Bourges Cathedral (Cathédrale Saint-Étienne de Bourges) is a Roman Catholic cathedral, dedicated to Saint Stephen, located in Bourges, France. It is the seat of the Archbishop of Bourges.
History
The site occupied by the present cathedral, in what was once the northeastern corner of the Gallo-Roman
walled city, has been the site of the city's main church at least since
Carolingian times and probably since the foundation of the bishopric
in the 3rd century. The present Cathedral was built as a replacement
for a mid-11th-century structure, traces of which survive in the crypt.
The date when construction began is unknown, although a document of
1195 recording expenditure on rebuilding works suggests that
construction was already underway by that date. The fact that the east
end protrudes beyond the line of the Gallo-Roman walls and that royal
permission to demolish those walls was only granted in 1183 shows that
work on the foundations cannot have started before that date. The main
phase of construction is therefore roughly contemporaneous with Chartres Cathedral (begun 1194), some 200 km to the northwest. As with most Early- and High-Gothic cathedrals, the identity of the architect or master-mason is unknown. The choir was in use (though not necessarily complete) by 1214 and the nave was finished by 1255. The building was finally consecrated in 1324. Most of the west façade
was finished by 1270, though work on the towers proceeded more slowly,
partly due to the unfavourable rock strata beneath the site. Structural
problems with the South tower led to the building of the adjoining
buttress tower in the mid-14th century. The North tower was completed
around the end of the 15th century but collapsed in 1506, destroying the
Northern portion of the facade in the process. The North tower and its
portal were subsequently rebuilt in a more contemporary style.
Important figures in the life of the cathedral during the 13th century include William of Donjeon
who was Archbishop from 1200 until his death in 1209 (and was canonised
by the Pope in 1218 as St William of Bourges) as well as his grandson, Philip Berruyer (archbishop 1236-61), who oversaw the later stages of construction.
Following the destruction of much of the Ducal Palace and its chapel during the revolution, the tomb effigy of Duke Jean de Berry
was relocated to the Cathedral's crypt, along with some stained glass
panels showing standing prophets, which were designed for the chapel by André Beauneveu.
Generally the cathedral suffered far less than some of its peers during the French Wars of Religion and in the Revolution. Its location meant it was also relatively safe from the ravages of both World Wars.
The cathedral was added to the list of the World Heritage Sites by UNESCO in 1992.
Dimensions and structure
The cathedral's nave is 15 m wide by 37m high; its arcade is 20m high; the inner aisle is 21.3 m and the outer aisle is 9.3 m high. The use of flying buttresses
was employed to help the structure of the building. However, since this
was a fairly new technique, one can easily see the walls were still
made quite thick to take the force. Sexpartite vaults are used to span the nave.
Features
Plan and Elevation
Bourges Cathedral is notable for the simplicity of its plan, which did without transepts but which adopted the double-aisled design found in earlier high-status churches such as the Early-Christian basilica of St Peter's in Rome or in Notre Dame de Paris.
The double aisles continue without interruption beyond the position of
the screen (now largely destroyed though a few fragments are preserved
in the crypt) to form a double ambulatory around the choir.
The inner aisle has a higher vault than the outer one, while both the
central nave and the inner aisle have similar three-part elevations with
arcade, triforium and clerestory
windows; a design which admits considerably more light than one finds
in more conventional double-aisled buildings like Notre-Dame.[1] This design, with its distinctive triangular cross section, was subsequently copied at Toledo Cathedral and in the choir at Le Mans.[2] The flying buttresses
surrounding the cathedral are relatively slender and efficient,
particularly compared to the contemporary but much heavier flyers at
Chartres. Their steep angle helps to channel the thrust from the nave
vaults and the wind loading on the roof to the outer buttress piers more
effectively.
Portals and Facades
The west facade is on a particularly grand scale when compared to
earlier cathedrals. The four side aisles and central nave each have
their own portal reflecting the scale of the spaces beyond. As is often
the case with Gothic churches, the central portal carries sculpted
scenes related to the Last Judgement, whilst the south portals are dedicated to the lives of saints - here St Ursinus and St Stephen.
The north portals were destroyed when the tower collapsed but surviving
fragments indicate that their sculptural programmes were dedicated to
the life and death of the Virgin. Unifying all five portals is a dado
screen of gabled niches which stretches the whole width of the facade.
The spandrels between these niches feature an extended Genesis cycle which would originally have told the story from the beginning of Creation to God's Covenant with Noah.[3]
Romanesque
carved portals from about 1160-70, probably intended for the facade of
the earlier cathedral, have been reused on the south and north doors
(occupying the spaces normally reserved for transept portals). Their
profuse ornamentation is reminiscent of Burgundian work.
Stained Glass
Apart from the axial chapel, Bourges Cathedral retains most of its original ambulatory glass, which dates from about 1215 (around the same time as Chartres Cathedral). The glazing programme includes a famous Typological window (similar to examples at Sens and Canterbury), several hagiographic cycles, the story of the Old Testament patriarch, Joseph and symbolic depictions of the Apocalypse and Last Judgement. Other windows show the Passion and three of Christ's parables; the Good Samaritan, the Prodigal Son and the story of Dives and Lazarus.
The French art historian Louis Grodecki identified three distinct
masters or workshops involved in the glazing, one of whom may also have
worked on the windows of Poitiers Cathedral.[4]
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