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English Pages 316 Year 2005
JEAN MARKALE |
Cathedral OF THE
Black
Madonna
The Druids and the Mysteries of Chartres
|
1
|
Boston Public Library Boston, MA 02116
Cathedral OF THE
Black
Madonna
Digitized by the Internet Archive in
2017 with funding from
Kahle/Austin Foundation
https://archive.org/details/cathedralofblackOOmark
Cathedral of THE
Black
Madonna The Druids and the Mysteries of Chartres
JEAN MARKALE Translated by Jon
Graham
Inner Traditions Rochester,
Vermont
Inner Traditions
One Park
Street
Rochester,
Vermont 05767
www.InnerTraditions.corn
Copyright
©
1988 by Editions Pygmalion/Gerard Watelet,
English translation copyright
©
2004 by Inner Traditions
Originally published in French under the
Paris
International
Chartres et Venigme des Druides by
title
Editions Pygmalion/Gerard Watelet, Paris First U.S. edition
published by Inner Traditions in 2004
All rights reserved.
No
form or by any means, ing, or
part of this
book may be reproduced or
any
utilized in
electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, record-
by any information storage and
without permission
retrieval system,
in
writing from the publisher.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Markale, Jean. [Chartres et l'enigme des Druides. English]
Cathedral of the Black
Jean Markale p.
;
Madonna
translated by Jon
:
the Druids
Graham.
—
and the mysteries of Chartres
/
1st U.S. ed.
cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 1-59477-020-4
(pbk.)
—Devotion to—France. Black Virgins. Christianity and other religions — Druidism. Cathedrale de Chartres. 1.
Mary, Blessed Virgin, Saint
2.
4.
3. I.
Title.
BT652.F7M37 2004 282'. 445 124
—dc22 2004018268
Printed and
10
bound
in the
United States at Lake Book Manufacturing, Inc.
987654321
Text design and layout by
Priscilla
Baker
This book was typeset in Sabon, with Trajan as a display typeface
Contents 1.
2. 3.
m Part » 1
4.
The
The Entrance
Sites
to the Labyrinth
The Vibrating Stones
2
31
Chartres over the Course of History 7. 8.
73
m Part 2 w
9. The Virgin’s Great Shadow
The Mother of God
108
Worship of the Virgin
5.
10. 6.
The Black Madonna
132 168
Part 3
The Mystery of the Druids The Forest of
the Carnutes
Gargantua’s Itinerary
Our Lady
of
226
Under Ground
The Virgin of
Index
the Druids
290
200
244
267
PART
The
1
Sites
The Entrance to the Labyrinth
of us have our
of things, especially
upon something previously unknown
lay eyes
cially true for
dim past
are
endowed with an
still
For me, odd as
My
trains.
thanks to the
it
is
espe-
legacies of the
The
evocatively luminous power.
sounds, the cathedral
which fueled many
associated with
fantasies: Didn’t
which
beyond
my way
hope of ever finding
is
rail-
became acquainted with the world
first
the entrance to a labyrinth in all
is
first
such a monument.
generation
train,
when we
to us. This
monuments whose
those famous old
cathedral at Chartres
road
own view
I
it
show me
dreamed of losing myself, out?
“Look! That’s Chartres Cathedral!” From our third-class compartment (we rode third class),
amid
window
class only
because there was not a fourth
the din of wheels switching tracks,
that bizarre silhouette suddenly
I
spied through the
looming from a
many had
mound
ris-
ing out of a
wooded
me from
road through the appalling flatness of the Beauce. Yes,
that
a
was my
into the
West
first
valley. It
is
a sight
sight of Chartres,
in search of
were already beginning to There
was
from the long
seen long before
trains
burrowing
an almost mythical Brittany, whose ghosts stir in
my
fertile
imagination.
another curious circumstance, terribly charged with emo2
I
The Entrance
Labyrinth
to the
3
tion
and invoking incredible images, that dates from 1936, when
was
eight
and a half years
dominated by the absence
whose shadow poisoned
my
mention for librium.
I
never loved
throw myself she
father,
—
or,
daily
who
was
It I
a fairly sad period of
should
say, the flight
creator, she
my mother. Nor
was
Around
mother was
behaved to
my
on
When I would
feelings of affection for her,
the pretext that
me more
I
was wrin-
me; although she was
a stranger to
like a foster
mother.
environment.
to imagine another world, one to this time,
and me, not to
did she love me.
lonely, introverted child confined in a closed
resource
life,
struggled constantly to maintain his equi-
would roughly push me away under
My
my
—of my mother,
my grandmother
for
life
into her arms, acting
kling her dress.
my
old.
I
which
without knowing what to
I
was
I
My
had no
call
it,
a
sole
right.
began
I
engaging in metaphysical speculation. Well educated in the best Catholic principles, respectful of the clergymen street
whether
I
knew them
nizable by their cassocks) nal grandfather,
or not
(in
—no doubt
who cawed like
a
I
would
greet in the
those days they were recog-
in reaction against
crow every time he saw
my
mater-
a priest
—
asked myself weighty questions concerning the Beyond. Paradise
had been described to me
as
an immense region where
little
angels
played music and everyone wore white. But this image, which had
been designed to reassure me, instead
would
I
do for
every time
I
filled
me
eternity in this bizarre place? Vertigo
pondered the notion, not because
I
What assailed me
with terror:
had doubts about
the reality of an eternal paradise, but because eternity, like infinity,
was
intolerable to the understanding
sad, distraught child. In
shaped
my
later
any
case,
I
— or
misunderstanding
— of a
firmly believe that this vertigo
behavior and largely explains the path
I
have cho-
sen to attempt to discover a certain truth.
During
this
September
ing about a figure
in
1936,
named Adolf
said to be taking place in Spain,
when
Hitler,
strange rumors were
when
we had
terrible things
just spent
friends
who
were
some peaceful
days in the Perche region, Mortagne to be precise, at the
some family
fly-
home
have always been more than friends to
of
me
— The
4
Sites
and with and
whom
in a train to
home.
feel at
Night had
the fog
My
grandmother,
We
had taken
we
my
bumpy
a
ride
got on another, faster train
where we would catch the
to Chartres,
father,
train to
where the strange circumstance occurred.
is
window
Paris.
Conde-sur-Huisne, where
would take us
Paris. This
the
always
were heading back toward
I
that
I
fallen,
and
it
was
foggy.
but an opaque mass
toward Chartres.
I
could see nothing outside
around
all
us.
The
train dived into
was an agonizingly long
It
ride.
suddenly
I
imagined that the only thing existing was the track on which the train
was
and there was nothing around that
traveling,
track.
We
were on a kind of dike or bridge extending across the universe, extending across that assailed
me when
get to Chartres?
I
This thought prompted the same vertigo
infinity. I
When would we
heard descriptions of heaven.
remember my
vividly
we would
certainty that
never
reach Chartres, and that our journey through the fog would continue
through
eternity.
These were strange sensations that are
When
words.
bling because
found myself on the Chartres train platform, stum-
I
I
was
still
half asleep,
world
really existed. Yet
lights.
And
I
the signs told us
magically inside I
my
it
was hard
was walking on
we were
head as the
have never forgotten
island in a motionless sea
so dear to Peguy, but
—not
among
awareness of
my
how
who
glebe”
as
in
if
response
in the ruts
the old city of Chartres appeared to
eyes to the contours of an
swamps
“fertile
have gone astray
rises
it
never occurred to
unknown over a
the road to travelers, and especially to prevent in the
an
Francois Villon’s “infernal marshes”
shadows. Our Lady the Virgin often
mired
reality.
a peaceful haven,
middle of the
that foggy September evening, although
to raise
name resonated
Chartres represented deliverance
in the
to the desperate appeals of those is
to believe the
my own
watched over by the reassuring image of Our Lady
of time and space. This
me
in Chartres. This
sole
how
for
the ground. There were
from an unspeakable nightmare, Chartres,
me
capture in
difficult to
of suffering.
me
cathedral in the
mound
to point out
them from
getting
The Entrance
I
had no idea then of what
moors, and through enced that evening
my
an indelible imprint on
What was Lady of
It
was
Madonna
in other churches. Yet questions arose:
Our Lady
the difference between
Our
of Chartres and
between Our Lady of Lourdes and Our Lady of
Paris,
Montligeon? Are they
many names?
same person?
the
all
Why
does she have so
hadn’t reached the point of wondering about
I
monotheism and polytheism, but intrigue a child. After
all,
Christmas, but they are
“Our Lady”
was
experi-
I
character.
one name, simply a name, followed by the image of the
and Child that can be found
5
longer journey along shores, over
but the sense of deliverance
forests,
left
Labyrinth
a cathedral could be. Chartres
much
only a stop, one leg in a
to the
the
was material
to
numerous incarnations of Father
there are
all
the same, there
all
same Father Christmas. So why not
in a never-ending variety?
Then war moved
into
and
my world,
can
ieties,
privations,
felt in
the barely heated houses, the
suffering.
I
by smoky candlelight because the
with
accompanying anx-
all its
still
clearly recall
memory
electricity
of doing
my
when I roamed
cathedrals.
Notre-Dame
in the
in
through ancient
shadows of the
My
Paris fascinated me. cities that
streets past strange shops,
I
had never
cut.
stomach. Yet
seen.
The
cold
I
my homework
had been
ber the pangs of hunger that gripped
how
this
I
remem-
was
also
architecture of
imagination wandered I
walked down narrow
beneath canopies that sheltered
me from
the rain, in dead cities that held in their centers vast edifices covered
with flying buttresses and grotesque sculpture, topped by aggressive spires that soared into space. ter
And
the dull drone of airplanes, sinis-
messengers of sneaking death, often darkened
noise of the In this
bombs drowned out
the music of the angels.
world of hatred and violence,
of a past that
I
I
took refuge
in the
shadow
reconstructed with the great comfort of books.
covered medieval
literature:
I
The
this space.
reveled in the
Lancelot of the Lake, and Perceval;
I
company
wished to have
of Merlin to transform with a single gesture the
around me into a wonderful orchard
filled
all
I
dis-
of Tristan, the
powers
unwholesome world
with beautiful young
girls
;
The
6
Sites
with tormenting eyes.
My
image of heaven began to borrow
ments that no longer had anything blessed robed in white
immutable full
eternity.
I
and singing praises
confess that the
of ripe fruits, where
common
in
Isle
Morgana and
ele-
with the host of the
Lord
the
to
of Avalon,
trees
its
in
an
always
her sisters lived in a crystal
me more than the sad, monotonous Christian parinspired so much vertigo. In fact, when evoking the Isle of
palace, pleased adise that
Avalon
— or any other marvelous island from Celtic
Emain Ablach,
as
Promised
Isle
—
Insula
Pomorum,
the
Land of
never experienced any vertigo.
I
tradition, such
I
felt I
Faery, or the
was
from
safe
everything there, including distress, given a sense of security by the
women who
presence of these beautiful and mysterious drafts of forgetfulness to the sailors
Lady made way
for
Morgana,
to love with a love that
is
a
wrecked upon
their shores.
Our
whom one yearns
queen of the night
absolute and eternal.
offered
The
vertigo
came
then not from the duration, but from the instant of the fugitive
my
encounter with the Queen of Faery. This was eroticism. But
it
was
also a kind of adherence to the doctrines of
Woman, woman.
courtly or rather fine love: salvation by the the Divine through the intermediary of
Thinking about
now,
it
believe there
I
the desire for salvation through Virgin.
meeting with
first
woman
is
and
the merger with
no difference between trust in
Our Fady
Marian worship developed concurrently with
fine love they are
two
ably not be repeated
sides of the
lest it
same
reality.
But
this
the
the
theme of
should prob-
be seen as evidence of a “sick mind.”
I
already have enough of a reputation for being an unyielding agnostic.
To dare compare Mary, mother of
woman It
of the Courts of Fove
Jesus, with just
—some hussy! —
is
any noble
not even a sacrilege.
demonstrates the kind of antireligious belligerence whose
reward
is
And
just
excommunication.
yet
.
.
.
the last time
I
attended a Christmas midnight Mass,
which was not so long ago,
at
the reading of the Gospel.
The
Vannes Cathedral,
was
horrified at
priest coolly said that
Joseph had
I
traveled to Bethlehem for the census, with Mary, his wife,
who was
The Entrance
Once
pregnant.
returned home,
I
looked up the passage “
.
.
proved otherwise,
who was
Furthermore, one of the translators of
former professor of mine, and for his expertise, honesty,
impenitent agnostic,
and dishonesty of
and
word and
not an agnostic.
join the priesthood.
was
was
I
stifle
my
by
certainly fueled
How much
cated me.
with merely
have always
deeply about
felt
I
told that
Renan and
my
Stalin
who owe
the image of
me
well that
They
my
I
Morgana some
suits their needs. I
am with
mean
I
others.
I
desire
The Oratorians,
satis-
become
my
to reflect
and
requests and ques-
and helped put
anxieties,
my
me
me
my
good they did
stormy for
me.
friends.
a priest.
I
was too tormented by
the Fay to tranquilly content myself with the
priests
One
My
finality of the Creation,
will never forget all the
did not
wished to
were seminar-
inspired
do not share
my
all
scruples
only canon law but also the fluctuations of their
as
I
so.
the “catechism,” nor in giving
worship rendered to a Virgin Mary stripped of full
do
They were not
these Oratorians!
them have become
all that,
a
are devoted servants of the Faith, edu-
responded to
For
is
a bishop. This did
familial environment.
tions,
of
text.
of appearing an
was twelve years old
I
meaning, the
its
I
a
the greatest esteem
the only one able to
it is
God. They always welcomed warmly
in order.
is
and unshakable Truth ex
the essential
When
instilling in
life,
has been
same that not only claims
finally
And many
it
Father Auvray,
faith. So, at the risk
the standard “brainwashing” treatment.
thoughts
Until
ardent desire to become a Catholic priest.
remarkable intellectuals
fied
I
this Bible,
Fouche was Oratorian, and Talleyrand was
ians,
not
”
quite edifying:
cannot refrain from denouncing the hypocrisy
I
cathedra, but also asserts that
am
was
matches the original
a certain clergy, the very
to deliver the divine
I
It
pregnant.
closely
7
Jerusalem Bible and
believe that the Jerusalem Bible translation
I
and objective work that
serious
my
Gospel of Luke.
in the
with Mary, his fiancee,
.
opened
I
to the Labyrinth
of
my
flaws
is
that
I
am
which
I
and
I
know
interpret not
own minds
as best
as honest with myself
therefore elected the profane
lost all sense of the sacred,
sexuality.
life.
This does not
continued to seek through
The
8
all
Sites
my
that crossed
path
—
in
women,
of course, but also in
medieval cathedrals with whose magnetic aura
I
the
all
was permeated,
as
well as in those modest but mysterious country chapels and disused yet still-living sanctuaries that provide an incomparable testimony to
the transcendence established between the this
the divine.
Is
an agnostic attitude? You cannot be as passionately interested
in
the quest for the Grail as in
human and
what?
am
I
have not leaned
I
one day that
God
believe in something. But
Galahad over the sacred
like
been blinded by the impossible realize
you
unless
emanating from
light
could be present in the
it,
vessel
and
but
did
I
priest’s chalice as
well as in the Grail, and that the Virgin presided over church liturgies,
even
when
they were botched by priests
who no
longer under-
stood them. It is
easy to be disappointed and sometimes disconcerted by the
attitudes of
some
representatives of the Church.
Church
heart’s content that the
aspects
that
And we can this
only
condemn
world (“You
and currently “work
smells a
bow down
will get
thinkers” by remarking on trine
yet
my
for
in the Beyond!”),
while at the same time for-
we
and spread.
risk being taken for “free-
my faith,
shows how
beyond
and protected from any dogma, can be considered
And
all
doc-
heretical.
abrupt realization that there was something real in
these botched liturgies ence.
it. It
if
who
before the great and
your reward
in the social sphere,”
a betrayal, even
little like
has
it
of the
fires
the hypocrisy of clerics
getting the spiritual message they are supposed to share It
our
alliances contracted with totalitarian govern-
centuries have compelled the poor to
powerful of
institution, but
such as the
unacceptable,
totally
and the
Inquisition
ments.
are
human
a
is
We can repeat to
At the time
I
came about through
was madly
with a
in love
involved in a relationship with a priest.
a rather sordid experi-
I
woman who was
found myself with her
at
Mass one
day,
where
remained
like
marble, content merely to witness the spectacle.
