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Secrets of the Dead: Building Notre Dame - PBS

How did the Notre Dame cathedral emerge over the centuries as one of the world’s most celebrated and beloved buildings? Secrets of the Dead: Building Notre Dame takes viewers on a major historical and scientific investigation into the construction of Notre Dame de Paris, which began in the 12th century and was completed several hundred years later. Standing alongside the builders of yesterday and today, uncover the vast architectural, technical, human, financial and political challenges experienced throughout the cathedral’s turbulent history.

Film Interviewees

Ken Follett – Novelist; Author of “The Pillars of the Earth”
Yann Potin – Historian, French National Archives
Caroline Bruzelius – Historian, Duke University
Dany Sandron – Historian, Sorbonne University
Philippe Villeneuve – Chief Architect of France’s Historic Monuments, in charge of Notre-Dame de Paris
Stephan Albrecht – Historian, University of Bamberg
Olivier de Châlus – Historian, Sorbonne University
Jean-Michel Leniaud – Architectural Historian
François Icher – Historian, French National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS)
Florian Renucci – Master Mason, Guédelon Castle Building Site
Noteworthy Facts

Following his election in 1160, Maurice de Sully, bishop of Paris, set his sights on constructing a new, grand cathedral. Pope Alexander III and King Louis VII blessed the first stone of the new cathedral in the spring of 1163.
Notre Dame de Paris was named in honor of the Virgin Mary, who was becoming an increasingly popular figure in Catholicism.
The construction of Notre Dame took full advantage of the technical innovations that defined Gothic architecture of the Middle Ages, including arches that allowed the cathedral’s vaults to rise higher and made it possible to install large bays of windows that rivaled the architecture of other churches of the time.
Construction of Notre Dame entered a second phase under the reign of King Philippe Auguste, who decided to make Paris the capital of France. During his reign, France became a European power and the population of Paris doubled.
To construct the complex vaulted ceiling, the builders built a wooden framework on pillars; then stone blocks were placed on top of the framework one by one. These “ribs” of stone blocks came together to lock with the keystone, allowing more stone blocks to be used to enclose the vaults.
In the early 13th century, the builders realized they needed a system that would carry rainwater away from the cathedral’s exterior stone walls to prevent erosion and damage. They hollowed out the tops of the flying buttresses and connected them to form a network for water collection, with the water shooting out of the mouths of gargoyles that cap each of the flying buttresses.
By the mid-13th century, after 70 years of construction, the general form of Notre Dame de Paris was finished, complete with heavy bronze bells that marked the rhythms of daily life for Parisians.
As the Renaissance blossoms in the 14th century, the architectural style of Notre Dame, now known as Gothic, begins to fall out of favor. As centuries pass, Notre Dame takes on an increasingly larger role in civic life because of its ability to host massive crowds due to its size.
In 1831, the release of poet Victor Hugo’s history-making novel “The Hunchback of Notre Dame” gives new life to the cathedral, with Parisians now viewing it as a national treasure.
Restoration of the cathedral began in 1843 under architect Eugène Viollet-le-Duc.

Видео Secrets of the Dead: Building Notre Dame - PBS канала The Random Zone
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7 сентября 2020 г. 6:00:00
00:55:22
Яндекс.Метрика