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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsThe Spire of Notre Dame Tumbled Like a Spear Into the Heart of Something Timeless
The Spire of Notre Dame Tumbled Like a Spear Into the Heart of Something Timeless
At a time when intellect and human achievement are under attack, we lost a monument to both.
BY CHARLES P. PIERCE
APR 15, 2019
In 1823, a workman laboring on the roof of the Basilica of St. Paul Outside the Walls in Rome, which had stood untouched above the alleged tomb of St. Paul for over 1,400 years, started a fire that destroyed the basilica almost entirely. Over the next 17 years, contributions from the likes of the Viceroy of Egypt and the Russian Tsar enabled the church to rebuild the place. I suspect that's what next when the ashes finally cool on Ile de la Cite and they go about the business of rebuilding Notre-Dame de Paris. After all, it's already happened once; the cathedral was ransacked and vandalized during the French Revolution, but, thanks to Victor Hugo's novel about the hunchbacked bellringer, a restoration project was launched that took 25 years.
It was, of course, a made for television catastrophe. A building almost 900 years old, burning in the Parisian twilight, a spire tumbling to the ground like a flaming spear into the heart of something timeless. Great video. If there only had been cable news when the Colossus of Rhodes came down, or when the Alexandrian Lighthouse tumbled into the sea. And, of course, because this is 2019 and America is out of its mind, the president* provided the comic relief, bellowing into the electric Twitter machine like the guy who clears out the end of a Manhattan saloon.
...
It was as much a museum as a place of worship. There was much talk on Monday about how the crown of thorns also may have been destroyed in the fire, especially among credulous anchorfolk who would believe anything. The alleged crown of thorns in question showed up in France in 1238 when the king of Jerusalem gave it to Louis IX. (It previously had been held as collateral for a loan from bankers in Venice.) There is no reason for anyone to believe this is the actual crown of thorns, of course, but apparently it was saved along with a number of other valuable artifacts, so good for all involved.
The cathedral, of course, was a monumental work of art that contained, and was festooned with, other monumental works of art. It was central to French history, good and bad. Heretics were burned in front of it. The Third Crusade was proclaimed there, as was the Festival of Reason. Henry VI of England was crowned king also of France within it, and so was Napoleon. It also hosted the marriage of Henry III of Navarre to Margaret of Valois. This interfaith weddingHenry was a Protestantwas the precursor to the massacre of the Huguenots on St. Bartholomew's Day in 1572. It survived Robespierre and Adolph Hitler. Now, it may have fallen to the same kind of industrial accident that brought down the basilica in Rome almost 300 years ago.
History burns as well as wood does. In 2018, the National Museum of Brazil burned and 200 years of assembled history was lost, including the 11,000-year old skull of an early human. Earlier this month, in Tennessee, the Highlander Center, one of the intellectual seedbeds of the long struggle for African-American civil rights was lost to what probably was arson. These places are not as famous, nor as picturesque, as Notre-Dame, but with intellect and vaulting human achievement under attack in so many places these days, all of them leave a lot of the best of what we are in ashes, falling from an evening sky.
https://www.esquire.com/news-politics/politics/a27155538/notre-dame-fire-spire-collapse/
Hekate
(90,708 posts)I'm still tearing up at each of these tributes as they come in.
mcar
(42,334 posts)The history, art and architecture that's been lost.
I was raised Catholic and even went to a Jesuit college. In on class, many moons ago, we studied the architecture of ancient churches, particularly Notre Dame. I was fascinated.
Hekate
(90,708 posts)...of how it felt to be a young man (he himself was once young) standing inside the great Gothic cathedral Notre Dame de Paris, looking up and up and up at all those flying buttresses and stained glass.
It was in good part because of Charlie Miller that I ended up majoring in history, although I went in the direction of Asia -- intending, like Robert Frost, to return another day. Mr Miller's been gone these many years, but I have not forgotten him, and if I'd ever had a bucket list, Notre Dame would have been on it.
malaise
(269,022 posts)he must have heard George on with lyin' Brian this afternoon.