I
saw her putting on
quite a
show
of faith.
During Communion, when she rushed up to receive the host,
I
I
could
not help but imagine a different kind of communion, along the lines
The Entrance
Remy
of that described by
and Sammael (Satan)
Lilith
in
Gourmont
de
God
— a blasphemy involving “communion” if
refrain
you who
my
you do not grant
take neither food nor drink before it is
I
from send-
making
a challenge similar to that of Saint Patrick in
request of the Lord: “God,
9
about
in his strange play
both the holy and profane senses. Nor could
ing
to the Labyrinth
my prayer
is
prayer,
swear to
granted, and
Legend claims that
will be responsible!”
I
a
this
if I
die,
always
worked, not only for Saint Patrick but also for every other saint of
who knew what
the original Celtic Christian Church, individuals
they wanted, ions I
who were
on such matters
heroes before they became statues.
are well
known, and
it
My opin-
was not by chance
that
wrote a book celebrating the merits of the different forms assumed
by ancient Celtic Christianity, which were among the most ardent forms of worship existing So
I
challenged
to have a sign.
I
God
had
to
1 .
in the
know.
I
same way
made
as did Saint Patrick.
this silent prayer:
“God,
are truly present in the host, in the appearance of bread,
woman who
accept being ingested by this sacrilegious priest to
commit
the
just for
show.”
A
response.
It
same
mute
arrived.
sacrilege;
During the night the
I
purest
have believed
in.
if
you
you cannot
else this I
is all
awaited a
woman became
sick
and
This was the sign. Since that
in the true presence of
wind the dawn has
had
has caused a
prayer, but a sincere one.
vomited everything she had taken time
you cannot. Or
I
to offer can
God
in the host.
The
sometimes emerge from the
most sickening swamp.
How many times
have
I
passed before the cathedral of Chartres
without stopping, simply looking tecture that raises so
many
at
it,
intrigued by
questions for
me and
its
strange archi-
pushes
me
into an
imaginary world. The Middle Ages was a time of
faith
icence as well as a time of darkness and obscurity.
As an adolescent,
I
assiduously frequented
Dame
1.
Notre-Dame
in Paris as well as
de Montligeon in the Perche region, where
Jean Markale, Le Christianisme celtique
(Paris:
and magnif-
I
Imago, 1984).
left
Notre-
behind some
The
10
of
my
meant
Sites
Our Lady
youthful fantasies. But what could
me
to
during those stormy times
not only of God, but of
humanity?
all
from the Gospel of John:
I
—she who was the mother
repeated to myself the words
“J esus said to his mother,
your son.’ Then to the disciple he said ‘This I
I
had been taught that Jesus had given
did not understand. Certainly
she said this. She was, for
mother” her
entire
all
your mother.’”
mother to humanity.
who had repeatedly told me
down from
the cross.
lost her
she
felt
It
was
a
my own
minute think of
for a
I
a “sorrowing
mother”?
my
remember one of
and purposes,
intents
But could
life.
as a “sorrowing
made good was
is
My grandmother would have tears in her eyes when
touching image:
I
his
this
mater dolorosa, the Virgin on whose knees lay the body of
her dead son after he had been taken
mother
is
‘Woman,
grandmother,
World War,
eldest son during the First like the
my
the Virgin have
teachers
—not a
priest
—who thought
on the greatness of maternity
sense to give a course
the middle of the Petain era
and
motto of “Work,
its
it
(this
family,
country”) that would extol the merits and sacrifices of every
“mama.”
made me
It
And
feel sick.
Lady, Mary, the virgin mother of God,
any
in
mean
what could Our
case,
to
me?
Why should the
various images of the mater dolorosa have any effect on yet there
was something tormenting me, something
depths of
my entrails.
missing.
The
It
“Consoler of ordeals ...” goes. But
it
embedding
Many
A
lot of
came back
good
this did
itself in
my
years later
September
my memory:
me, as the saying
so.
mind. realized
I
I
was
what was then
in a
mountain
same way
the
—
it is
former student,
as
Our Lady
always September!
— and
in truth the best student
ago era of 1968, when the most
I
common
really stirring inside
village,
Velay region, not far from that mysterious
me
to
did not prevent the image of the Pieta from permanently
and troubling me
haunts
arising out of the
was, of course, the sense that something was
of the Virgin
litanies
me? And
Saugues, in the
Our Lady
of Puy that
of Chartres. I
It
was
was accompanied by
in
a
ever had during that long-
philosophical activity
was
The Entrance
throwing paving stones I
esting classes of students
found myself
eventful
life
Her blue
in
I
having
had the pleasure
ever
the
lively intel-
most
over the twenty years since
to teach.
we had
last
seen each other.
eyes expressed suffering and despair. She seemed the forces of
if
me
She had brought
her.
inter-
Saugues with Dominique. She had led an
to be a part of this world, as
snatched
me from
what may have been one of
lectual discussions with
I
did not keep
it
11
Don’t worry,
at the representatives of Order.
was among them. But
So
to the Labyrinth
no longer
shadow had already
to a desolate
and deserted pond,
where she told me strange voices spoke to her from beneath the water. She told
me
that their hands were reaching
toward her to
pull
down to their sunken city. She recounted legends, ones I have told many times myself, and threw out the name of Virginia Woolf her
as
if
by chance
— but which
I
found a provocation, as
the dull blue-
if
green waters would bring back the image of an Ophelia forever vanished.
Dominique, so young and
frail
yet fierce
and hard, showed
the indelible traces of drug use. She spoke in beseeching tones, as a
drunken boat cast back by the storm She had
became
me accompany
lost in
to
.
.
her into the Saugues church, where she
contemplation of a Pieta, which was quite beautiful
and moving, by the way.
wanted
.
We
then
left
the building. She
now
chest.
The
rising
wind
I
to strike
me
stirred her hair like algae in a
pond:
who
world to become
And
then
I
moment, were
passed by stared at us
a particularly scorching glare;
if
she
with lightning, she would have done
so.
stared insolently back at her, asking myself
for the
hand, and
asleep
One woman gave me
had been able
my
fell
another image of Ophelia. The people accusingly.
said she
regarded as solely a decorative
element. She snuggled up next to me, took
my
had
beneath the porch on the stone benches that once
sit
served just this purpose but are
on
if
warm and
how
holding her dead son against
We her,
it
would take
understanding.
suddenly realized that the two of a reversed Pieta.
long
us, at that precise
were not the sorrowful Mother but rather the suffering Father
holding his dead daughter and looking for any means to restore her
,
The
12
to
life. I
then recalled to mind Breton Calvary depictions of this same
which
scene, in is
as
Sites
him
new
to
light. Yes, this
was
the gesture she
life,
I
eternal
made by
was not Mary,
realized
nestled
when
A
the Virgin of virgins.
Several days
later,
rate ways, she pulled
spoke volumes about her
I
was only
a
man. And
terrifying desire: Restore
only
I
could do nothing more for
when Dominique and
me
close
name on my
“Can you promise me one
“When
I
to I
yet
life!
also
knew
there
about
my
was nothing
absence, and
told the caller that she tigative inquiry.
had been saved
poned the
It
again went our sepa-
will
I
was
quite simple in
And
come looking
its
depth:
several minutes
for you; I
we
will
left her.
I
could do. But there was some concern
I
someone had telephoned Dominique. She killed
me, thus setting off an entire inves-
actually she
in extremis
inevitable.
I
be yours.” She followed this a
thing? Die with me.”
had
was
nothing.
and whispered: “You know, when
lips will
the time arrives,
her,
both leave together and never return.” Like a coward,
And
me
grasped the meaning of the Pieta. But
short while later with a question that
later:
and
for,
my own powerlessness. Dominique, her head stubbornly against my chest, trying to live by the rhythm of my heart,
was already dead, and
die, the
in
strange scene that held a strange sensation.
finally
I
with a glorious body garbed
my hand
taking
was aware of Dominique’s
This was
life,
This was what Dominique was asking
it.
deepest motivations. I
It
Mary, the universal Mother, wished to reintegrate her son and
if
restore
But
body never extends below Mary’s knees.
Christ’s
but
I
who had
knew
“killed” herself. She
that this
There was nothing more
I
had merely postcould do for
her.
Mary haunted me, because Mary is the only one capable of rescuing human beings from despair. Why are there so many representations of the Virgin holding her child? Why are there so many representations of the mater the image of the Virgin
dolorosa ?
It
must correspond
sciousness.
Why
Our Lady
unless
would it
is
to something deep in
there be so
many
human
con-
sanctuaries dedicated to
because the image of the mother haunts the
memories of the sons and daughters of
this
world?
When
I
began
The Entrance
to the Labyrinth
13
taking an interest in the Middle Ages and Gothic architecture,
my
eagerly read everything
I
cathedral of Chartres.
learned that
dral in the world.
dows from
I
I
could put
hands on that concerned the
was
it
the
most beautiful cathe-
learned that the most beautiful stained-glass win-
the thirteenth century could be found there.
learned that the sanctuary had been built on the ple in
which
The Druids,
statue, for they
now know
was
it
also
of a pagan tem-
site
said,
on the threshold of
that this tradition
were responsible for erecting the
must be taken with
all
monition of the Christian Mary, but
I
I
the necessary
claim that the virgo paritura
its
a
giv-
had long foreseen the mystery of the Incarnation.
reservations, particularly
lescent
I
had been discovered along with
a mysterious well
statue depicting a virgo paritura, a “Virgin
ing birth.”
I
is
a pre-
must confess that to an ado-
haunted by the Middle Ages and utterly enthralled by the
Celtic origins of
Western
civilization, the revelation
was food
for
thought.
Chartres became for believed
— and
Western
me
—are
believe
still
spirituality.
a vital center of
Here again
I
essential to
had been
laid
of the cathedral. This labyrinth as to
its
others
Cretan
it
my
story,
I
it
the development of a conviction has
also learned that a
I
over the flagstones in the nave
prompted wildly varying conjectures as a simple decorative element,
it
know
the labyrinth to be a feature of an old
part,
I
and
wondered what such
I
I
sensed that
had
it
was doing
in a
a purpose, however,
and
a depiction
might be necessary to discover what
entering
I
contained the most arcane secrets of Hermetic philoso-
Christian sanctuary. that
down
meaning. Some regarded
felt it
phy. For
the living forces
do not think such
anything to do with an agnostic attitude. But strange labyrinth
all
this
purpose was before
and finding the way out again.
strove for
many
Chartres. Although
years to find the entrance to the labyrinth of I
continued to investigate the cathedral by
devouring countless books about twenty-five.
When
I
passed
my
it,
I
did not
visit
it
until
I
turned
baccalaureat [the French equivalent
of receiving a high school diploma
— Translator
j,
my
grandmother
The
14
Sites
promised to make
pilgrimage
a
Circumstances and the to I
vow.
fulfill this
now
think that
I
eventually did
later date.
mature enough to handle such a con-
yet
which ultimately took place
frontation,
not allow her
much
for her, but at a
it
Chartres.
of
fragile state of her health did
was not
I
Our Lady
to
several stages,
in
as
if
entrance to the famous labyrinth was forbidden to me. Initiation
always takes place on deceptive and intentionally tortuous paths.
My
path was indeed tortuous, but
what awaited me
took
it
with no knowledge of This touches on mys-
in the heart of the labyrinth.
weight to the most unconscious
teries that lend their
to
I
make our way
human
desire;
to the holy of holies necessarily entails a certain
period of apprenticeship.
But was tuality? live,
Contemporary
therefore
or less well later
an apprenticeship
this
we must
what
is
falsely
essentials.
known
reminds of
my
me
of
what my
desire to
must “have
program!
It
showed
social hierarchy
must
—more and
a job,” is
the basic
It is
all
well
and concern ourselves with
for example, the
father used to
become
a writer.
tell
day of
literature
He would
his real
on Sunday,
to
concern to see
whose core value
is
amuse
me
security.
I
rest.
me when I made
too
invariably reply:
“That’s fine, but begin by studying seriously and getting a
Then you can make
We
on condition that we do so outside nor-
mal working hours-— on Sunday,
much
We
as “secularism”:
to display our religious faith
religious matters, but only
It
called spiri-
take part in a system that functions
spare time to think about the soul. This
principle of
and good
is
society has taken a definitive stand:
—to protect the
we can
what
in life or in
good
yourself.”
find
“my
job.
A fine
place” in a
vainly remonstrated
with him, retorting that humanity’s progress had been achieved only because hooligans, marginal types, and troublemakers had broken
through the
“it
a dreamer. In a
Sunday
goes without saying” mentality.
any
case,
I
glass of beer
on the
treated
me
like
never forgave him for considering literature
distraction, just like the obligatory
(what a bore!), the
He
visits to
Aunt Machin,
terrace of a cafe.
Sunday promenade
the theater matinee, or the
And when I spoke
to
him about
The Entrance
to the Labyrinth
15
going to hear a symphony, he answered that he would prefer attending an operetta: “At least
Here not
is
was
from alone
far
so-called cultural
in
me from
can-
I
—which my promoting and defending — concerning
phenomena and
this attitude
the behavior of those described as
“good Christians” because they contribute regularly
to the collec-
and attend eleven o’clock Mass every Sunday before
tion plate
returning
thinking.”
from thinking.
the crux of the matter: It keeps us
proposing an analogy between
resist
father
relaxing and keeps
it is
home
And Sunday
ored accordingly as a person was able. day; therefore,
The Lord was hon-
to carve the roast beef or lamb.
a day unlike the others.
it is
It is
the Lord’s
is
possible and even
obligatory to think about religion that day and also to relax. But the
other days of the
week
earn our daily bread and
work
remunerated
over,
activity
“good works”
is
we can
for the parish. This
that time,
it
was
when I was
ond imagine
on the
eties, I
other.
I
was
life
erations
same
I
had not
the society
it
I
I
proposed to
could not for a sec-
saying!? a precipice spiritual
faces of but lived in
I
I
I
one
what they
really
this
your mother!” So
I
is
and
flouted delib-
was already thinking along
vaguely listened to on Sunday pieces of
in
good
in Christ!”
any case we would have had
Holy
Virgin, the
model
my children, that you swallowed my hostility.
the reason,
just
reality,
meant. These same sermons always
extolled the merits of the blessed
— “And
—
cultural
was unaware of his
good Christians every day of the week! Live
to understand
and
would have
Mass were loaded with
But no one really listened to them, and
mother
I
seems
the sermons
during that famous 11:15 advice: “Be
two
yet read Pascal, so
Of course,
life
realizing that in so-called primitive soci-
on “amusement,” but lines.
financially
violently rejected. For even at
I
on the one hand and the
why
all
model.
—what am
the sacred and the profane were
this basic rule.
the kind of
face, as a
a ditch
had begun
could not understand
the
was
same model
once
We
devote our efforts to doing
only a dreamy adolescent,
that there
between the profane life
the
serious matters:
until the evening;
me, with a completely straight Obviously
more
are reserved for
for every
should love
,
The
16
I
Sites
now
think
My
Lady of Chartres.
was not merely
was what obstructed my approach
all this
me
been impossible for
Middle Ages and Gothic
interest in the
cultural;
was part of a
it
Our
to
greater whole.
would have
It
to grasp the beauty of the architecture with-
out being aware of the worship that took place in the sanctuary this instance,
attention.
I
trated the
art
—
worship of the Virgin Mary. Other elements drew
had learned that some of the stained-glass windows
Song of Roland which
my
illus-
had studied and appreciated
I
in
in
tenth grade under the guidance of the remarkable teacher and writer
Jean Hani, the person truly responsible for giving research.
knew
I
that
some of
me
a taste for deep
windows had been
these
crafted
thanks to the generous donations of Pierre Mauclerc, count of
Creux and duke of
Brittany,
association was, of course, a leave
me
indifferent.
