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Medieval Europe Medieval Europe



Keywords

91
Elders of the Apocalypse
Via Turonensis
Robert II
Hugues Capet
Hugh Capet
Calvinist
House of Capet
Étampes
Hugo Capet
Robert le Pieux
vandalism
France
Essonne
Île-de-France
collegiate
iconoclasm
Wars of Religions
Robert the Pious
Notre-Dame-du-Fort


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Étampes - Notre-Dame-du-Fort

Étampes -  Notre-Dame-du-Fort
Since the times of Hugh Capet, the first King of the Franks of the House of Capet, Étampes was an important place. It was a crown domain between Paris and Orleans. Hugh´s son Robert II (aka "Robert the Pious") built a stronghold here and founded a collegiate here in the 11th century.

The former collegiate church Notre-Dame-du-Fort was erected within the 12th century in (traditional) Romanesque and (modern) Gothic style. Only the crypt dates back to the earlier 10th century-church. Here the relics of the martyrs Cantius, Cantianus, and Cantianilla were kept. The popular saints were orphaned siblings beheaded during Diocletian's persecution. "Robert the Pious" had transferred the relics to Étampes from Milano.

Meanwhile Notre-Dame-du-Fort serves the parish. In 1562, during the first War of Religions, the Calvinist troops raided, ransacked and vandalized the church. In case something was spared, it got smashed during the French Revolution.

Nothing stopped the furious vandals in their rage. They wrecked the complete portal. Even the heads of the "Elders of the Apocalypse" populating the archivolts of the slightly pointed southern portal were not spared out. All of them lost their heads.

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