Saint-Médard, Paris, is a Roman Catholic church located at 105 Rue Mouffetard in the 5th arrondissement of Paris. It takes its name from Saint Medard, the bishop of Noyon in northern France, who was protector of Queen Radegund, and helped her found a convent at Noyon to escape her abusive husband, King Chlothar I. Medard is the patron saint of French farmers.[1]

Saint-Médard
Saint-Médard, Paris
Religion
AffiliationCatholic Church
ProvinceArchdiocese of Paris
RiteRoman Catholic
Location
Location141 Rue Mouffetard, 5th arrondissement, Paris
Geographic coordinates48°51′8″N 2°20′50″E / 48.85222°N 2.34722°E / 48.85222; 2.34722
Architecture
TypeChurch
StyleFlamboyant, Neoclassical
Completed15th−18th century

History edit

Early Christian tombs from the Merovingian period were found by archeologists a few meters from the present church. The cemetery was probably connected with an early oratory from the sixth or seventh century.[2] In the ninth century, following the Norman invasions, there was a chapel dedicated to Saint Medard, close to the route of the Roman road which connected Roman Lutetia with Lyon, near the point where the road crossed the Bievre River. The existence of this church, whose parish was later attached to the Abbey of Saint Genevieve, is documented in a papal bull in 1163 from Pope Alexander III.

Construction of the present church took place from the early or middle of the 15th century until the 18th century. The work was interrupted by the Wars of Religion. In December 1561, the church was the scene of a dispute between Protestants and Catholics which led to the pillage of the church by the Protestants.[3] In 1655, the church was placed directly under the Archbishop of Paris, but kept a close relationship with the nearby Abbey of Saint-Genevieve. In 1683 it became a parish church, within the jurisdiction of the Abbot of Saint-Genevieve.[4] In 1724, the faubourg Sant-Marcel was integrated into the growing city of Paris.[5]

In the 18th century the church came under the influence of a more radical group of clerics known as the Convulsionnaires of Saint-Médard. The Convulsionnaires believed that going into a trance and having convulsions could cure illnesses, and was a valid expression of Christian faith. The church was also frequented by the Jansenists who also expressed non-traditional Catholic doctrines. Prominent Jansenists connected with Saint-Medard included the philosopher-mathematician Blaise Pascal. the theologian Pierre Nicole, and another leading Jansenist theologian, François de Pâris, who was buried in the church cemetery.[6] Followers of the Jansenists and Convulsionnairers met secretly in the cemetery at his grave. The Pope declared Jansenism a heresy, and issued a decree forbidding access to the cemetery. Convulsionnaires were arrested and imprisoned in the Bastille.[1][7]

In 1784, an ambitious new building program began, under the architect Petit-Radel. The choir was modified and a new axial chapel was added to the apse at the east end. During the French Revolution, the clergy of church were required to take an oath to the civil Constitution, which they did, but, in November 1793, as the Revolution became more radical, the church was shut down by the government. In 1798 it re-opened in a new form as a Constitutional church, with the clergy taking an oath to the government as well as the church. The building was shared between the Catholics and a congregation of revolutionary Christians called Theophilanthropes. They was soon replaced by another Revolutionary church called the Decadire, or Constitutional Catholics. The week was modified from seven to ten days, and on each tenth day it became a Temple of Labor. In 1801, when Napoleon signed a Concordat with the Pope at Notre-Dame, the church was finally restored to the Catholic Church.[5]

Exterior edit

The exterior is a somewhat awkward collection of architecture; the flying buttresses are supported by very massive abutments, but do not align with the chapels alongside the church, indicating that the chapels were built afterwards.[5] The sides of the church are lined by rows of trees, and the building is difficult to see except in winter.

The west front, facing rue Mouffetard, features a large bay filled with a large Flamboyant Gothic window, flanked by Flamboyant pinnacles, dating the upper facade to the 15th century. However, the lower part of the facade, rebuilt in the 18th century and again in the 19th century, has no decoration or architectural distinction. Some architectural historians believe that the original facade resembled that of Saint-Nicolas-des Champs in the 3rd arrondissement.[5]

The plan and the interior edit

The nave and the western front were built in the middle of the 15th century. The west front was extensively changed in the 18th and 19th century, and the lower portions were entirely redesigned. The choir, the portion of church at the east end where the clergy worships, was constructed between 1562 and 1620. The Chapel of the Virgin, the axial chapel at the east end of the church, was added in 1784.