I
through
hook
knew
also
Aristotle could be seen there, lost
This struck
me
Thomism was
my
Duchess Alix. This
native region and did not
that the statue of the philosopher
amid
all
as bizarre at the time, for
the sages of Christendom. I
was not
simply a revival of Aristotelianism
Most important,
that era.
to
his wife,
I
knew
there
was
made
relic
that
in her
was
honor
sacrifices
this cathedral? It
—and to preserve,
a silk cloth given
believed
I still
me.
But what was the Virgin Mary’s role in been erected
relevant for
human
these legendary figures were capable of engaging in pit attracted
aware that
a mysterious crypt
where the shadows of the Druids lurked. At the time
on dolmens. This dark
yet
it
was
said, a
had
symbolic
by the Byzantine emperors to
Charlemagne and was, according to legend, worn by the Virgin on either the
Annunciation or the day of Christ’s
real question
concerning
me
then: In
the exemplary mother, relevant to rejected
me? Under
Chartres interested
what way was
less
But
this
was
the
the Virgin Mary,
me when my own mother had
these circumstances,
me much
birth.
it
is
understandable that
than Saint-Julien-le-Pauvre
in Paris
or the Saint-Kornely church in Carnac.
Nonetheless, one day entered the cathedral. But
I
I
did
make my way
to
Chartres and
was more concerned with
fulfilling
my
a
The Entrance
vow
grandmother’s
than determining what gave
Furthermore,
intensity.
was
it
this
sanctuary
in the context of a family outing
Sunday excursion of the “something that should be seen” Nothing particularly
my memory
striking remains in
of
to address.
day.
The next time we would go
one
in Beauvais.
see the cathedral of
was
it
little I
sunsets of Brittany,
would catch
I
Our Lady
trains that carried
me
was
a nice
Amiens or the
And
These too were things that should be seen.
from the long-distance
towers of
did not matter;
It
—
other
it,
the strange labyrinth that raised questions
no position
at the time in
its
type.
than the dazzling light of the stained-glass windows and, a
more emphatically,
17
to the Labyrinth
to the golden
a quick glimpse of the
brown
two
tall
of Chartres flickering over the plain, sometimes
wind over
illuminated by lightning flashes, like trees twisted by the
shores on which no ship will wreck.
was almost twenty years before
It
was
my
a fairly dark period of
at night
life. I
on the small roads around
tryside, traversing
dead towns
in
returned to Chartres. This
I
anesthetized myself by driving
through the deserted coun-
Paris,
which the houses opened only on
certain Sundays, losing myself in remote valleys that to I
an agglomeration that
was beginning
I
was running away from
myself, but
still
close
to find demoniacal. In fact
did not
I
were
know where
I
was
going.
A woman who
wanted
to be called Frangoise
accompanied me.
She loved to ride during the night. She intoxicated
and was good
at
making
was up
crest of the hills;
it
other side. After
all,
satisfied
love.
some of my
this
to imagine
should have,
fantasies
that night in September
Chartres. But
I
as in space.
It
was
lie
on the
not delighted me, at least
me
to slow
whose
that the precipice
—
trickier,
a
way
down
existence
1936 outside the railroad car
knew now
from the world
what might
and inspired delusions of which
tipping off a precipice of nothingness,
arate
if
Sometimes the fog forced
yet unaware.
with words
But her gaze never went beyond the
me
to
me
was
I
I
was
to avoid
had sensed
rolling
toward
farther away, sep-
no doubt, but remote
in time as well
of forgetting something, perhaps even
,
The
18
Sites
something
Chartres that likely that
But the fact remains that
essential. I
was always toward
wandered during these nocturnal adventures.
was haunted by
I
it
a passage
It is
from Caesar’s Commentary
on the Gallic Wars when he spoke of the land of the Carnutes, where he maintained that the
was
located. I
and
largest sanctuary of the Gallic Druids
had passionately studied the history of Gaul
I
knew
peoples,
knew
for a long time,
quite well the territories occupied by the different Gallic
who had
that the
often
names on
left their
name Arras came from
a city or region. So
the Atrebates, that the
I
name
Auvergne derived from the Arvernes, and that the name Chartres reflected that of the Carnutes
much
farther, to the very
(although their domain extended
banks of the Loire, and encompassed
Orleans, Saint-Benoit-sur-Loire, and even Blois). This the
famous
where
forest of the Carnutes
would gather once
a year.
It
all
was
the site of
the Druids of Gaul
therefore represented a veritable central
sanctuary of the Gallic religion, a kind of omphalos around which the vital forces of druidic spirituality radiated.
bury myself
in this radiation that
I
made
It
was perhaps
these nightly drives along
the roads of the Beauce. In truth, the Beauce region
only at night. The flatness of
its
is
interesting
countryside irritated me, and
tainly did not share the idiotic indulgence of Charles
“Presentation de
Peguy
Beauce a Notre-Dame de Chartres.”
la
I
(strange mixture!)
I
have
We
this
in
is
On
all
—that
is,
among
the twentieth-century writers of
a single line inspires
have the right to love or
no way
reject
me
to volcanic erup-
whom we
want
to,
and
a literary judgment.
the other hand,
this instance, the
my
company with Paul Claudel and Andre Gide
whose work reading but tions.
cer-
in his
always detested Peguy’s poetry and have firmly placed him in personal “hell” in
to
I
have never failed to mention Rabelais— in
famous episode from “Gargantua,”
in
which the
author shares a curious etymology with his readers. Gargantua
is
crossing through the great Carnute Forest on the back of an enor-
mous mare. But
it
is
quite hot,
and
horseflies are tormenting the
The Entrance
mare. She swishes her
ferociously to
tail
gigantic animal, these blows
down
start pulling
Not
tated.
tree
[How
ce!”
tear
tail
flies,
19
but as she
up the
a
devas-
is
utters these simple
is
which
trees,
until the entire forest
sight,
this
the
Labyrinth
standing on the horizon,
left
is
Gargantua, contemplating
“Que beau
them
others with
single
a
from her
kill
to the
and
words,
beautiful!] Ever since, this region has been
called the Beauce. I
can easily imagine that Rabelais was using
commentary on
ironic
this
episode as an
mania of medieval and ancient authors
the
always to seek a historical or mythological reason for a place-name.
But
I
also
that time
know that I
was
Gallo-Roman
cognomen means
every joke by Rabelais hides something. During
inclined to see in the
my
Belsa, which, in
name Beauce
a derivative of the
opinion, contains the name, or
rather, of the Gallic solar deity Bel or Belenos. This
Or
“brilliant” or “shining.”
Belsa could have been from
Belisama, which means “very brilliant” and has given
me
its
name
to
not far from there, in the Perche region.
the city of Belleme,
Furthermore,
name
this story of trees
knocking each other down reminds
of a very ancient Celtic mythological theme, that of the “walk-
Combat
ing forest” or the
of the Trees, a historical version of which
can be found in Titus Livy. Titus Livy portrays the Gauls as having
sawed through
number
a certain
allowed them to
fall,
knocking
the process but taking with
anecdote therefore takes there
was good reason
at night
it
of trees in a forest, then having
down an
me back
others, ravaging the forest in
entire
for this fierce
if
unconscious desire to roam
— an
ideal
how I found
desire to
and needed
go
myself one day back in Chartres. In truth,
there;
to find
it
was
solely that Frangoise
someplace to
stay.
have served equally well, but Chartres was next day
and symbolic pro-
heaven on earth.
This was
tired
So
through an area that had once been a sacred enclosure, a
jection of
had no
legion. Rabelais’s
to the oldest Druidic tradition.
nemeton, to use the Gallic expression
I
Roman
we wandered through
the
narrow
Any
other place
closest.
streets
and
Of
I
were
would
course, the
near the cathedral.
20
The
Of
course,
I
Sites
we went
into the sanctuary
and descended into the
leaned over the edge of the well and evoked
Ground. But Fay;
an island
knew
open
smothered
Morgana
bore the features of
air.
the
and
know what
did not
I
make
to
officiated
of this sanctuary
in the center of the earth.
cinating. But right,
and
that the Druids did not build temples
my interest was the
But what really held I
found
I
it
fas-
could not find the entrance. The time was not yet
was
I
labyrinth.
but a blind man, like Maeterlinck’s Golaud,
still
looks for his treasure at the bottom of the sea.
My
had been
to the cathedral
first visit
admired without understanding. This second neither admired nor ever,
Under
than in a dank, dark subterranean passage.
lost in the sea
all, I
in the
who
still
of
could more easily imagine her in the middle of an orchard on
I
After
Madonna
this
Our Lady
crypt.
was
No
the folds of a Vale of
knights spells.
was
that Frangoise
who
was
visit
What
nor understood.
felt
beneficial, but
Return, lighting the
fires that
conveniently forgotten
imprisoned; they view
is
it
this
Vale of
No
Return
that the knights are
and
as their due,
it is
is
blinded the
told,
happy
only
into
them with her
arrived from outside and ensnaring
But when the story of
I
how-
Morgana, pulling me
a perverse
had
a setback:
did gather,
I
I
what
is
to be thus
when
they have
been reawakened by Lancelot of the Lake that their memories are restored.
I
was
one of these knights, aware that
like
I
had been
blinded by Fran^oise, but perfectly at ease and asking for nothing
more.
And
was not even waiting
I
eyes to behold the statue of
Our Lady
This took place in 1971, ate pages of I
my book
on the
could catch sight of
Morgana. She was
was
also perverse
for
when Celtic
I
some Lancelot
woman, 2 and
Jean Markale,
certainly just as beautiful
Women
of the Celts (Rochester,
my
the
most passion-
this
woman whom
had the appearance of
in the night clearly
entire
depths of her eyes that escaped me. Fladn’t
2.
open
of Chartres.
was writing
and sensual, with an
to
I
and
attractive, but she
zone of shadows
in the
used a Breton proverb,
Vt.: Inner Traditions, 1987).
The Entrance
“Woman tion?
It
to the
21
Labyrinth
deeper than the deepest ocean,” as the book’s inscrip-
is
was
a vibrant
homage
to femininity, but also testimony to a
swallowed up completely would
certain fear, a certain vertigo: Being
not be long in coming. There are exalted vertigos that prevent us
from measuring the depth of the abyss. Sometimes, very strange fogs
would
from
issue
this abyss.
The empress of
me from
Francois Villon says, was watching
But was
Fran^oise or
it
Subsequently,
I
Our Lady
often
at night, preferably,
wandered over the same Beauce roads,
and no longer with Fran^oise. Other
Morgana, she who welcomes
I
had
encourages and pulls back the in the final analysis,
Lady the
faces of
yet to encounter the
who
who
consoles, she
Somewhere
hiding
veil
Else
—she
not so different from the one called
is
Virgin. Errantry has one valuable feature:
we
elimination of roads where
It
Our
allows the
bogged down
risk getting
still
and guides them over
travelers
the tortuous paths of the Druidic forest, she
who,
the mists of twilight.
the Virgin?
Morgana haunted me, no doubt because true
the infernal marshes, as
— on con-
we take the time to observe what is going on cannot be made to stumble in the same ruts twice. The
dition, of course, that
around
us.
problem
is
I
that there are a lot of ruts
on the paths of
this vast
world.
my “Romanesque” period. Having indulged in much fantasy during my youth and adolescence about the extravagance of the Gothic and the influence of the broken arch, I now I
then went into
rejected
them
for the semicircular vault
modest sanctuaries of the Romanesque dition rect.
more
clearly here,
The Romanesque
spirituality,
which
is
capitals
deeply rooted in the
tunity to emerge in stone.
and dreamed beneath the
era.
I
could see the Celtic tra-
historically
are
soil
the
and
last
artistically cor-
flashings
and taking the
The Romanesque
slightest
vault,
said to be of Byzantine or at least Eastern origin,
of Celtic
which
is
oppor-
is
often
the symbolic,
constructed reconstitution of the “roof” of the Gallic nemeton
—
in
other words, the starry sky that can be seen from a sacred clearing in the middle of a forest as yet
Romanesque
untamed by human
sanctuary, solidly established
beings. Finally, the
on the ground, thickset
The
22
Sites
and massive, protected from mystery,
indiscretion by
all
the ideal meeting place for cosmic
is
and
telluric forces, the
World
core in which the invisible lights of the Other
vital
centrated. So
I
haunted Romanesque buildings and would
thoughts there.
I
felt
Gothic cathedral
like
vibrations;
I
I
my
collect
sensed images. So what could a
much more
had not yet found the entrance
subtle
and complex
at
to the labyrinth because the
“deceptive illusions” of which Pascal speaks forbade
what were
are con-
Chartres have to interest me?
But there was something
work.
obscurity and
its
me
access.
But
Among them were my prejucompromise, my distancing from
these deceptive illusions?
dices, of course,
my
refusal of
any
any kind of religious dogmatism. And especially there was that impassioned search for Morgana the Fay, the erotic image (and
how!) of the Goddess of the Beginnings, she the birth of the world by ejecting
from her
who had belly
presided over
humanity and
all
other living things, the Virgin of virgins, the unique yet multiple one,
demoness that haunted Chateaubriand, Isis-Venus-Astarte
the
toward
when
whom
all
Gerard de Nerval’s yearnings aspired
he spied, in the middle of his fog, sublimated beneath the fea-
tures of
Jenny Colon, the
present in every act of his first.”
Could
she
is
called in Brittany,
this
Morgana who I
it
fictitious Aurelia, life:
is
was hidden behind
which
discouraged of
me
I
forever spied but never attained?
moors
that led nowhere.
real time but instead the sense of
aspired without admitting
it
when
I
an
to myself, but
which
me
catch
every time an irregularity in the sky I
let
now I
suffered
experienced
have never been able to look over the railing of a bridge
or the slightest mountain precipice without distress.
only
the
Itron Varia as
through significant episodes of vertigo, similar to what I
it is still
the shameless veils of
some blinding glimmer. Furthermore,
as a child.
nevertheless
returns,
Our Lady Mary,
strayed along nameless shores, over
infinity to
who was
“The thirteenth
be that the image of
no longer had any concept of
sight
—especially
flying,
when
It
is
perhaps
soaring through a layer of clouds that sud-
denly breaks apart for a dive toward a sea constellated by waves,
The Entrance
that
manage
I
works
tion
to
in
overcome
two
this vertiginous feeling.
directions:
beneath a steeple and see
its
I
result
is
am
my
the same, for
return to the
bosom
my
falling
this sensa-
standing motionless feel the
I
hands so
on me.
In
same
as to not see
any event the
involves a sensation of being swallowed, a
it
same earth of which
of the earth, the
and perhaps from which
I
I
am
a part
should never have been born. This brings
my
up again the problem of
my
face in
what might be
falling or
am
I
And
spire vanishing in the sky,
unease, the same desire to hide
where
When
23
Labyrinth
to the
my ambiguous
birth, of
relationship
mother. Here, too, this “deceptive illusion” prevented
me
from gaining access to the statue of the Chartres Madonna, the
tri-
with
umphant image not and
child. It
from her,
of maternity, but of the love that unites mother
my
but
Mon
this deceptive illusion that
is
it
eyes
was
and
my
mind.
Mon
had
endeavored to dissipate
a bit of
Morgana
the Fay in
Morgana, one who had been bruised by
a purified
and was aware of the higher
reality
beyond appearances that one
should search for through the convulsive movements of
sleazy paradisiacal delights of the Vale of
tasmagoria that had prevented
from
my imprisonment.
me
No
and the
life.
Like
me from
the
Return by opening
my
Lancelot of the Lake, she had already helped to free
eyes to the inanity of certain settings
life
puerility of the
until that time
phan-
from emerging
She was also on a quest, and quite often our
we
paths strayed to different sides of the straight line sent in those large mysterious forests in
But the straight
the
same one that does not
line,
exist in the
an ideal and perfectly utopian
pre-
which the Castle of Wonders
beyond the shadow of
lay.
still felt
a doubt,
is
precisely
world of appearances.
It is
line,
invented by Euclid, that demol-
ished the other geometrical systems.
Who is right and who is wrong?
No
one and everyone,
from
it
seems, as no absolute truth can be
scientific reasoning,
Mon,
in
any
no matter how rigorous.
case, clearly grasped that
what was preventing
my
had not yet
set-
entrance into the labyrinth was the “quarrel” that tled
with
my
mother,
who
drawn
I
by then had been dead for a long time.
