Notre-Dame de Dijon
unknown (French)
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Alternative Title
Notre Dame, Dijon
Date
1220-1250Description
View looking up, depicting the full west front; The building dates from the first half of the thirteenth century. Viollet-le-Duc studied the structure of Notre-Dame de Dijon. The tall, monolithic and incredibly thin colonettes which support the apse vaults he describes as "splender pins, as strong as if they were of cast iron, thanks to the quality of the stone employed". In 1183-1187 Hugh III granted free status to the inhabitants. The Gothic parish church of Notre-Dame (1220-1250), with a deep narthex, a façade with superimposed galleries and a lantern-tower, became the centre of municipal life; the city clock was installed there in 1386 (Dijon had no town hall before 1500). Source: Grove Art Online; http://www.oxfordartonline.com/ (accessed 7/16/2008)
Type of Work
church; stained glass (visual work)Subject
architectural exteriors, Mary, Blessed Virgin, Saint, religious, Gothic (Medieval)
Rights
Rights Statement
Licensed for educational and research use by the MIT community only