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Sainte-Chapelle, Paris


Sainte-Chapelle is full of light and color. Photo Creative Commons License Pierre Metivier.


The Lower Chapel of Sainte Chapelle. Photo Creative Commons License Pierre Metivier.


Spectacular stained glass in the Upper Chapel. Photo Creative Commons License Sean Munson.

 
Views of the Upper Chapel. Photos Creative Commons License Patrick Spence.

Window Detail
Detail of stained glass window. Photo © Nick Leonard.


Rose Window in the Upper Chapel. Photo Creative Commons License Angela.


Exterior. Photo under GFDL.

Location map and aerial view of Sainte-Chapelle. For a larger interactive view, see our Paris Map.



La Sainte-Chapelle (The Holy Chapel) is a 13th-century Gothic chapel on the Île de la Cité in the heart of Paris, France. It was built by Louis IX for use as his royal chapel.

History

Sainte-Chapelle was founded by the ultra-devout King Louis IX of France, who constructed it as a chapel for the royal palace and to house precious relics. The palace itself has otherwise utterly disappeared, leaving the Sainte-Chapelle all but surrounded by the Palais de Justice.

Unlike many devout aristocrats, who regularly swiped sacred relics, the saintly Louis bought his for a hefty sum. In 1239, he purchased the crown of thorns from the impoverished Latin emperor at Constantinople, Baldwin II, for 135,000 livres (the entire chapel, by contrast, cost 40,000 livres to build). A piece of the True Cross was added, along with other relics, making Sainte-Chapelle a valuable reliquary.

In addition to properly sheltering his holy relics, Sainte-Chapelle was a result of Louis' political ambition to be the central monarch of western Christendom.

At the time Louis' royal chapel was constructed, the imperial throne at Constantinople was occupied by a mere Count of Flanders and the Holy Roman Empire was in uneasy disarray.

Sainte-Chapelle was planned in 1241, started in 1246 and quickly completed: it was consecrated on April 26, 1248.

Just as the Emperor could pass privately from his palace into Hagia Sophia in Constantinople, so now King Louis could walk directly from his palace into the Sainte-Chapelle. The king died of the plague on a crusade, was later canonized by the Pope, and is now known as Saint Louis.

During the French Revolution, the chapel was converted to an administrative office, and the windows were obscured by enormous filing cabinets. Their all-but-forgotten beauty was thereby inadvertently protected from the vandalism in which the choir stalls and the rood screen were destroyed, the spire pulled down and the relics dispersed.

Most of Louis' precious relics were lost or destroyed in the French Revolution; the few that remain are in the treasury of Notre-Dame Cathedral.

In the 19th century, Viollet-le-Duc restored the chapel. The current spire is his design. Sainte-Chapelle has been a national historic monument since 1862.

What to See

Despite its small and humble exterior above the Palais de Justice buildings, Sainte-Chapelle is among the high points of French High Gothic architecture. The interior gives a a strong sense of fragile beauty, created by reducing the structural supports to a bare minimum to make way for huge expanse of exquisite stained glass. The result is a feeling of being enveloped in light and color.

Sainte-Chapelle stands squarely upon a lower chapel which served as parish church for all the inhabitants of the palace. This chapel, which is rather plain, is dedicated to the Virgin Mary. A souvenir stand often occupies most of the chapel today.

The most visually beautiful aspects of the chapel, and considered the best of their type in the world, are its 6,458 square feet of stained glass windows of the upper chapel, surrounded by delicate painted stonework. The windows are in deep reds and blues and illustrate 1,130 figures from the Bible. The rose windows added to the upper chapel in the 15th century.

Nearby is the Conciergerie, which can be accessed on a combined ticket with Sainte-Chapelle. Paris' oldest prison, it is where Marie Antionette and later the leaders of the Revolution were held before their execution.

Quick Facts

Site Information
Names: Sainte-Chapelle
Location:Paris, Ile-de-France, France
Categories: Royal Chapels; Churches
Faith:Christianity
Denomination:Catholic
Status:museum
Date:1242-48
Patron:King Louis IX
Architecture: Gothic
Features:Medieval Stained Glass
Visitor Information
Coordinates: 48.855355° N, 2.345029° E   (view on Google Maps)
Address:4 bd. du Palais, 4e, Paris, France
Phone:01-53-40-60-80
Website:sainte-chapelle.monuments-nationaux.fr/en/
Hours:Mar-Oct: daily 9:30am-6pm
Nov-Feb: daily 9am-5pm
Cost:€8 adults; €5 ages 18-25; free 17 and under
Photography:Permitted
Public transport:Metro: Cité, St-Michel, or Châtelet-Les Halles
RER: St-Michel

Note: This information was accurate when published and we do our best to keep it updated, but details such as opening hours can change without notice. To avoid disappointment, please check with the site directly before making a special trip.

Travel Resources for Paris

Article Sources

Article written by Holly Hayes with reference to the following sources:

  1. Sainte-Chapelle - Centre des Monuments Nationaux
  2. Sainte-Chapelle - Fodor's Online Travel Guide
  3. Sainte-Chapelle - Frommer's Attraction Review
  4. Sainte-Chapelle, Paris - Discover France
  5. Sainte Chapelle - TripAdvisor traveler reviews


Article last updated: 10/29/2009.





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