It
The
24
is
Sites
harmonious balance with
difficult to find a
can
be achieved with a being whose
it
could manifest
itself
shadow lurked near
only through resentment and silence? Despite
belief in the survival of the spirit
munication between those
who
dialogue proved to be quite
Cocteau’s
La Machine
and even
are
in the possibility of
and those
who
no
are
difficult. I recalled the
which Laius attempts
infernale in
com-
longer, this
scene from Jean to forewarn
He
Jocasta of the imminent arrival of their son, Oedipus. his
how me but
a living being;
focuses
all
energy on appearing in the mephitic vapors of a sewer, but each
And
time he speaks, his form vanishes. invisible forces; he has
everyone
no
he
finally,
is
constrained by
right to forestall Fate. Furthermore, not
capable of grasping the mysterious messages sent from
is
the Other World.
Mon
Nevertheless,
had taken
my peace
mother. According to her, to recover all,
I
of
had never been able to speak: “Mama,
One morning we
hard, very hard.
mother if
my
mind once and
for
me
needed to make a gesture toward her and utter the
I
words
as
with
a notion to reconcile
all
the
more
ridiculous photo
—adorned
of the
to say the
Mother
I
was
cemetery where
my
was both very moved and very
so because a photo of
words of
rose before
my
her tombstone.
love, but
me
I
— a vain and
sensations.
I
did not
was overwhelmed: The image
like a light that
could regenerate and bestow upon
mother
brought back some
It
some strange past
strange memories, or rather
manage
visited the
love you.” This
buried and remained there for a long time in meditation,
is
something should happen.
uneasy,
I
fateful
me
a
could engulf me, that
new
and open
vitality
my
eyes to the essential realities. Alas!
Why
did
I
house, a house that vers to ensure that cally,
death.
she
made
What
words of
The garden
my
would not
my
Mon my
inherit? Intentionally
proof of hatred.
Now this
that
show
grandparents’
mother had used some shrewd
certain that nothing
fine
love!
I
then decide to
would be
And
there
I
left
legal
maneu-
and systemati-
for
me
after her
was, trying to utter
house was abandoned and almost in ruins.
grandfather had cultivated with such love had
The Entrance
become still
a no-man’s land.
It
somebody ...
serving
was
a sad sight.
to the Labyrinth
25
that house
was
If at least
had been disinherited
I
for nothing, for
the simple satisfaction of a mother’s hatred for her son.
Following grew. it.
I
But
Mon
this painful experience,
could not have cared it
was
less
my
resentment and bitterness
about that house;
the principle of the thing that gave
my
understood
it
the image of the physical mother
— simply
had no need of
a symbolic value.
me
confusion. She then told
another image of maternity, and that perhaps
I
needed to get past
I
womb,
a
after all
reach the concept of the universal Mother, the Virgin Mary.
was
a Calvinist, prey herself to that
own
shaken by her
Lady
fundamental search for essence,
the exaltation of the universal love for beings
was
in this state
windy day
taking the highway,
Our
and things
that,
human action. of mind that we went to Chartres one wet and
end of winter.
at the
—to
Mon
tempests and discovering in the image of
normally, should be the engine of It
was
that there
all
We
left
from
Paris, but instead of
we wandered down winding
roads that brought
us into Chartres from an unusual direction, from the other side of the Eure River
—that
to say, the right bank, whereas the cathedral
is
stands on a rise on the
left
bank. This gave us a completely different
view of the sanctuary from the one that appears on postcards and other tourist items. before us, as
is
It
was not
the case
when
the
modern
city of Chartres
leaving the station or getting off the
highway toward clumps of houses and cement
town
we saw
buildings. Instead
of the past that spread in terraces up the
it
and
was
a small
was
reflected in the churning waters of the river.
car,
looking for a bridge to take us across the Eure and having no
luck.
Then, once
I
did
manage
to get across,
we
pefying dead ends. The streets kept shrinking
could
see, as
to learn us. It
if
was
if
under the
we were still
spell of a
magician
I
hill
was driving Mon’s
got lost
away
who
among
stu-
as far as the eye
sought to
test us
wove
before
capable of disentangling the skein he
the unattainable entrance to the labyrinth, this time
accompanied by gusts of wind that shook the den plots bordering the
river.
trees in the small gar-
The
26
I
Sites
don’t think
and more
respect.
I
recognized nothing,
going, although our goal, the cathedral, the moss-covered
like
cathedral
—
thought of other
mound
Our Lady
town of Ys,
And I
was constantly its
was
above
two uneven
spires
once
I
sits in
for
nec-
front of a
Rouen, sleeping
when
felt
was always
it
the square that
in
in search of lost
me
to mistake the
of Chartres for one of the last remnants of the
the sunken city that slumbers
a tempest
visible
which
cities in
would not have taken much more
of
know where I was
did not
in Puy-en-Velay, of course, but also in
flamboyant nightmares that
cities. It
difficulty
something out of a medieval dream
wander before finding
essary to
its
I
I
mocking us with
roofs,
tile
and frenzied architecture, by Victor Hugo.
more
ever entered an ancient city with
I
precisely
somewhere
what was raging
in the tempest.
outside.
eventually found a street that went up, but
it
twisted and
turned, narrowed considerably in spots, and detoured from the desired direction while lingering
on the
side of the
mound
dominated by a conglomeration of roofs and gardens. sation,
comparable to the one that we
when we
A
in places
strange sen-
according to the legends,
feel,
pass from one world to the next,
when we
stray
from the
world of humans to enter the world of heroes and gods, the world that the Irish call the sidh, the
world of the great megalithic
mounds.
Then
all
at once,
without warning,
chevet of the cathedral.
now
We
had
just a
at the level of the sanctuary,
wind from every
direction
it
before,
few yards to climb.
a large square
and pounded by the
the cathedral appeared to me, in
merely glimpsed
on
we emerged beneath
all its
We
it
were
whipped by
rain.
the
how
This was
majesty and mystery.
and knew that
the
I
had
was only now revealed
by virtue of that initiatory route we had taken through the narrow streets of a city, similar to
convulsive
We
movements of
both
felt
no
other,
in the
the earth.
the veritable materialization of the cathedral, a pro-
found and intense shock however
Mon
whose shadows disappear
had never seen Chartres
this
brief
and spontaneous
way. As for me,
I
it
was.
suddenly saw
The Entrance
something that
until then
I
had “pretended
to myself” never to have
seen. This impression of absolute discovery disconcerted
though a tornado had
just unfurled
my
over
me.
had suddenly opened over the world. Truth atmosphere was
far
from
displeasing,
It felt
as
head, fully manifested
by the wind spouts that enveloped us from everywhere, as
tive
27
to the Labyrinth
if
the sky
to say, this very distinc-
and we
felt
a
growing
desire to let the sacred expedition that brought us there carry us to
the center of the earth.
So
we
entered the cathedral by the southern portal and were
immediately plunged into a blue radiance. Yet the dark sky was casting
little light;
we had
own
Chartres possessed their
own
illumination, strong
enough on
of its
without needing sunlight, purely and simply an “inner sun,” or
a “black sun,” although
difference between the is
windows
to believe that the stained-glass
because
it is
I
have never been able to grasp what the
two expressions
hidden and reveals
is.
If
a “black sun” exists,
only in certain places under
itself
certain conditions that are hard to predict. In
on
that
this
damp
it
any
case,
I
can swear
winter day, the Chartres cathedral revealed an
impossibly beautiful “black sun” that had the
gift
of
making
irides-
cent the smallest particles of stone or the tiniest glimmers of glass that shone overhead.
And
then somewhere, surrounded by the lumi-
naries with flickering flames, the statue of
the darkness
on her
pillar, like
Our Tady loomed out
some ancient
deity that
humans had
raised for blessing by the last playboys of the Western world,
dared venture into a “historical I
monument”
downgraded sanctuary
museum? The answer was
that
eases
the
as
it is
who now,
rather than a temple of the Virgin.
actually asked myself this question:
or in a tion
this already
of
easy:
conscience of
churches would be empty
if
Where was
I
all
was
I
—
in a sanctuary
in both. It
is
a justifica-
our contemporaries. The
they were not the most appropriate
exhibit halls for displaying the artwork of the past or for playing
and
listening to music. This
gion,
is
a sign of the times. Art supplants reli-
and Christian sanctuaries are more often entered
pose of admiring than for praying. Where
is
the time
for the pur-
when
religion
— The
28
and
art
Sites
were so commingled that
without including the other?
It is
was impossible
it
some
true that
to
mention one
late-nineteenth-cen-
tury architecture in the style of Sacre-Coeur of Paris,
Our Lady
of
Fourviere in Lyon, or the basilica of Sainte-Anne d’Auray have
dug a moat between
definitively
umphalism,
and
art
by emphasizing
religion
tri-
and intimidation to the detriment of
self-sufficiency,
we
authentic faith and sincerity. Fortunately,
and some other sanctuaries
—to
have Chartres
still
remind us that nothing can be
divine or even sacred without being beautiful.
These thoughts that
I
mulled over
in silence in
no way affected
my
desire to enter the heart of
ary.
My intrusion here, not to mention my pilgrimage, corresponded time
I
considered to be the sanctu-
I
no way responded
to a deep need that in first
what
entered Chartres
was because
it
And I saw nothing. The second Our Lady the Virgin but rather in
was something time
search of
quest of
real
occasion, which
and
I
new
had
there in
sensations
image of a woman. This third
perfectly alive
would prove
that
was not
to be seen.
through the
The
to a vague curiosity.
to be the decisive test,
was
the true dis-
me access to the mysterious Black Madonna. And it was a woman who guided me, although she had never visited the sanctuary before, and showed me
covery of the entrance to the labyrinth that allowed
the entrance.
cated to
was
I
sure that
me and I would
gotten to look
for.
No
all
I
had
to
do was follow the path
be able to discover what
doubt
Mon
indi-
had perhaps
I
had that flame
for-
in her eyes that
does not burn but instead allows us to crawl slowly through under-
ground corridors hidden from the gaze of the to grasp the
woman,
world only through losing myself
but never just any
capable of helping in
living.
me
woman.
I
need
discover them.
It
signs,
I
have been able
in the eyes of a
and few
women
are
requires a strange alchemy
which our slow metamorphosis occurs through the scorch marks
we
receive
This
is
from
how
a beloved being I
needed to find the
wanted
finally exit.
.
.
managed
.
to enter the labyrinth.
But was finding
to do? Outside the
this exit
wind continued
something
to howl,
Now I
I
really
and the rain
The Entrance
to the
Labyrinth
29
squalls continued to batter the stone’s grimacing faces.
The
of security and the sensation of being sheltered from
the world’s
all
feeling
torments, the conviction that such a sanctuary could only be the
supreme refuge, guided expecting no response; cat
when
I
caressed
eyes and
my
prompted
questions.
I
was
simply wished for the stone to purr like a
my
gaze. This
is
how we
can
feel at ease
relentless rages the universe inspires to test us.
long remember that strange day. Time had stopped
will
I
I
with
it
and stop fearing the
my
engaging
in the
game
of chess
gladly played with
I
it
each time
I
decided to define the world. There were few visitors and finally
more
faithful kneeling
woman
beneath Our Lady of the
emerge from prayer, walk toward the
edly put her lips to the stone column.
snickering inside, as
was
pillar
is
my
watched
a
and devot-
could not refrain from
way
denied the woman’s
or her desire, through a perfectly natural gesture, to
sincerity,
attain the exalting promise that face.
statue,
I
wont, for the phallic symbolism of the
too obvious. But this in no
all
I
Pillar.
Our Lady
the Virgin wears
The human being needs the concrete
in
on her
order to reach the
ineffable.
In the crypt
around the Well of the Saints-Forts
I
could see that
strange opening toward the world of darkness not far from the statue of
Our Lady
of
Under Ground, that blaze of
causes to spring out of shadow.
I
in the original sanctuary, not the
lished
on
this
mound began their
need to
had
a strong
light that piety
impression of being
one the Druids
may have
estab-
but the one their successors on this sacred
site
building in the Carolingian age, no doubt aware of
fulfill
a mission, to
encourage love for the Virgin
who
welcomes and protects her children scattered throughout the world. For this purpose they had conceived an extravagant plan: to raise
would
above the ancient forest of the Carnutes a stone vessel that sail
eternally in the Beauce plain to bear witness to the
proposition that what
is
beautiful
is
good and what
is
good
is
nec-
essarily beautiful. I
knew
that this
was
the center, the absolute starting point for
!
The
30
Sites
this fantastic
explosion of stone and luminous glass.
wonderment
that seizes souls about
The
I
mused on
the
which Julien Gracq speaks:
colors have simultaneously, for the blues and the reds, rather
than the dry flame of carved gems, that of weakly sparkling cabo-
chons that yellows,
bring the gangue to mind, and for the browns and
still
some
succulence that raisins, the this city,
I
and others
violet hues I
a gilded green, a stimulating
never recall seeing before: flowing honey, plums,
transparency of ripe grapes.
It
seems that
would come through here each day can awaken and be sated
for color that
two separate
to satisfy
thing
the crypt of
was
magic of
Our Lady
of
fiat
3 .
light, that give
lux In this maternal
Under Ground,
knew
I
womb
that every-
climbed from the crypt, the rain had stopped
But the wind continued to gust with that violence of time, through the
seemed
under
possible.
When we dawn
an appetite
kinds, as different in nature as bread and wine
birth to color through the is
lived in
in this place alone,
There are kinds of darkness that give birth to
that
if I
built to
welcome
narrow
it
streets of
it
falling.
takes from the
an ancient town that
and sometimes put
embrasures of the doors and windows, or even
it
to sleep in the
in the
mystery of
enclosed gardens and high walls. The wind turned to the rhythm of the long breaths that could be earth, for the earth
vibrated, as
if
was
alive
felt
emerging confusedly from the
beneath our
feet.
And
the stones
ready to burst, to show us, no doubt, that henceforth
the entrance to the labyrinth
was open
to us so that
we might calmly
tread a path through the blue-tinged darkness of magnificence.
3. Julien
Gracq,
En
Lisant, en ecrivant (Paris: Corti, 1981).
The Vibrating Stones the mention of the
name
looms on the horizon behind
a
Chartres, the image of the cathedral
modest screen of
foliage
spreading plain. In most people’s minds, Chartres
and only
its
cathedral.
No
doubt we should
reaction the implicit recognition that
most the
town, and that
this
this
cathedral,
see in this
automatic
Notre-Dame
of Chartres
is
the
most gripping and
overlooks the fact that Chartres
is first
town holds other monuments, other churches.
does not acknowledge the fact that for centuries
a vast
is its
beautiful cathedral in France, or at least the
most complex. But
on
on the top and
sides
a It
men and women have lived there of this mound around which the
Eure River detours, between the houses with their subtly moss-worn tile
roofs, to flow north along that axis of the
the
wind
world that generates
Water
that breaks against the towers of the cathedral.
flows tranquilly through the town of Chartres. There
grows calm. Flame-bright flowers appear spring and
fall,
then there
is
when
the sun splashes
its
in the
is
a
wind
gardens in both
light against the walls.
stone, the eternal stone torn
from the earth and
into the sky not as a challenge but as an appeal to the infinite
ber of invisible worlds. Chartres into
making
city
a
And built
num-
town, with everything that goes
a town.
Certainly the
modern
is
that
modern neighborhoods resemble those
—the triumph of concrete, the squared-off 31
in
any
insipidity of
32
The
Sites
a rational
old
and so-called functional urbanization. But there
nestled
city,
over the summit
on the northeast
sides of the
is
also the
mound and
spilling
around the prodigious mass of the sanctuary.
itself
Seen from the square in front of the church, the town English in appearance. miliar country.
There
To
a native
it
can seem almost
The atmosphere of Chartres
is
like
most
is
somewhat an unfa-
distinctive.
nothing reminiscent of the area around the Parisian
is
metropolitan complex. Nothing serves as a reminder of the vast west that opens to the sea. There
south.
of course, nothing reminiscent of the
easy there to lose sight of where you are.
It is
Chartres, that to the time
is,
is all,
when
in a city
You
are in
with a long history that reaches back
the Gallic Carnutes built a fortress-sanctuary in the
middle of what was then a vast sacred
forest.
