Database: Cimetière des Saints-Innocents: Difference between revisions
imported>Amnestyyy Created page with "Originally, the street leading to Saint-Denis - outside the ramparts of the Roman capital which mainly occupied the left bank - served as the city's cemetary.<br> --<br> <nowi..." |
imported>Amnestyyy m Amnestyyy moved page Database/Locations (ACU):Cimetière des Saints-Innocents to Database: Cimetière des Saints-Innocents |
(No difference)
| |
Revision as of 12:00, 1 March 2015
Originally, the street leading to Saint-Denis - outside the ramparts of the Roman capital which mainly occupied the left bank - served as the city's cemetary.
--
* Just to say: you're about to read my favourite historical nickname of all time.
--
Louis VI the Fat, who had already overseen the construction of Les Halles, had Saint-Innocents built in 1130. Its cemetary would become the cemetary of all the churches of Paris, which made for an unprecedented concentration of dead bodies: a plague epidemic could bring about thousands of deaths in the space of just a few weeks. In the 1400s improvements were made, partly paid for and desgined by Nicolas Flamer. The whole was overseen by a macabre mural of the Dance of Death. Just prior to the Revolution, the bodies were disinterred and moved to the catacombs beneath Paris.