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Church of Saint Paul of Narbonne dans l'Aude

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Eglise romane et gothique
Aude

Church of Saint Paul of Narbonne

    30 Rue Dupleix
    11100 Narbonne
Église Saint-Paul de Narbonne
Église Saint-Paul de Narbonne
Église Saint-Paul de Narbonne
Église Saint-Paul de Narbonne
Église Saint-Paul de Narbonne
Église Saint-Paul de Narbonne
Église Saint-Paul de Narbonne
Église Saint-Paul de Narbonne
Église Saint-Paul de Narbonne
Église Saint-Paul de Narbonne
Église Saint-Paul de Narbonne
Église Saint-Paul de Narbonne
Église Saint-Paul de Narbonne
Église Saint-Paul de Narbonne
Église Saint-Paul de Narbonne
Église Saint-Paul de Narbonne
Église Saint-Paul de Narbonne
Église Saint-Paul de Narbonne
Église Saint-Paul de Narbonne
Église Saint-Paul de Narbonne
Église Saint-Paul de Narbonne
Église Saint-Paul de Narbonne
Église Saint-Paul de Narbonne
Église Saint-Paul de Narbonne
Église Saint-Paul de Narbonne
Église Saint-Paul de Narbonne
Église Saint-Paul de Narbonne
Église Saint-Paul de Narbonne
Église Saint-Paul de Narbonne
Église Saint-Paul de Narbonne
Église Saint-Paul de Narbonne
Église Saint-Paul de Narbonne
Église Saint-Paul de Narbonne
Église Saint-Paul de Narbonne
Église Saint-Paul de Narbonne
Église Saint-Paul de Narbonne
Église Saint-Paul de Narbonne
Église Saint-Paul de Narbonne
Église Saint-Paul de Narbonne
Église Saint-Paul de Narbonne
Église Saint-Paul de Narbonne
Église Saint-Paul de Narbonne
Église Saint-Paul de Narbonne
Église Saint-Paul de Narbonne
Église Saint-Paul de Narbonne
Église Saint-Paul de Narbonne
Église Saint-Paul de Narbonne
Église Saint-Paul de Narbonne
Église Saint-Paul de Narbonne
Église Saint-Paul de Narbonne
Crédit photo : Florent Pécassou - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
700
800
1100
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
719
Muslim conquest
759
Merovingian Conquest
1180
Preroman reconstruction
1224
Beginning of Gothic Works
1244
Transfer of tomb
1265
Completion of work
1368
Fire of the nave
1432-1458
Reconstruction of spans
1508
Closed Bell
1751
Consolidation of the bell tower
1862
Historical Monument
1942-1946
Archaeological excavations
1953
Minor basilica erection
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The church: ranking by list of 1862

Key figures

Saint Paul-Serge - First Bishop of Narbonne Tomb transferred to the choir in 1244.
Abbé Robaldus (Robaldo) - Abbé and Bishop of Pavia Directed the Gothic reconstruction from 1224.
Grégoire de Tours - French historian Evoked Saint Paul in Historia Francorum.
Jacques Gamelin - 18th Century Painter Author of four paintings of the choir.
Frédéric Mistral - Provencal poet Popularized the legend of the frog.
Henri Nodet - Chief Architect Restaura balustrades and berries in the 20th century.
Saint Rustique - Archbishop of Narbonne (427-461) Represented in a classified table.
Jean-François Clément - Anthropologist Qualified the mosque of Narbonne as one of the oldest in France.

Origin and history

The Basilica of St Paul of Narbonne, originally a medieval collegiate, draws its origins from a first building burned in the fifth century. After the Muslim conquest of Narbonne in 719, a mosque was installed in the old basilica atrium, destroyed after the Merovingian reconquest of 759. A pre-Roman church was rebuilt around 1180, then deeply transformed from 1224 under the impulse of Abbé Robaldus, the future bishop of Pavia. The choir, the transept, and the nave were taken over, and the tomb of Saint Paul-Serge was transferred there in 1244. The work was completed in 1265, marking the culmination of a major Gothic construction site.

In the 14th century, a fire in 1368 damaged the cover of the nave, causing the reconstruction of the vaults and the bell tower. Between 1432 and 1458, the two western spans were rebuilt, and in the sixteenth century six piles of the nave were reinforced by circular piles. An unfinished bell tower, started in 1508, was interrupted by the construction of the new ramparts behind the façade. The modifications continued over the centuries, with notable restorations in the 18th century (consolidation of the bell tower in 1751) and in the 20th century, where Henri Nodet restored the balustrades of the walker and the bays of the transept.

The church, classified as a Historical Monument in 1862 and elevated to the rank of minor basilica in 1953, contains a rich interior decor. The capitals of the nave represent damnes devoured by monsters, while those of the choir, decorated with dacanthe leaves and daguerites, bear witness to a refined Gothic art. Four paintings by Jacques Gamelin adorn the choir, including an Assumption of the Virgin and a Saint Charles Borromée. The left transept houses Renaissance vantals and vestiges of tapestries from Aubusson in 1696. A local legend, popularized by Frédéric Mistral, tells the story of a frog carved at the bottom of a benign man, whose leg was broken by a carpenter companion.

Saint Paul-Serge, the first bishop of Narbonne, is a central figure in the history of the place. According to Grégoire de Tours, he was one of the seven missionaries who came from Rome in the third century to evangelize Gaul. His tomb, transferred to the choir in 1244, attracted constant devotion, making the church a major stage on Via Tolosana, a pilgrimage path to Santiago de Compostela. Archaeological excavations carried out between 1942 and 1946 revealed a Paleo-Christian cemetery around his grave, confirming his role in the Christianization of Narbonnaise. The sarcophagi discovered, some of them carved, date from the Constantinian era and attest to the reuse of an earlier pagan necropolis.

The abbey adjacent to the church, secularized in 1206, housed a community of canons until 1791. Carolingian diplomas of 782 and 843 attest to its importance from the early Middle Ages, where it was recognized as the second church in Narbonne after the cathedral. The restorations of the twentieth century, led by Henri Nodet, allowed to highlight archaeological remains, including a pre-Christian cella memoriae and mosaics. Two paintings classified as Historical Monuments, a portrait of Saint Rustic (Archbishop of Narbonne in the 5th century) and a Penitent Mary-Madeleine, were rediscovered and restored thanks to the intervention of the municipality.

The architecture of the basilica is distinguished by the absence of bow-buttons, the high vaults being countered by an elevated walkway and massive foothills. The apsidioles, illuminated by narrow, flared windows, are decorated with columns topped by broken arches. The radiant chapels, united under one roof, illustrate a remarkable technical mastery. Today, the Basilica of Saint Paul-Serge remains an exceptional testimony of southern Gothic art, mixing paleo-Christian, Roman and medieval heritages.

External links