<\/a>\u00ab Christ out of the basement \u00bb – Jub\u00e9 : t\u00eate en cours de d\u00e9gagement Fouilles de la crois\u00e9e du transept de Notre-Dame de Âé¶¹APP \u00a9 Denis Gliksman, Inrap
Âé¶¹APP, mus\u00e9e de Cluny – mus\u00e9e national du Moyen Age. Exposition \u00ab Faire parler les pierres \u00bb, 19\/11\/2024-16\/03\/2025<\/p><\/div>\n
It was then that, like a puzzle, the pieces of the enigma began to take shape. A poet whose uncle was a cardinal is said to have lived in the Notre-Dame cloister (a plaque on one of the houses in the neighborhood confirms this). He died at the age of 35, was a good rider and suffered from chronic headaches (his writings attest to this). His name: Joachim du Bellay. Eureka! some exclaim (perhaps a little too quickly). Impossible, retort others. Du Bellay, in fact, sang at length in his poems about his attachment to his native region, Anjou. However, the skeleton corresponds to a person who lived… in the Ile-de-France region (as proven by isotopic analysis of the teeth). In a final twist, the convinced argue that du Bellay could very well have been raised by his uncle in Âé¶¹APP, therefore in the Ile-de-France region, and have kept the isotopes. For now, the mystery remains to be solved. If anyone is interested \u2026<\/p>\n
Christ Rising from the Earth<\/h4>\n
April 15, 2019: the spire bursts into flames and crashes onto the roof, causing the transept keystone to break and the vault to explode. Beneath, a massacre ensues.<\/p>\n
February 2022: after the stage of clearing and preserving the building, a team of archaeologists can finally begin work. Their time is running out: the construction site remains suspended pending the progress of their work. And it’s an understatement to say that they will go from surprise to surprise.<\/p>\n
In addition to the discovery of the aforementioned coffins, they will unearth three thousand stone fragments, including a thousand sculpted ones, 700 bearing traces of polychromy. All that remains is to piece together the puzzle…<\/p>\n
The location of the discovery is essential: at the level of the choir, right on the site of the rood screen erected in the 13th century and destroyed at the beginning of the 18th century, the cathedral choir undergoing extensive alterations. It quickly becomes clear that the sculptures correspond to the Passion of Christ, following the scenes in the enclosure of the choir on the north side. Hands holding accessories that allow us to recognize Aaron here, Moses there, a bust of Christ on the cross, a dying head (probably that of Jesus) emerge from the ground, buried there preciously after the ritual destruction.<\/p>\n
The polychromy makes these fragments even more moving, where the blue of the eyes, the red of the lips, and the pink of the tunics seem as if they date from yesterday. A rodent lost among the vine leaves, Christ’s left hand nailed to the cross, and the lantern depicting the Arrest of Christ take us back to the time of medieval visitors, fascinated by the beauty and artistic quality, but above all moved by the proximity and humanity of the iconography displayed.<\/p>\n
We feel “at home” at Notre Dame: we pray there, we meet there, we discuss there, we take refuge there…<\/p>\n
Recent archaeological discoveries bring us closer to these distant ancestors whose faith has literally spanned the centuries.<\/p>\n