This forest has
now
disappeared, but the sanctuary, although not in the original clearing,
by homes where stone and
there, flanked
is still
cob and thatch. This
is
how we
good many
houses,
streets in
have replaced
can measure the perennial nature of
a place that does not escape transformation
A
tile
Chartres are
some of which have been
by the colors of time.
still
bordered by ancient
beautifully restored. Visitors can
see the corbeled gables, like those in the rue
du Cheval blanc
close
to the cathedral, or latticework
and brick constructions. The upper
town connects
which
by
stairs
strolling sive
to the lower city,
called
tertres,
on one of these
number
sits
on the banks of the Eure
and by narrow, winding
—the rue Chantault— we can
of doors and
windows from
see
— one
When
an impres-
different periods.
even a twelfth-century Romanesque house France
streets.
There
is
of the oldest in
—whose tympanum holds some curious carvings. Below here,
near the Massacre Bridge, stands
Our Lady
of the Breach Chapel,
which houses the ancient statue of the Virgin that once stood above the Drouaise Gate. In the rue des Ecuyers, a turret stair with sculpted half-timbers
stands just beneath the old castle. Berthe, preserves the
Eudes
I,
she
memory
who wed
of the
Its
name, Staircase of Queen
widow
of the count of Chartres,
the king of France, Robert
II.
In the rue de la
The Vibrating Stones
Poissonnerie
House,
and
built during the fifteenth century.
On
rated:
the consoles are an
snails
fairly
sow
one of the strangest homes
sits
on
a grapevine.
common
in the
The facade
Huve House
On its
the second story
tal
the depiction,
is
Who
Spins, with the
spindle and distaff. In the rue Noel-
It
was
built
the Place Jean Moulin, the Hotel de
with pedi-
around 1550 by the that
was beau-
Champrond
has a por-
doctor Claude Huve, a humanist and enthusiast of
On
richly deco-
offers a rich Renaissance facade
ments, columns, and caryatids.
tiful.
is
Salmon
enormous salmon, an Annunciation,
Middle Ages, of the Sow
here greatly hindered by
Bellay, the
in the city, the
all
with a basket-handle arch. In the rue de Grenets there
town
1792.
The neighborhood of
known
as Cloitre
the cathedral includes the canons’ quarter,
Notre-Dame (Our Lady’s
complex that was once sealed by nine
Cloister). This
portals, of
which two
is
a vast
survive,
including the one on the rue Saint-Yves facing the northern gate. it
we can
closed
it
a
an ancient Henry IV-style dwelling that became the
is
hall in
is
mansion, and near l’Etape-au-Vin, the Hotel
late-Gothic-style
Montescot
33
still
see the hinges
On
and those places where the chains that
were embedded. This quarter has a wealth of old homes, of
which the most
beautiful, those facing the
the thirteenth century.
Royal Portal, date from
They have admirably carved tympanums,
including arabesques of leaves and images of winged griffons and a battle scene. Farther south,
on the corner of the rue des Changes,
stands another carefully restored thirteenth-century house, which displays
tympanums decorated with
with leaves instead of
hair.
depictions of heads covered
These remnants provide a
ture of the wealth of the ancient Episcopal
The same could be Chartres.
Near
fairly
good
pic-
city.
said about the former bishops’ residence in
the north porch of the cathedral an eighteenth-century
grillwork gate gives access to the honor garden of the Episcopal palace, today the
Museum
of Fine Arts.
The facade
is
typical of the
Louis XIII era. But some sixteenth-century arcades of the ancient
commons
remain, beyond which, where the Orangery once stood,
The
34
Sites
extends a terrace that looks over the lower city and the Eure Valley.
From
here
impressive
we can
number
see that the old city of Chartres held
of churches.
Some
are
still
an
standing, but others
are either in ruins or have been redeployed to serve other than cul-
Church today
tural purposes. For example, the Saint-Martin-au-Val
serves as a chapel for the Saint-Brice retirement
home. In
spite of a
restoration job in dubious taste, the building has retained nal
Romanesque
unity,
its
origi-
with an exceptional opulence and a curiously
elevated choir. Four of the capitals sculpted in round point with
composition seem to have retained their
interlacing
Irish-style
authenticity.
But the crypt
beyond doubt the most
interesting
remnant
here.
south
side.
located beneath the choir and can be reached by
It is
A
is
its
fragment of the Gallo-Roman wall measured out in fishbone can
be clearly distinguished over the door.
was
It is
thought that
this crypt
rebuilt during the late tenth century, using materials taken
an older sanctuary
—curved
column
from
and monoliths, bases
shafts
adorned with cable molding, and capitals of various manufacture.
One
some
similarities
to certain capitals in the Jouarre Crypt (Seine-et-Marne),
whose con-
of these capitals, to the right of the altar, has
struction
is
a typical
example of pre-Roman
Irish style
onto the Continent. The very unusual capital next to
from the Merovingian
The two
capitals
it
transposed
could date
era.
on the western wall are quite
striking because
of their primitive appearance; they are also akin to Irish Celtic art.
This
is
important insofar as Saint-Martin-au-Val, or at
crypt, could well be a itself.
A Gallo-Roman
of the building, and
much
older sanctuary than
is
least its
the cathedral
cemetery once occupied the immediate side
amid the
first
Christian sepulchers an oratory
dedicated to Saint Martin de Tours was built, which was the origin of the monastery that until 1663 belonged to the
Abbey. During the entire Merovingian era the
Marmoutier
Irish
monks, including
famous Saint Colomban, contributed greatly
to reconverting a
country that had in large part abandoned Christianity. Juxtaposing
The Vibrating Stones
35
and archaeological observation with the tradition
this historical
concerning the Druids’ virgo paritura raises certain questions. By all
evidence there was a Celtic contribution to Chartres the exact
scope of which today,
is
unknown. And what of
the custom,
still
observed
which every new bishop of Chartres, before being
in
solemnly enthroned in his cathedral, spends the preceding night in a prayer vigil at Saint-Martin-au-Val?
an ancient
Could
this
initiation that early Christianity
be reminiscent of
borrowed from the
Druids?
The foundation and
it is
nearby
of Saint-Aignan
thought that originally castle of the
it
it
of a
also quite ancient,
counts of Chartres. But the current building
of
little
is
must have been located within the
dates from the sixteenth century.
robbed
Church
its
Some
recent renovations have
character, although
we can
still
see a four-
teenth-century portal recessed in the Renaissance facade, a flamboyantly styled crypt,
south
side,
which
sixteenth-century
catastrophes,
is
richly decorated
is
Saint Michel,
main entrance
those
depicting
Crowning of Our Lady,
from 1547 credited
subject
and dates from 1543. Several
windows have survived various
stained-glass
particularly
Funeral, and the glass
and the vault of the Saint-Michel Chapel on the
it
to the church
Dormition, the
as well as a curious stained
famous glassworker Jean Jouan;
to the
and
the
inspired both Raphael is
through a
which has been decorated with great
and
lateral door,
Diirer.
care.
icant eleventh-century remnants. Following the fire of
damage
in
the Eure
city, it
was
The
dated 1541,
Saint-Andre Church, a former collegiate church, contains
ravaged part of the
its
rebuilt,
but
signif-
1134 that
suffered considerable
it
both 1861 and 1944. The choir, which was built out over
on an arch that spanned the
river,
was destroyed. The
facade dates from the twelfth century and offers capitals in the purest
Romanesque
The height a
style,
of the nave
framework
is
with colorful figures and plant motifs.
most impressive.
A
tower once topped by
spire overlooks the enclosed area that
Cemetery of the Innocents.
On
was once
the
the north side, the Saint-Ignatius
The
36
Sites
Chapel presents a blend of Renaissance and Flamboyant architec1
Lower doors
ture.
and end floor
was
is
lead to stairways that go through the side aisles
from before the twelfth century, whose
in a crypt dating
almost
level
with the Eure River.
seems that
It
this
an ancient
originally built for the purpose of incorporating
water cult into the
new
Christian faith. This
is
church
not surprising
we
if
back to the Druidic traditions associated with the founding of
refer
the sanctuaries in Chartres.
But It
is
Church
the Saint-Pierre
that
is
most worthy of
interest.
one of the most remarkable monuments of Chartres and
many is
it is
respects can hold
own
its
in
in
comparison with the cathedral.
It
the ancient Benedictine abbey of Saint-Pere-en-Vallee. Fallen into
disuse during the tenth century,
it
was inhabited anew and
by the monks from the abbey of Saint-Benoit de Fleury, as Saint-Benoit-sur-Loire. But
its
origins
In the seventh century, Saint-Pere
lie in
Abbey
from Sainte Bathilde, wife of King Clovis abbey was
In the tenth century, the walls,
and
its
position in the valley
count and the bishop asked
abbey to construct bell
cant
its
own
to the abbey.
this time.
located outside the city
particularly vulnerable.
new
it
did,
The 1134
choir
with the ambulatory and chapels. At
deacon
who
The
for permission to allow the
and the church’s
fire
caused
The monk Hiduard, from 1151
directed the construction of a
a twenty-four-year-old
the Merovingian era.
II.
which
defenses,
now known
received a large donation
still
Hugh Capet
tower keep dates from
damage
was
restored
whose lower
this
time the
signifi-
to 1165,
story remains
tomb
of Gilduin,
died at Saint-Pere-en-Vallee
while on pilgrimage to Chartres, was discovered in the foundations. This odd figure came from
Rome, where he had obtained from
the
pope permission to turn down the post of archbishop of Dol-deBretagne, to which he had been elected against his wishes. At that
1.
[This refers to a specifically French-Flemish architectural style of the fifteenth
teenth centuries. Flamelike tracery style,
is
hence the flam(e)boyant name.
one of the
— Trans.]
and
six-
salient characteristics of this rather florid
The Vibrating Stones time the Breton church,
still
37
dependent on the metropolis
officially
of Tours, attempted, under the impetus of the Breton kings, to free itself
from foreign
and the
saintliness,
tutelage. Gilduin left behind a reputation for faithful again
crowded around
his
tomb
in
1165,
leaving offerings that allowed the grandiose reconstruction of the
abbey to proceed. Its
general appearance
is
Radiant Gothic. The nave was erected
in the first half of the thirteenth century,
and on the thick supports
of the choir an extraordinarily light stone armature
mitting the placement of a large
number
was
erected, per-
of windows. This
The
against a vast overall design that addresses the issue of light.
bays of
grisaille glass
ated stained-glass
dinary
harmony
symmetry. the
with color figures alternate with the histori-
windows
in the nave,
an extraor-
windows on apostles.
two of the important
for
the north are reserved for Saint
John the
Those of the south are dedicated to the
saints, respecting a scholarly hierarchy that
goes from
monks
bishops to popes. The Virgin and Christ are located in the
last
of the nave. Saint Gilduin, clad as a deacon, wards off with his a cross that
is
discreetly depicted running
border. Generally speaking, the
Church are among the most
windows
what
is
to
bay
hand
the length of the
is
now Saint-Pierre
They
are equal to
that they are less
known
less visited.
The cathedral crowns everything that
power and
of
down
beautiful in France.
those of the cathedral; their only “flaw”
and
fig-
with merely reversing the colors. The
ures, the artists being satisfied
and the
for
expression are reduced to their essentials;
same “cartoon” has even been used
Baptist
which allows
of tints and tones while avoiding even the slightest
Movement and
stained-glass
all
is
is
the
is
of Chartres and overshadows
spread about the surrounding area with
of enchantment. This
glass
mound
is
its
great
because this mass of vibrating stone
complete beneath a sky that often unleashes torrents,
the better to flood with light the hearts of the
take shelter in
its
all
men and women who
guardian shadow. Our Lady of Chartres, the
Virgin crowned with towers
—
as
once Cybele, mother of the gods,
The
38
Sites
was crowned is
—
in her perpetual labor of giving birth:
The cathedral
and maternal,
a sub-
most gripping when the
struc-
truly the exaltation of this image, both divine
lime arch that holds the world in gestation.
The appearance of the cathedral ture
is
approached from the lower
is
city
because of the sudden tran-
from narrowness and the horizontal to something that
sition
and challenges
the laws of gravity and balance. This
all
tery of the sacred:
It
transforms
Emerging from a bend
that
all
in the
is
rises
up
the mys-
touches.
it
street,
we
find ourselves just
beneath the Saint-Piat Chapel, which adjoins the building on the east side. This chapel
merely an
artificial
above a capitulary
was not part of
now
is
hall,
and
is
connected to the
staircase. This
no tombs
the Majestic Virgin
rest of the building
where the treasury of the
is
in the cathedral itself;
it is
dedicated to
and has therefore triumphed over death.
Saint-Piat Chapel, sitting
on the
spot for grasping the cathedral in
side,
all its
The apse develops an extraordinary fan of the choir
is
housed, and also where the bishops of Chartres are
buried. There are
The
it
extension achieved in the fourteenth century, just
by an elegant openwork cathedral
the original cathedral;
is
probably the ideal
architectural complexity. flying buttresses; because
skirted by a double ambulatory, each of these buttresses
is
has two spring points and altogether they extend toward the nave
kind of impenetrable
like a
forest.
Their shapes are reminiscent of
wheel quarters, braced as they are by small columns that bring to
mind
the spokes of a wheel.
from
a single monolithic block, base
greater stability.
It is
flight
still
in existence.
is
formed
and capital included, to ensure
generally agreed that these are the
pieces of a fairly bold style, oldest
Each of these small columns
and that these
first trial
flying buttresses are the
Added, no doubt soon
after, is
an upper
supported by the pedestals that had been intended for the pin-
nacles. This
is
the beginning of the Gothic style,
elements also remain. This the strong cascades
—the
is
why
the projecting buttresses suggest
lateral pressure of the
they channel so harmoniously.
and Romanesque
nave walls
—that
The Vibrating Stones
Romanesque technique
around the chevet. The
also visible
is
39
chapels in the apse have semicircular vaults and are themselves sup-
ported by the crypt. The three oldest chapels (dating from 1020)
were surrounded by a second wall around 1200, and new, narrower chapels were inserted between. As a result, the flying buttresses have
uneven openings. In
fact, all of this all
a particularly fortunate
whole
—a synthesis of rather odd elements
without the genius of the architects, could have been a grace-
and
less
dis-
hanging together somehow and forming
parate and the unequal,
that,
shows the triumph of the
heteroclite jumble. But here resides the miracle of Chartres:
Time has found no
grip
on the
deliberate will of
its
constructors to
build an eternal work.
This brings us to the south portal, a creation of the Gothic era.
Romanesque
build-
ing (of
which only the crypt and western portal remain), the
desire
was
make
Following the 1194
to
the
fire
new
that almost destroyed the
building even
Instead of having only one portal, as
Chartres that
was graced with two more
more is
and grandiose.
beautiful
the case in
many
worthy of the old one
that were
had survived, and these became the doors to the
Chartres cathedral
is
cathedrals,
unique in the world in that
it is
The
transepts.
the only one to
boast three portals of such importance. The south portal was inspired
by the principal facade of Laon, which had inspired the builders of
The
Amiens
been
just
is
nied by his apostles and the martyrs and those
It is
nity,
who
and
relieved the apostles
the symbolic depiction of the
on
the Christ
accompa-
commonly
called the
their evangelical mission.
Church on
leading humanity to the Last Judgment.
its
march toward
is
Heaven; to the right
is
Hell.
beneath Christ, and immediately below them
Judgment. Charity a blessing
num on
and
the
is
left
is
also present
on the
eter-
The tympanum of
middle porch shows Christ surrounded by angels. To the Christ’s right)
in turn
several years later.
central image of this southern portal
Confessors,
built,
the
left
(on
Mary and John
are
is
a depiction of the
portal: Christ here
is
giving
surrounded by statues of the apostles. The tympaporch depicts Christ above the martyrdom of Saint
The
40
Etienne.
Sites
The
statues are those of different martyrs, in particular
and Saint Denis.
Saint Laurent, Saint Clement, perhaps Saint Piat
may
But some
nephew from
be surprised to find Roland, Charlemagne’s
the chansons de geste.