The nave, and the choir edit

The periods of construction are visible in the different styles in the nave. The first three traverses of the nave date to the mid-15th to the early-16th century. are in the Flamboyant or late Gothic style. mid-15th to the early-16th century. The arcades have pointed arches, and are supported by columns without capitals. The next three traverses are from the 17th century, in a larger "tier-point" form. The choir, built between the mid-16th and the beginning of the 17th century, is in the Renaissance style, with rounded arches. In the 1622 the choir was given a new vaulted ceiling built of wood instead of stone. In the 18th century, the columns were carved with grooves to give them a more classical appearance. The carved wooden tower of the pulpit (1718) between the nave and choir is the classical centerpiece of the church.[8]

The disambulatory and chapels edit

The oldest chapels are located on the left side in the west end of the nave. The disambulatory around and behind the choir leads to a series of more recent chapels and the axial chapel at the east end, which was added in the 18th century. The chapels are filled with elaborate art work and decoration. The chapel at the east end of the church was constructed by the architect Louis-François Petit-Radel in 1784. In conformance with a vow made by King Louis XIII, this chapel, like other axial chapels in France of the period, were dedicated to the Virgin Mary. It has a classical simplicity. Until recent times, the chapel was closed off from view of the rest of the church by a wall of stone rubble.[5]

Art and Decoration edit

Sculpture edit

Column sculpture edit

Several vestiges of sculpture from the earlier churches can be seen in the column capitals and in places where the arches meet the walls of the nave.

Paintings edit

The chapels along the sides of the church contain several paintings by notable artists of the 18th and 19th centuries. They include:

The work by Zurbaran was originally painted for the altarpiece in a convent in Seville, then was sold to a French banker who placed it in the church. The painting of Caminade of "The Marriage of the Virgin" was commission by Cardinal Melchior de Polignac when Caminade was still a student in the Academy of Rome.[9]

Stained glass edit

In the chapels the church has preserved a number of old panels of stained glass from the 16th century, which have been inserted into newer windows.

The organ edit

The church organ, on the tribune over the west end of the church, was built by François-Henri Cliquot. The carved oak case of the organ was made in 1644–46 by the master wood artist Germain Pillon, and is one of the oldest in Paris. Its decoration features three towers topped with the heads of angels and harpies. At the top is a figure of Christ resurrected with two angels at his feet. The console of the organ is decorated with two angel- musicians.[9]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Dumoulin, Aline. 'Eglises de Paris", (2010) pp. 96–99.
  2. ^ Fleury, Michel, "l'Origine mérovingienne de l'église Saint-Médard", "Les Cahiers de la Rotonde" number 2, (1978)
  3. ^ History panel in front of the church
  4. ^ de Dainville-Barbiche, Ségolène. "Les prieurés-cures génovéfains", Devenir curé à Paris. Presses Universitaires de France, 2005, pp. 307-316
  5. ^ a b c d e "Église Saint-Medard à Paris", patrimoine-histoire.fr
  6. ^ Planta, Edward. A New Picture of Paris, Or, The Stranger's Guide to the French Metropolis, S. Leigh and Baldwin and Cradock, 1831, p. 223
  7. ^ "Religious Enthusiasm in Early Eighteenth-Century Paris: The Convulsionaries of Saint-Médard", "The Catholic Historical Review," Volume 61, issue 3, pages 353–385 (1975)
  8. ^ Dumoulin (2010), p. 27
  9. ^ a b Dumoulin (2010), p. 98

Bibliography edit

  • Dumoulin, Aline; Ardisson, Alexandra; Maingard, Jérôme; Antonello, Murielle; Églises de Paris (2010), Éditions Massin, Issy-Les-Moulineaux, ISBN 978-2-7072-0683-1
  • Lecompte, Francis and Ladoux, Bernard, "Paris Rive Gauche – Quartier Latin, St, Germain des Prés, Montparnasse – Les Essentials du Patrimoine", Éditions Massin, Paris, ISBN 978-2-7072-0870-5
  • Strayer, Brian E. (2008). Suffering Saints: Jansensists and Convulsionnaires in France, 1640–1799. Sussex Academic Press. ISBN 978-1-84519-245-7.

External links (In French) edit