Thread on the ages of Notre Dame, from Alistair Horne: "In the popular concept of the early Middle Ages, a church was likened to a ship steering for harbor...pic.twitter.com/xWiWjWgXHw
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"Six years later he would marry Josephine's successor, Marie Louise of Austria, there. ...
"Two decades later, Victor Hugo lent Sully's 12th-century handiwork new romantic life in his creation of the figures of Quasimodo and the hapless Esmeralda in his great eponymous novel ...
"Most of what one sees of Notre-Dame today, however, is the legacy of the 19th-century gothic medieval restorer -- or vandal, depending on the point of view -- Viollet-le-Duc, creator of the walled city of Carcassonne that is so romantically ...
"...exciting when seen from a distance, so phoney close up. ...
"Even the 28 Kings of Judah on the great western facade, destroyed by revolutionary zealots, are reproductions of Sully's originals. ...
"Then, seven years after Viollet completed his work, Notre-Dame was threatened once again with destruction, this time by the Commune in 1871, when pews were actually piled up in the center of the nave and soaked with petroleum. ...
"Notre-Dome, however, was to outlive them all." (From Alistair Horne's "Seven Ages of Paris", Random House, 2002) (END)
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