The legend of Charlemagne
portrayed in the stained-glass windows, but tion in Chartres
much more
was
it
seems that the inten-
to give this heroic and, in the final analysis,
with the idea of the Crusades. Roland
army
—that
is
to say,
fighting single-handedly
is
Muslims
pagans
torical context of the time, but also
—
in the properly his-
relentlessly striving to
destroy the Christian message. In this sense Roland
ramparts of the Christian
faith,
and
the sacrifice of the greatest martyrs.
demonstrate that faith one’s
life
harmony
mythical than real hero a meaning quite in
against a Saracen
is
is
his glorious
The porch on
one of the
is
death
one with
is
the right seems to
defended not only by blood and sacrificing
but also by knowledge. This explains the presence on the
tympanum
of the Confessors around Christ,
who
above Saint
is
Martin the Evangelist and Saint Nicholas the “Resuscitator.” The porch therefore highlights the church fathers, such as Saint Sylvester, Saint
company
Ambrose, Saint Jerome, and Saint Gregory,
of local saints such as
The western facade est
is
the
Laumer
(or
Lomer) and
most famous and
familiar.
church square at the greatest distance. This
known Royal what
it is.
Portal, without
The
central figure
is
is
Avit.
side of the
the site of the well-
which Chartres would not be quite Christ in Majesty,
who
above the
is
men from
twelve apostles and surrounded by the twenty-four old
on which the twelve apos-
the Apocalypse. At either end of the lintel tles
are depicted stand statues of
Hebrew
scriptures, Eli
porch (again
the old-
It is
and also the one that can be seen from the other
in the
two
and Enoch.
at Christ’s right), the
inspired prophets
On
the
tympanum
Ascension of Jesus
from the
of the is
left
depicted
above angels and apostles. This representation of the Ascension
is
surrounded by a calendar that depicts the signs of the zodiac and the labors of each month.
The tympanum of
the porch
on the
dedicated to Christ’s childhood and includes the Virgin
right
Mother
is
pre-
The Vibrating Stones
41
senting the Child. Surrounding her are angels and the masters of
who
antiquity
The
taught the liberal
arts,
such as grammar and music.
capitals are dedicated to several episodes in Christ’s
the Last Supper
notably
life,
and the Pilgrims of Emmaus. The statue columns
Hebrew
depict great figures from the
Scriptures such as Moses,
David, Solomon, and the Queen of Sheba. This western facade shows hardly any architectural or unity.
It
was constructed during and
metrical. Three
two
spires.
several different eras
1194. But
in
it
does not matter.
harmonious beauty emanates from equivalent in medieval height. in
That on the
one go starting
art.
The two
right, called the
in
1145, and
also survived,
the addition of the level with
was taken
it
bell
Old
perfectly
which has no
towers are not the same
Bell
New
and
Tower, was constructed
Bell
Tower
fire.
Toward
to the north,
and the whole was completed with
its
to elevate the nave,
rose
window,
for this opportunity
which was already an impressive
The height was extended
to
above the ground, which means that a modern ten-story
feet
building
A sober
survived the 1194
height and held the record for the time.
115
asym-
to the building that
this complexity,
1200, work continued anew on the
whose base had
is
a half centuries separate the construction of the
The lower part of the porch belonged
was destroyed
and
artistic
would not touch
the top of the vault.
Above
the rose story
the Gallery of the Kings, consisting of an admirable parade of figures,
was
built after 1250.
The Old
ment. The spire
some 160
Tower
Bell
feet,
itself
is
remarkable
in
both concept and achieve-
holds a record for height, soaring straight up
unfettered by superfluous ornamentation. This spire
has the distinction of being hollow and not supported on any frame-
work. The walls gradually shrink the higher one carved in the shape of a scale and slightly a
way
bell
as to prevent rainwater
tower
easily
spills
notably at the time of the great
fire,
bells
Each stone
is
over the joint in such
from penetrating
supported the tons of
gets.
to the inside.
The
once housed there,
demonstrating the incompara-
ble stability that Viollet-le-Duc recognized
when
he declared that to
The
42
his
Sites
knowledge there was no other medieval construction
built as this spire.
At the base of the
similar in style to those of the
An odd
New
for the
completed
finally
by lightning.
noon.
Its
buttress.
1513 following
stone spire It
is
its
base
a delay
Romanesque,
is
caused by a
it
was
fire started
the highest in France after the cathe-
would take
modern
a
More complex than
stories to reach the top.
building of thirty-two the
Old
Bell
Tower,
it
an abundance of Flamboyant decoration, notably statues of
the apostles
But feature
accompanying a standing Christ on the west fagade. examine more closely the Royal
let’s is its
mix
of styles,
unity that emerges statuary
is still
sculpture.
The
which
when one
in
no way
Portal. Its strangest affects the
Romanesque but already foreshadows
cally in the twelfth century.
rhythm asserted
in the long
ues gives to
all this
elsewhere.
.
.
classic
The
Gothic
portal’s unity resides primarily in the desire of the
an image of the Kingdom of
.
profound
studies this incomparable group.
artists to illustrate the central figure of Christ in is
the Angel of the
offers a sundial oriented to
Tower, while
Bell
in
dral of Strasbourg.
offers
is
a large statue
representation of a donkey playing a hurdy-gurdy can be
found on the neighboring
As
tower stands
Royal Portal. This
named because he
Meridian, so
bell
as cleverly
God
as
it
Majesty.
The
result
was envisioned symboli-
According to
Villette,
“The
vertical
and motionless forms of the large
stat-
hedge of honor a nobility that has no equivalent
The geometrical decor of
the subject of the small
columns
is
the
columns
is
varied,
and
that of an exuberant fantasy.” 2
Also visible are precise references to classical antiquity that bring us to the history of Chartres
the School of Chartres
and the
fact that in the cathedral’s
was one of
the
most
shadow,
brilliant universities of
Europe from the eleventh to the thirteenth century. Thus there should be no surprise at finding
among
these statues the figure of
Aristotle, the great inspirer of Scholasticism, holding a writing desk
on
2.
his
Jean
knees and wearing a furrowed brow. This memorial recog-
Villette,
Chartres et sa cathedrale (Paris: Arthaud, 1979), 61-62.
The Vibrating Stones nizes the role of this late disciple of Plato as creator of a certain
43
form
of dialectic in which the Middle Ages gladly thought to recognize itself.
Similarly, Cicero represents rhetoric,
Ptolemy grammar, and
Pythagoras music, or rather the universal rhythm, what called the
We
is
sometimes
“music of the angels.”
must not overlook the
sents the Infant Jesus.
left
tympanum, where
the Virgin pre-
Here the presence of the philosophers and
thinkers of antiquity shows that the Virgin Mary, through her
maternal function,
also the
is
Throne of Wisdom, the word wisdom
designating in medieval terminology both knowledge and technical intelligence used in the service of
would
the
God and
humanity. But what
works of the mind be without the labors of every day?
the arch of the
left
tympanum
the signs of the zodiac alternate with
peasant occupations, reinfusing knowledge into ordinary never forgotten that humanity the balance of matter
and
is
incarnated, and that
exterior
it
is
the
all
life.
It is
reside in
spirit.
The north facade of Our Tady of Chartres renowned, yet
On
is
probably the
least
most meaningful part of the cathedral’s
and the most revealing of the cathedral’s constructors’
intentions. Traditionally, the north part of medieval churches
is
dedicated to a more secret, or at least a more discreet, teaching.
The north side of
in
is
many
at least
shadow and
cold,
which explains why, on the north
buildings, scenes are depicted that,
if
not infernal, are
connected with the Prince of Darkness. This
is
the case
with Notre-Dame in Paris, where the legend of the
who made
Theophilus,
a pact with the devil
cleric
and was eventually
saved by the intervention of the Virgin Mary, dominates the
ornamentation. Furthermore, following the traditional orientation, which
much
older
toward the left,
left
than Christianity, the observer
east
and the
rising sun.
is
is
always pointed
North, consequently,
the sinister side etymologically (in Latin, sinistra
is
to the
manu, “at the
hand”), which term subsequently became burdened with a very
vexing connotation. In ancient days, during services,
men were
The
44
Sites
arranged on the right and the
which automatically suggested
women on
the
left
facing the altar,
women, who
a lesser position for
were suspected of maintaining privileged relations with the
and were thus lowered left side
to the sinister side.
of the sanctuary
—when
it
was not
But paradoxically, the the chevet chapel
generally dedicated to Mary, the Virgin Mother, the
make
the
left side
The
desire
of the cathedral the privileged location conse-
crated to Mary, mother of God,
than
—was
woman who
crushes the head of the serpent or dragon of the depths. to
devil
was never made more manifest
in Chartres.
The north facade was begun but was finished
laid at the
gallery they
same time
same time
as the southern,
writes:
last. Villette
The porch was planned from were
at the
the very onset,
and
as those of the portals.
its
foundations
Deprived of the
should have crowned, the gables retain a sober
appearance. The towers, conceived during the course of the construction, are supported
abutment
piers that
—as
in the south, incidentally
had been prepared
—on
the
for the flying buttresses.
Here the buttresses are adorned with small
edifices
with pedi-
ments, in accordance with the part that connects to the abutment piers of the choir
ing statues that
and chevet. Finally there are the greatly protrud-
accompany
Equally worthy of note foot of the
New Bell Tower.
is
the very
It
with a face that has retained first
the rose. 3
was
its
buttress of the nave, there
handsome clock
built in
gilding is
1520
in
pavilion at the
Renaissance
style,
and polychromy. Beneath the
a well with a notch to allow the
buckets to be drawn up. The presence of this well cannot help but bring to is
mind
the Well of the Saints-Forts in the crypt. In any case,
food for thought that
ship of the Virgin
3. Villette,
in Chartres, as in
many
Mary was always connected
Chartres et sa cathedrale, 59.
it
other places, the worin
one way or another
The Vibrating Stones
with the presence of a well or fountain, a more or
45
unconscious
less
legacy of ancient traditions going far back before Christianity.
The north
panum
in the
portal
therefore consecrated to
Our
Lady.
The tym-
middle depicts the Crowning of the Virgin, and imme-
beneath
diately
is
representation
a
is
it
of the
death
and the
Assumption of Mary. The branches of a Tree of Jesse extend around it,
and higher up there are the historied depictions of the Creation.
The
left
tympanum
hood of
(to the Virgin’s right)
Christ, encircled
whole surmounted by a
by the parable of the Ten Virgins, the
series of sculptures giving concrete
both the active and the contemplative
Job as
its
cled by biblical figures such as
The
statue
Visitation
the
The
right
tympanum
Solomon, Tobias,
Esther,
has
encir-
and Judith,
a magnificent “calendar of the peasant.”
columns below concern the Annunciation and the
on the
Queen
life.
form to
above a Solomon’s Judgment, the whole
chief figure,
and topped with
dedicated to the child-
is
left;
Balaam, Solomon, the Architect of the Temple,
of Sheba, and the Sibyl on the right. In the middle a
superb grouping of Saint Anne and the Virgin surrounded by statues of Melchizedek, the priest king; Jeremiah, the prophet; Moses, the legislator;
David, the supreme king; Isaiah, the visionary; Jeremiah,
the “lucid one”;
John the
Baptist, the precursor;
the theoretical builder of the
Roman
and
finally Peter,
Church. This grouping
is
con-
with the story of the Creation and Original Sin to end with
sistent
new
the triumph of Mary, the
Eve,
who, by her acceptance of the
divine mission, contributes to the total redemption of suffering
and
laboring humanity.
But though the Virgin central
tympanum by
the
is
triumphant, as
Assumption and Crowning of Mary, her
triumph remains profoundly human. Mary she
is
subject to the
fully expressed in the
is
same laws
is
as all other
a
woman, and
humans, even
as such if
she
is
accorded such an exceptional place. The Royal Portal highlights the Virgin as Throne of
Wisdom, though Wisdom
the north portal, mainly
human wisdom
is
on the right-hand
is
equally present on
side.
a direct derivative of divine
The theme
is
that
wisdom. This
is
46
The
Sites
shown by drawn
young Queen of Sheba
the
King Solomon, inspired by the
to the wise
turns majestically to
sculpted If
on the
there
Jerusalem,
temple was a
monument
welcome
irresistibly
Spirit of
mad
God. He
who
Marcoulf,
is
pedestal, clearly illustrates his antithesis.
show not only
to
is
human
that the construction of such a
labor, but that
it
had been necessary to
erect a
allowing, under certain very precise conditions, the
establishment of a
Throughout the
privileged
between heaven and
link
earth.
Middle Ages, Solomon was regarded
entire
who knew
initiated architect
the
while the
her,
is
such emphasis on the rebuilding of the Temple of
is it
who
“pagan”),
(a
God’s
We know how
secrets.
shadow of this king has weighed on
as the
heavily
the brotherhoods of builders
before becoming the embodied symbol of both operative and con-
templative Freemasonry. This
is
why the
of the portal
left side
is
also
dedicated to the activities that flow from this divine wisdom: animal
husbandry and farming, music and industry. Depicted next to the doctor are the architect with his square, the painter with his palette, the philosopher,
and the alchemist.
The purpose of
traditional alchemy, of course,
form lead into gold but
not inspired by the
fire
the divine breath that
is
to trans-
to discover the great secrets of
common
remain hidden to
was not
mortals.
Commoners
of the alchemists.
They
the elemental cause
are those
life
who
that are
are not inspired by
and indispensable medi-
ator between primal matter, or original Chaos, and the philosopher’s stone,
which
is
the result of the slow crafting of this matter that
then purified and given the active
life
are
two
life
by the mind. The contemplative
sides of the
same
the south portal of the cathedral,
umphant image of
the angels under the eyes of It
and
the Virgin Mary, she
God and
would take days and days
This
reality. it
who
is
life
and
the lesson of
comes through the is
is
crowned
tri-
eternally by
humanity.
to grasp the great wealth of art
and
knowledge sculpted on the outer walls of the cathedral of Chartres. During the Middle Ages, every tiatory journey.
visit to a
sanctuary was a long
There was no expectation that
it
would be
ini-
possible
The Vibrating Stones to abruptly enter a church,
was
first
fall
to one’s knees,
and
start to pray. It
Our contemporaries who can
necessary to reach this stage.
casually enter a cathedral either to admire the masterpieces
it
houses
or to indulge in banal cultural practices seem to have forgotten
But a cathedral
like
Chartres does not allow
necessary that
easily. It is
imbued with the message ourselves in
we remain by
left
what could be
It is
dare to bury
—the
interior,
engraved and which cannot
is
deciphered the
first. its
western
traditional orientation of churches intends the choir to
be located on the east, supposedly because
toward Jerusalem. This explanation a coincidence that
is
is
is
it
was necessary
quite simplistic
valid only in Western
The eastern orientation it
we
thus appropriate to enter the cathedral through
The
portal.
to be entered so
called the “holy of holies”
we have
this.
long on the outside to become
where the second part of the message be deciphered until
itself
builders before
its
47
and
to turn rests
on
Europe and North Africa.
clearly pre-Christian; the Celts practiced
themselves, facing the rising sun. This
was how
the four funda-
mental directions were defined and their meanings were derived: In front life;
was
life;
to the right, or the south,
was “nonbeing,” immobility, hell of
on the
I’ifern
Armorican Breton tradition
light. In the its
movement
of
yen
or “sinister” side. Here
left
—
in other
words, the frozen
—characterized by the absence of
Christian viewpoint, the merit of such an orientation
reinforcement of the theme of the Resurrection. The light
dies in the
west but
lowing a stay the
light, the
and behind, the west, was death and disappearance into the
night. This left only the north,
was
was
dawn,
is
perpetually reborn in the east. Tife, then, fol-
in a transitory
like Christ
Other World, reappears
on the morning of the
of us can hope to be reborn as Jesus was,
in
triumph
at
third day. Because each
we must make
bolic gesture of entering the divine sanctuary
the sym-
from the west and
turning around to the east, therefore benefiting from the material
and
spiritual light that
back of the
choir.
emanates from behind the
Thus death
In Chartres, everything
is
is
altar,
from the
vanquished.
constructed to permit this symbolic
The
48
Sites
advance inside the cathedral. There are which, as in
ing the sanctuary. But there like the
the baptismal fonts,
Christian sanctuaries, are located near the western
all
entrance, signifying that baptism
up
first
is
is
the absolute initiation for enter-
enormous space
also the
that opens
mirror of the Other World mentioned in the scriptures.
