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Keywords

45
Prince of Condé
Joan of Arc's
Siege of Orléans
Arnulf of Carinthia
Carloman II
Centre-Val de Loire
Henri-Quatre
Charles X
Via Turonensis
Cathédrale Sainte-Croix
Henry IV
Jeanne d'Arc
Norman
Loiret
Orléans
France
Marie de' Medici


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Orléans - Cathédrale Sainte-Croix

Orléans -  Cathédrale Sainte-Croix
A bishopric existed in Orléans since about 350, when the city was called Aurelianum. A predecessing cathedral was looted by the Normans in 865 and rebuilt by Caroligian Kings Carloman II and Arnulf of Carinthia. That church burnt down in a blaze in 999.

In the 12th century a cathedral was erected in Romanesque style, but in 1227 the facade of this structure collapsed. It was decided to replace the building with a Gothic cathedral. The construction started in 1288 and was not completed in 1428, when Orléans was under siege. Joan of Arc's lifted the Siege of Orléans, what was her first major military victory. She attended a Mass here in May 1429.

During the Wars of Religion Huguenot troops took Orléans. Louis, Prince of Condé, who led the army, tried to save the cathedral. But bricking up the portals was not enough, some fury soldiers sneaked in and blew the crossing up. This caused the collapse of the structure in 1568.

Henry IV (aka "Henri-Quatre") and his spouse Marie de' Medici laid out the foundation stone in 1601. When the French Revolution started the building of facade and towers stopped. The towers got finally completed in the 19th century. When Charles X inaugurated the cathedral in May 1829, the building was not completed. It was part of the 400th anniversary of lifting the siege by Joan of Arc.

The cathedral is 140m long.

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