Chartres Cathedral
Item
- Title
- Alternative Title
- Drafter
- City
- Location
- Building Creation Date
- Century
- Description
- Classification
- Building Type
- Documentation Type
- Style/Period
- Cultural Context
- Subject
- Source
- Access Rights
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Chartres Cathedral
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Cathédrale Notre-Dame de Chartres
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Cathedral of Our Lady of Chartres
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King, Thomas Harper (English architect, born 1822)
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Chartres, Centre, France
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France
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rebuilt 1194-1260 (creation)
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12th century
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13th century
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elevation of west façade, elevations
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Dedicated to Notre-Dame, Chartres Cathedral acquired strong associations with the cult of the Virgin. Most of the 12th- and 13th-century sculpture and stained glass survive, to make the cathedral one of the most 'complete' medieval buildings in existence. The present cathedral was built after a fire in 1194
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of the earlier church only the 11th-century crypt and the 12th-century western block survive. The cathedral, built of limestone, is about 34 m high and 130 m long internally. It has a four-bay choir with double aisles and a double ambulatory with six radiating chapels, of which three are shallow and three, reflecting the surviving crypt chapels, are deeper. [A UNESCO World Heritage Site]
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Architectural Documentation
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elevations
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Gothic (Medieval)
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French
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Cathedrals -- Gothic -- France -- Chartres -- Cathédrale de Chartres
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King, Thomas H. The Study-book of Mediaeval Architecture and Art. Bruges, Belgium: C. Beyaert, 1893, 52.
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Public Domain
- Item sets
- Architecture Illustrations
“Chartres Cathedral”, Arch Design Images, accessed November 15, 2024, https://exhibits.lib.ttu.edu/s/archlib/item/18470