The nave, which bears allows visitors to
sail
a close resemblance to a capsized vessel,
within
it.
The nave of Chartres
most impressive because of the colors the
light
is
one of the
produces as
it
comes
through the countless stained-glass windows. In fact, there
we can
that inspires respect.
Is it
feel
something beyond measure, something
the spiritual aura of the
technique that causes this sensation?
we should not overlook
but
which bear responsibility to a
1020
for
its
the constraints of
for the entire effect.
or the builders’
one or the
1194
other,
architecture,
The cathedral was
to use the crypt dating
heir
from
foundations, which explains the exceptional width of the
nave,
some
Dame
in Paris).
is,
definitely
It is
Romanesque design and was obliged
site
(compared to only
fifty feet
The nave of Chartres
is
thirty-eight feet in Notre-
the largest of this type
—that
flanked by flying buttresses. Thanks to these, the architect was
able to eliminate the galleries that were formerly needed to balance the pressures of the high vaults. Galleries, beautiful as they
always block some of the
light.
They
may
be,
are replaced here by a kind of
triforium that serves as a circulation gallery, which furthermore
allows the aisles to be greater in height, which in turn considerably
expands the surface available for the windows: “Henceforth the
problem of the this
light
is
resolved,” says Villette, “and, starting
from
experiment, the entire history of Gothic architecture will consist
of the preeminence of
The drama of
the edifice stems
tural features of the
with
its
empty spaces over
full
spaces.” 4
from how the massive
architec-
lower part of the construction are combined
higher masses.
The forms shooting skyward grow
lighter as
they ascend, but toward the ground the foundational courses are
4. Villette,
Chartres et sa cathedrale, 60.
The Vibrating Stones exceptionally heavy and thick.
The
49
pillars are alternately cylindrical
and octagonal, which both breaks the monotony and
distributes the
weight more evenly, partially on weaker but highly elegant supports
and
A
partially
choir that
on blocks of
a density that can withstand
the largest in
is
all
any weight.
France and flanked by a double
ambulatory naturally extends the nave. The sixteenth-century con-
and restorer Jean de
struction of the choir enclosure by the architect
Beauce in Flamboyant
XV’s
reign) of the
style
and the
end of Louis
installation (at the
monumental group
of the Assumption sculpted by
Bridan above the high altar have somewhat amended the original building plan. But the wide scope of the choir almost supports this sculpted group, which
with medieval
is
neither in the best of taste nor in
style.
The transept of Chartres, along with most important
in France.
entire length of the
the architect
harmony
It
the one in Laon,
measures almost 212
feet,
church of Saint-Germain-des-Pres
was not obliged
to respect the
is
also the
which
in Paris.
Romanesque
the
is
Here
blueprint
or to use the crypt and generally allowed his construction to run
over the original building on install aisles,
which are
He took
all sides.
relatively rare.
somewhat reduced, however,
in
The width
two
crosses, light
lateral rosace
it is,
this to
of the transept
comparison with that of the
pal axis, the nave of the choir. But such as sizes the
advantage of
this transept
is
princi-
empha-
windows, which, seen from the transept
form an amazing display of colors that
is
intensified
by the
added through the western rose window located farther away.
Everywhere we look on
this crossing,
we
see only discrete or blind-
ing rays of pure color, gushing lines of force rocketing toward the sky.
And when we
transfer our gaze to the floor,
it is
to see
how
it
too has been as intensely worked as the rest of the construction.
The
floor inside the cathedral
is
composed of paving stones
that
have not been changed since the beginning of the thirteenth century. It is
slightly sloped to
at a time ary.
The
when
allow for easier washing, an important feature
pilgrims were
flagstone surface
still
is
allowed to
camp
inside the sanctu-
uniform rather than interrupted by
The
50
Sites
tombstones as
tomb the
Our Lady
in
not a single
is
of Chartres, but both surprising and intriguing
famous labyrinth located almost
At times
There
in the majority of cathedrals.
this labyrinth
is
at the very center of the nave.
can be found obscured by chairs and benches,
motivated perhaps by the numerous studies written about
its
meaning.
Chartres was not the sole example of this symbolic, and obviously initiatory, decoration; there were labyrinths on the floors of
various cathedrals and churches, but
preserved in
its
entirety. It
is
it is
the only one that has been
the flat depiction of a labyrinth forty
feet in
diameter that creates a “path” some nine hundred feet in
length.
Sometimes
is
it
Way, because the
called the Jerusalem
grims could not travel east until they had symbolically
pil-
fulfilled their
pilgrimage here. The official explanation provided by the clergy
simultaneously simple, logical, and reassuring: that reminds the faithful that paradise
road
full
lies at
It is
is
a representation
the end of a difficult
of snares. But this explanation appears simplistic, to say
myth of
the least, and contradicts the very
There can be no doubt that
the labyrinth.
this labyrinth
was intended
for pil-
make
grims who, having entered by the western door, prepared to precise circuit inside the cathedral.
It
familiarize themselves with the site
way
a
was
initially a
and
especially to discover the
for
them
to
path closest to the spiritual reality of which they had come in search.
But the theme of the labyrinth inherited from trated by the
Minoan
and the Minotaur,
would have us
is
earliest antiquity, illus-
legend of Minos, Pasiphae, Ariadne, Theseus,
much more complex and ambiguous than some
believe. Certainly,
on
a psychological level
considered the wanderings and gropings of the search of the light
—that
is
the soul’s it
it.
can be
human mind
in
to say, of a truth that can always be seen
sketched against the horizon but which escapes our grasp
attempt to possess
it
Certainly,
wandering during
on
a religious level
it is
when we
the image of
terrestrial existence, or as a depiction of
as prey to temptation, blindness,
should one day or another find sented by the triumphant Christ.
its
and lack of knowledge, which
way
to the divine Light repre-
The Vibrating Stones
But the story of Theseus going to
kill
Minotaur
the
51
in the heart
of the labyrinth and then finding the exit thanks to the thread given
him by Ariadne
fails to
convey that finding the
was
that finding the entrance
important goal
— especially
exit
was one goal but
considering
the
that
Heraclitus, in corroborating the legend, says the exit
same opening
as the entrance
by virtue of the
And
climb are also those that descend.
Now who
would Ariadne be
then,
of
exactly the
who
first to
guides
find the
not one of the archaic
if
Cretan depictions of the Mother Goddess? ship,
is
Ariadne
is
it
dialectic
fact that the paths that
Theseus not only to rediscover the exit but also entrance.
more
quite another, perhaps even
there
Is
some
relation-
however unconscious, between the presence of
this
labyrinth in a sanctuary dedicated to the worship of Mary, mother of God, and the strange palace of Knossos, in
which
Pasiphae and Ariadne incontestably evoke the
fertility cults
figures like
con-
nected to the Goddess of the Beginnings? The labyrinth of Crete was
not only a “prison” for the Minotaur; only ones
who
Ages
in the
It
was
also a “temple.”
who had some
could enter were those
edge of the path to travel.
it
seems that
it
was
the
The
kind of knowl-
same
in the
Middle
majority of the large sanctuaries, Chartres in particular,
where each sculpture, every architectural element, each stained-glass image presents teric
all
the characteristics of a double language, the exo-
within the grasp of everyone and the esoteric reserved to a few.
Without going further tion,
it
in
what
should be emphasized that
the overall plan of the cathedral.
given their
is
its
place and
way
its
It
development,
purely and simply an observa-
this labyrinth
is
not negligible. Before making all
Chartres should experience this labyrinth,
to both sight as they
owy
from the
integrated into
therefore has a role to play that,
to the heart of this sanctuary,
trate, the better to profit
is
artistic
pilgrims and visitors to first
and
to learn to concen-
spiritual riches offered
and awareness, then to allow themselves
meander through the cathedral (which
than the labyrinth
and
itself),
where the heart of the sanctuary
is
is
to be guided
much more
shad-
finally to recognize exactly
located. This
is
not necessarily the
The
52
Sites
geometric center of the structure or the perspective from the high Pilgrims can note in any case that
where the supreme feminine
side
is
Mary, the incontestable mistress of
One
this
which
is
millennium-old sanctuary.
Our Lady
of Chartres, at least
obviously the famous statue of
level, is quite
the Pillar,
the sinister
left,
exalted, in this instance the Virgin
of the essential elements of
on the ground
Lady of
paths lead to the
all
altar.
Our
placed not far from the transept in the
outermost part of the double ambulatory to the
left
of the choir.
Furthermore, the Virgin of the Assumption that clutters the high altar indicates
with an eloquent gesture of her hand the appropriate
which
direction to take to the heart of the sanctuary,
Our Lady
chance, above the place where the chapel of
Ground
is
located in the crypt
— along with quite work
that archaeologists, although at
unearth
—
in the very entrails of
some
for
what formed
is,
as
of
if
by
Under
few other things
a
time, are hesitant to
the original
nemeton
of the Druids in the land of the Carnutes. It is
Pillar
on
only relatively recently that the statue of
was placed
in this spot.
As her name
a pillar that seems to reveal
sumptuous garb, which
is
Chartres
is
The
the
telluric forces that
fire
brought into the West, but
and the ravages of the Virgin
Mary
is
said to have
offered to the sanctuary by Charles the
authenticity of this relic
ment of Chartres
elevated
a Virgin with Child, clad in
veil that the
a
worn and which had been Bald.
is
is
of the
appropriate given that one of the treasures
—which escaped Revolution — piece of a of
indicates, she
and symbolize the
spring from under the ground. She
Our Lady
it
is
suspect, as
is
the
way
it
was
contributed to the prodigious develop-
as a site of pilgrimage, so
it is
right for
Our Lady
of the Pillar to be attired so richly. She should also be crowned, as the
whole monument
who
after her sleep
is,
to the glory of the triumphant Virgin, she
and her Assumption was crowned Queen of the
Angels. Particularly remarkable, and enigmatic in
Our Lady
of the Pillar
is
a Black
many
respects,
Madonna.
This statue raises certain issues.
It is
colors have almost totally disappeared;
a it
polychrome work whose currently
shows only the
The Vibrating Stones
dark
pear.
it is
of
tint of the
what
It
wood. Some say the wood
is
walnut; others declare
does not matter; the statue clearly
are called Black Virgins or Black
sented sitting, holding Jesus on her
ahead and holds a pear
left
holding the globe of the world in his
the category
falls in
Madonnas. Mary
knee. She
left
hand,
repre-
is
looking straight
is
hand, while the child,
in her right
53
who
is
making the gesture
is
of benediction with his right.
What
is
often
unremarked
atively speaking. Certainly is
irresistibly evocative
compositional
by
of thirteenth-century Virgins. But
that
was created
it
Concurring testimonies specify that
named Wastin
not very old,
is
des Feugerets,
who
it
carved on
in
was donated by
died in 1521.
Thus
some
had replaced an older
fairly
it
donated “in the month of
invalidates
its
May
But there
is
and
no proof that
Madonna. Comparative
canon
a
explicitly
had been
1220, by Pierre de Bordeaux,
this ancient statue
character as a Black
to cover statues with paint
in cap-
mysterious circumstances, the statue
Archdeacon of Vendome.” That
way
the
can be dated
“in gilded vermeil” that
figure
it
all
it
Renaissance.
the
from the sixteenth century. But these same testimonies state that following
rel-
general appearance and attitude
its
details, as well as the inscription
indicate
letters,
ital
that the statue
is
was
Madonna.
It
gilded in
no
was common
gilding. this first statue
studies
on the
was
in fact a
Black
different representations of
on the cathedral’s windows can give only an
the Virgin with Child
idea of the general appearance of the statue of 1220. According to
Mary was
Delaporte,
ahead; with her
left
“seated,
the head erect,
looking straight
hand she held the Infant Jesus on her
left
knee;
with the other hand she raised an object that was either a scepter or 5 a fruit.”
Pillar
5.
Y.
was
It
would seem
a kind of
Our Lady
copy or adaptation of the 1220
Delaporte, Les Trois
Houvet, 1965), 42. This
that the current statue of
is
Notre-Dame de a small but
la
statue.
of the
But
we
cathedrale de Chartres (Chartres: E.
thoroughly documented study on the problems
posed by the statue, with references and citations concerning the origin and successive relocations of the statues of
Our Lady
of Chartres.
54
The
Sites
do not know whether the statue of 1220 was carved or
if it
was
Vendome.
any
case,
Our Lady
is
of the Pillar and the Virgin
Chartrian tradition
preceding her that
Madonna. The no
it
was destroyed during
Revolution
the
of
Under Ground
— although
now housed
remain, as well as the recent statue
Madonna
Thanks
know
that
two imitations
in the crypt (prob-
ably at the very spot that once held the original statue)
Black
Black
the
as
identifies
Our Lady
mysterious
less
same era
donated by the archdeacon of
a very ancient statue
In
in that
—
is
not the
of Chartres.
and even some engravings, we
to these descriptions
the original placement of the Black
Madonna: She was
fas-
tened to the rood screen that closed the choir, on a stone column to the
left
of
its
“Around
entrance.
her,
copper columns supported
crossbeams of the same metal on which lamps were hung.” But the
rood screen was demolished cate the statue.
in
1763, and
new home was on
Its
it
was necessary
to relo-
the northwest pillar of the
square of the transept, facing the nave, but
this
was only
until
1791.
There was a curious desire on the part of the Church to restore worship of
Our Lady
ble crypt.
The
Ground took egated
of
statues
given to the Black
Under Ground
now
inaccessi-
Madonna and
the latter
was
rel-
where. In any case, no further attention was
Madonna, and
that
in the
were thus exchanged; Our Lady of Under
the place of the Black
who knows
was banned
Under Ground, who was
it
was burned by
in the cathedral,
was
the statue of
revolutionaries
Our Lady
of
when worship
which had become the Temple of
Reason during the Revolution. After 1795, when worship had been reauthorized, the Black
placed in
its
Madonna was removed from
current location, on a pillar that
columns of the former rood
from vandalism, under
most venerated of cathedral, as
is
clear
this enclosure that
The
all
is
its
is
obscurity and
only one of the
And this Black Madonna, spared name of Our Lady of the Pillar, is the screen.
representations of the Virgin in the Chartres
from the abundant candles permanently
now
lit
in
a veritable chapel.
interior of the cathedral
is
not lacking for statues. In
this
The Vibrating Stones regard the perimeter of the choir
is
furnished as best as
could be. Begun in 1514 in the Flamboyant of the choir enclosure required
many
style, the
years before
possibly
it
construction
was
it
55
finally fin-
ished in 1529 in the purest Renaissance style. But the sculptures
were
far
from being completed. According
have been
set since
work began,
to a plan that seems to
principal scenes
from the
life
of
Christ and the Virgin were sculpted on the choir’s perimeter. This
lengthy construction lasted until almost the end of the ancien regime. Thus,
it is
erly speaking,
nor
not the work of a single sculptor or school propof a single style.
is it
could easily have turned
It
out as a bizarre assemblage of heteroclite compositions, but an
amazing continuity
oped
in a space of
exists in these forty scenes that
more than 250 square
feet.
characteristic of the styles of different eras,
may
although some
ment
feel that its
that nevertheless
presence
manages
is
have been devel-
The ornamentation, is
particularly rich,
monu-
regrettable in a
to retain the specific nature of
Radiant Gothic.
The now vanished rood screen belonged erected during the time of Saint Louis.
columns, and
it
it
had been
It
was held up by
tribune
consisted of seven vaulted bays that offered arcades
topped by gables on the nave
1763 because
Its
to this style.
side. It
was wantonly destroyed
obstructed the view. The sculptures that adorned
in it
were mutilated and buried on the spot, where they were found when the renovation in
work was undertaken. They
the Saint-Piat Chapel,
Notable among them
handsome
is
are currently
on display
which extends the cathedral’s chevet.
a very remarkable Nativity
Sleep of the Magi, in
which the sages
their feet resting against the stable wall
lie
and
side
a
no
less
by side with
from which horses are
emerging, already harnessed for their departure.
