1677.

Originally, a less decorated second door, connected by a tunnel under the fortifications, existed on the city side. This whole was dismantled at the end of the 19th century when the ramparts were destroyed. The interior façade, partially rebuilt in bricks and stones, retains a guard room accessible on request. The gate replaces an earlier medieval building, known as Porte du Malle, whose precise traces remain uncertain.

Classified as a historic monument since 18 April 1914, the Notre Dame Gate illustrates Cambrai's military heritage and the urban transformations linked to French expansion under Louis XIV. Its architecture combines defensive and decorative elements, testifying to the strategic and symbolic stakes of the time. The presence of the Royal Sun recalls the control of central power over the region after 1677.

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