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Database: Cimetière des Saints-Innocents: Difference between revisions

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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>
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>
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<nowiki>*</nowiki> Just to say: you're about to read my favourite historical nickname of all time.<br>
<nowiki>*</nowiki> Just to say: you're about to read my favourite historical nickname of all time.<br>
--<br>
--<br>
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.
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 Flamel]]. The whole was overseen by a macabre mural of the Dance of Death. Just prior to the [[French Revolution|Revolution]], the bodies were disinterred and moved to the [[catacombs]] beneath Paris.
[[Category:Database/ACU]]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Cimetiere des Saints-Innocents}}
[[Category:Database: Locations]]
[[Category:Helix database entries]]

Revision as of 12:11, 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 Flamel. 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.