1 favorite     0 comments    588 visits

Location

Lat, Lng:  
You can copy the above to your favourite mapping app.
Address:  unknown

 View on map

See also...


Keywords

capital
Autun Cathedral
Bourgogne-Franche-Comté
Cathédrale Saint-Lazare
Gislebertus
Aesop
Autun
Burgundy
Burgund
Saône-et-Loire
Bourgogne
France
fable
71
wolf
crane
Wolf and the Crane


Authorizations, license

Visible by: Everyone
All rights reserved

588 visits


Autun - Cathédrale Saint-Lazare

Autun - Cathédrale Saint-Lazare
Augustodunum (today Autun) was founded during the reign of Augustus, after whom it was named. It was an important settlement, the Roman theather, partly unearthed, could seat about 15.000 people, there is a Roman temple, walls...

But it is the Cathédrale Saint-Lazare and the wonderful carvings,
that made me return again and again.

There had been a church here earlier, that was just too small, when Autun became a center of pilgrimage, after relics of St. Lazarus were kept here since about 970. Just like Vezelay, 90kms north, where the relics of St. Lazarus´ sister St. Maria Magdalena were kept at that time. In 1120 it was decided to construct this larger and more suitable cathedral. At that time this construction was influenced by Cluny III, that was a little older. After severe damage during the Hundred Years' War, rebuilding and remodeling the romanesque structure started.

The tympanum, a masterpiece, signed by Gislebertus, survived accidently pretty undamaged, as it was hidden under thick plaster for many decades.

Many other carvings, carved by Gislebertus (or his workshop) are in and outside the cathedral.

Aesop´s fable "The Wolf and the Crane"

A wolf, having a bone stuck in his throat, hired a crane to put her head into his throat and draw out the bone. When the crane had extracted the bone, and demanded the promised payment, the wolf exclaimed: "Why, you have surely already a sufficient recompense, in having been permitted to draw out your head in safety from the mouth and jaws of a wolf."

This capital is on the very right side of the portal. It corresponds to the very left one.
See PiP (right corner).

aNNa schramm has particularly liked this photo


Comments

Sign-in to write a comment.