The
Saint-Piat
Chapel houses the cathedral’s treasury, including
everything that was saved from the former building and everything that excavations
and restoration work have recovered. This
the remnants of the in a reliquary
famous Tunic of the Virgin
but in a “monstrance.” The
veil
are
on
is
where
display, not
was donated
to the
The
56
Sites
sanctuary by Charles the Bald around the year 876. The
mark
the origin of Chartres as a pilgrimage site
tion to
Our Lady
son for
its
much
of Chartres began
seems that devo-
(it
but
earlier),
did not
gift
it
was
the rea-
success as such throughout the rest of Europe.
When
French queens were pregnant, the Chartres chapter house gave them a shirt that facilitate
had touched the reliquary containing the
an easy pregnancy. Also notable
most diverse
collection of objects, are a
cloth cut to
fit
the former statue of
The building glass
itself
in this treasury,
among
the
sumptuous sixteenth-century
Madonna and
cloak donated for the Black
Virgin’s veil to
a small piece of
Our Lady
damask
Under Ground.
of
dates from the fourteenth century, with stained
from the same era that
not lacking in interest. These windows
is
can hardly compete with the stained-glass windows of the cathedral itself,
however, which are so extraordinary and of such consummate
craftsmanship that they have come to eclipse thirteenth-century stained glass that can
The
art of
making stained
glass
still
and
the twelfth-
all
be seen in France.
was born
in
France around the
tenth century. Various testimonies confirm that
“windows with
ored glass and subjects” existed at that time
Reims and
Other documents
specify,
It
was
a
in Dijon.
with respect to the Abbey of Fleury (Saint-
Benoit-sur-Loire), that a lead setting different pieces.
in
col-
was used
to hold together the
phenomenal invention that allowed great
flexibility in the crafting of subject matter, for until that time, glass
panes were mounted on wooden frames or even, the chronicler Gregory of Tours,
rated beforehand. In ter
Muslim
on flagstones
we
that
lands, glass panes
armatures reinforced with plant
if
are to believe
had been perfo-
were affixed to
plas-
fiber.
The new process spread beyond France
quite quickly,
and
at the
end of the eleventh century the monastery of Monte-Cassino was noted for possessing stained-glass windows consisting of panes that
were assembled with the help of pieces of
lead, the panel thus
formed being affixed to an iron armature. Stained
come within
the reach of the cathedral builders.
glass, then,
Romanesque
had
archi-
tecture lent itself poorly to this technique, however, because the
The Vibrating Stones
was open
thickness of the walls considerably reduced the space that to the light. Conversely, once Gothic architecture
become both
walls had tainly
come
to invest
stained-glass
nate
is
more thought
cer-
to using the spaces of light,
and
windows
stained-glass
was perfected and
compact, the time had
less
windows became customary. This
number of
which
and
lighter
57
explains the inordi-
in a cathedral like Chartres,
centered on the play of light and shadow. All the
of the Chartres cathedral added together equal
windows
more than 6,500
square feet of surface space, a considerable area.
from the same
era.
Some
of the former building, destroyed in 1194.
The
largest
The windows
are not
all
are remnants
number
from the thirteenth century, when the existing cathedral was Others are of
later
we must
provenance. Obviously
are
built.
also take into
account the different restorations that have been undertaken since the art of stained-glass
windows, which was
virtually
abandoned
during the classical period, began to inspire unusual interest on both artistic all,
and
when
religious planes, not to
mention the mystical one. After
entering the cathedral of Chartres, the visitor
not only by the architectural breadth of the
site,
is
gripped
but also by the
strange lights emanating from the windows, especially the blue tones.
The “blue of Chartres”
and the stained
defined, though,
same studio
utilizing the
borhood of raw
The
light;
glass of
same methods.
But stained glass takes on
almost
famous.
is
its full
now
after centuries.
The
Only some of the
whole
is
not very precisely
Bourges came from the
Villette observes:
value only
if it is
given a neigh-
the cathedral of Chartres, alone or
—with Sainte-Chapelle of Paris—
tinted glass as a
It
retains
all
fulfills
the best conditions.
the potency of
its
lead settings strongly emphasize the colors.
flesh tones
have turned brown. Atmospheric
agents have attacked the outer face of the stained glass ness of
more
which
varies
colors even
from two to
six millimeters
—the thick-
—which adds even
quality to the effects of refraction that were obtained formerly
The
58
Sites
by a variety of “defects” achieved through blowing. The stained glass
windows
that are striated, buckled,
and riddled with bubbles
are the richest. 6
In fact, everything here obeys a master plan, as well as a perfect
knowledge of the variations of outside
light.
day, whatever the atmospheric conditions
or black cloud
—
all is
different tonalities.
lows,
and reach
organized to maintain a contrast
While
their
maximum
intensity. It
oldest stained-glass
windows
three
1194
is
on
this that the
windows
we
windows
is
(the central
icate nature of the
these three
it is
legendary
and wholly admirable compositions. To and resurrection of Jesus
an amazing Tree of one
is
more than
Jesse.
life
of Jesus.
The height of
thirty-three feet
tall),
these
the del-
drawing, and the perfection of the assemblage
windows
a group without peer in the entire world,
and probably the most beautiful example of the that
life
around 1150 and survived the
see the Easter mystery, the death
the right there
make
to
are those of the western por-
Christ. In the middle are the principal episodes of the
On
stir
yel-
thanks to the narthex tribune that protected them from the
fire
left
and
the
rests.
that were created
flames. These are venerable the
among
direct sunlight ignites the reds
reputation of “Chartres blue”
tal,
full sunlight, dull gray,
during the shadows of twilight that the blues
it is
The
—
Whatever the time of
art of stained glass
possible to see.
Tangibly belonging to this same era, but surrounded by more recent elements, the stained-glass la Belle Verriere,
window known
as
Notre-Dame de
which occupies the second window of the southern
ambulatory, thus acting as a counterweight to the statue of
Lady of the
Pillar, is
also
one of the masterworks of the cathedral.
This depiction of the Virgin the Black
Madonna. The
is
almost as venerated as
is
the statue of
Virgin Mother, wearing luminous blue
robes, stands out against a magnificent red background. Emile
6. Villette,
Our
Chartres et sa cathedrale, 83.
Male
The Vibrating Stones said of this Virgin that
dow
He
in existence.”
it
was “the most
also viewed
it
beautiful stained-glass win-
as reminiscent of the depiction
of the ancient mother goddesses of the Celtic tradition.
on
seated
straight
head
is
a throne looking straight ahead,
and her
encircled by a blue halo bordered with pearls
a rich crown.
on her
ting
Her hands
lap. Jesus
are resting
Mary
is
with her back quite
on a footstool covered by
feet resting
59
on the Infant
a carpet.
Her
and topped by
who
Jesus,
is sit-
also facing forward, clad in an uncolored
is
robe and a blackish brown cloak, his head surrounded by a cross-
shaped halo.
open book
He
in his left.
the dove of the
tom
of the
giving a blessing with his right
is
Above them
and the
first
from the beak of
at the Virgin’s halo.
window, two episodes of the
life
At the bot-
of Jesus are depicted, his
miracle at the wedding in Cana.
This Blue Virgin has generated
much
discussion. Certain details
composition, the blue alone, the archaic nature of
of
its
all
combine
it
three rays pour
Holy Ghost and end
three temptations
hand and holds an
to give
it
of stained glass that escaped the pletion of the renovation?
fire
We know
and was
was
from an 1137
stained glass.
charter of
It is
a ritual
lit
is
lamp before
her,
be a piece
com-
text that during
window
the object of specific devotion.
customary to maintain a
it
reinstalled after
that time, the cathedral did contain a stained-glass
odd because such
design,
an obvious impression of great age. But could
be the representation of an even older model? Could
ing the Virgin that
its
which
It
depict-
was then
itself is
rather
usually reserved for statues or icons, not
quite probable that this Virgin mentioned by the
1134 was the Blue
Virgin, for she has for centuries
enjoyed a popular enthusiasm that has never ebbed and
is
still
denoted by a wall blackened by the flames of the candles burned
in
her honor. In any event, she formed part of the glasswork of the original
Romanesque
at least eighteen
cathedral,
which
is
known
to have possessed
windows, three of which date to the
latter years of
the eleventh century.
A
large
number
of the other
windows
date from the twelfth cen-
tury and were installed during the construction of the current
The
60
Sites
Radiant Gothic cathedral. This
whose rose
size
the case with the rose
is
windows,
and subject matter make such a huge impression. The
window
of the western facade
and has Christ
in its center
is
devoted to the Last Judgment
—a standard for beauty.
A
triumphant
window
Christ of the Apocalypse occupies the center of the rose
Around him crowd
the southern portal.
large
men
the eighty old
of
of the
Apocalypse as well as the angels and the four companions. The
meaning
is
and eternal union
quite clear, involving the mystical
the end of time between
been freed from
sin
God and
have
finally
to their glorious status.
Below
God’s creatures,
and transcended
who
after
are five stained-glass images that set the stage for this victory. In the
middle
is
who made
the one
transcendence possible:
Queen and Mother. Around
as
her, in a
Mary
depicted
very charged symbolism,
range the prophet Jeremiah carrying the Evangelist Luke, Isaiah carrying Matthew, Ezekiel carrying John, and Daniel carrying
Also visible toward the bottom Pierre de
Dreux,
heiress to the
The
known
duchy of
large rose
to the Virgin. She
she
mistress of
all
who had
married the
Brittany, Alix de Thouars.
of the north faqade
represented as
receiving the gifts of the
Wisdom,
the coat of arms of the donor,
is
as Pierre Mauclerc,
window is
Mark.
who knows
is
obviously devoted
Queen and Mother
Holy Ghost. Here she
is
in the center,
the
Throne of
the mysterious designs of God. She
knowledge and
all
is
the
bounty, bounty and knowledge not
being viewed as separate in the Marian tradition. There are angels all
around
her,
and lower down are
Christ’s ancestors, the kings of
Judah, and the minor prophets of the
Hebrew
scriptures.
The
five
lower stained-glass windows emphasize yet further the Throne of
Wisdom aspect. The middle window is dedicated to Saint Anne, who is holding Mary on her knees. This was intended to show, without even referring to the idea of the Immaculate Conception (which
would not become dogma Virgin
was predestined
sion she a
would
fulfill.
until the nineteenth century), that the
at birth to a certain extent for the divine mis-
Below
this
window
is
reminder that the donor was Blanche de
the French coat of arms, Castille, the
mother of
The Vibrating Stones
Saint Louis.
To
the
left,
61
one window depicts Melchizedek above the
enemy king Nebuchadnezzar, and another window shows David above Saul. To the right
whom
the wise king
is
the face of Saint Louis has
most
and builder Solomon
been given) above
likely
Jeroboam, and Aaron above the pharaoh of Egypt. This subtle relations
existing
(to
is
how
between the Hebrew people and
the
their
neighbors were suggested, relations Christianity inevitably inherited.
The
description. Everything can be
the
windows defy
richness and variety of the other stained-glass
found here, from the noblest scene to
most banal, even the most informal, episode. Bustling through
them
are kings
and queens and princes wearing
magnificent silken robes; bishops, priests, and
richly
monks
embroidered
in distinctively
colored liturgical clothing; and mail-clad knights engaged in battles.
And from
all this,
which could be baroque with
its
wealth of
detail,
emerge peasants wearing coarse homespun, heads covered with
hoods to keep out the wind
as they
engage in the works of the
field,
or else working shirtless to bring in the harvest under a burning sun.
Artisans hold the tools of their trade.
Some
sculpt stone
and some
carve wood; others weave in their workshops. Fishmongers beneath
colored parasols, along with bakers and butchers, offer customers their wares.
A
great pride.
shoemaker
Drapers and
furriers display their
merchandise with
blacksmith shoes a horse caged in a
laces boots,
and
wooden
frame, a
a vintner trims his vines.
This reminds us that a good number of stained-glass windows
were offered by the selves
and
faithful,
depicted in them.
It
their
also
donors enjoyed seeing them-
allows us to leaf through an
admirable book of documentary images of daily century.
How many
have been used to But
this
compared
times these stained-glass
illustrate literary tales
on
extraordinary book of images
to a
comic
strip
evocations of everyday
life in
the thirteenth
windows
life
in the
—which
of Chartres
Middle Ages!
could even be
—contains many elements besides these
life.
Legends are teeming there, both those
pulled from the Golden Legend, meaning the legendary lives of the saints,
and from traditions that were viewed
as profane
and even
The
62
Sites
The
diabolic.
more than he
devil is
is
not absent from the windows of Chartres, no
from the exterior
The same holds
sculptures.
for the majority of medieval religious buildings, as
deemed necessary
to present the
that they might crystallize
them
get rid of
enemy
upon him
all their evil
impulses, thus to
This diabolical image
in a veritable exorcism.
who
in the
serene
is
of benevolence, the devil with his horned head and animal-
like face is putting forth his
that he
par-
is
“weighing of souls”
western rose window. Facing a radiant Saint Michael, full
had been
if it
to the view of the faithful so
ticularly terrifying in the depiction of the
and
true
obvious counterweight, and
clear
it is
attempting to seduce the Archangel of Light. In another
is
medallion a laughing and very carnivalesque
devil,
armed with
pitchfork and an expression that can only be labeled sadistic,
pushing before him a group of
terrified
damned
a is
souls.
Elsewhere another very serious but nonetheless horrible devil clutches the throat of a sick person as
window
if
is
connected with the numerous sculpted scenes
cathedral’s exterior, mainly
portal and in
fires
on the arches of
which the
cumbed
devil
where the jaws of this portal,
of hell. All
on the
visible
gape on the south
such as those notable groups
can be seen dragging a
to temptation, a courtesan,
hell
in the
on the
of Sainte Marguerite de Cortone, he has taken
appearance of a dragon with a head as red as the this
And
to strangle him.
and
woman who
a miser. In the
has suc-
window
of
Saint John, a devil takes possession of the soul of a dying person,
which resembles a
As
tiny
human
for the depiction of hell
folk imagery, with
body. itself, it is fully
monstrous demons
pleasure from torturing the damned.
Nicholas a devil
tries to
within the realm of
who seem
On
the
to take
window
dedicated to the same saint, this same devil
company
down as
of Saint
who
drag to the bottom of the sea a child
has fallen from the boat carrying him on a pilgrimage.
window
enormous
of magicians preparing a mysterious elixir
is
On
another
found
meant
in the
to
burn
the church dedicated to Saint Nicholas. Sometimes he appears
an imp whispering ambiguous suggestions
in people’s ears.
For
The Vibrating Stones
example, he
burn
shown
is
alive the fifty
suggesting to
Emperor Maxence
that he
inspiring
hovers
Maxence
near the
He
condemn Pantaleon
to
shoulder
left
of the
the
Church with Thomas
to be executed.
king Henry
English
reproaches a king,
who
is
lying
on
a
also
is
Plantagenet as the monarch discusses the respective rights of
power and
first
Alexandrian doctors converted by the preaching
of Saint Catherine and then decapitate the saint herself.
shown
63
He II
civil
Elsewhere he
Becket.
a bed, for not having
burned the
ship that carried the relics of Saint Etienne to Constantinople.
imagery
Diabolic Chartres.
It
was not
particularly
is
it
It
was
had
exorcised
it
cathedral
was
How would
it
shadow
The
depictions of the face of the
was present everywhere,
One
that
of the roles played by the
to provide exorcism for the largest
number
of people.
be possible to envision Chartres as a temple of the
impulses of the stained-glass
tri-
practicing this kind of necessary ritual for
the profound purification evil
in
of every believer, and that in order to be
to be actually seen.
umphant Virgin without and
many
to assert again that evil
lurked in the
effective
solely out of a taste for colorful subject matter
that the artists provided so
Enemy.
abundant and
and “reduction to nothing” of the dark
human
windows
being? of Chartres also reveal
many
hagio-
graphic as well as simply historic or epic legends. Particularly surprising are the
numerous depictions of the legendary
Roland. In the lower
circle
of the
beautiful
history of
stained
glass
of
Charlemagne, the king of the Franks commands the construction of a church in
honor of Saint Jacques of Pampelune. Farther up
is
the
flowering of the spears carried by those going to die at Roncevaux,
and next
to
it is
an overall view of the battle
the battle between
itself.
Roland and the pagan Ferragut
In the lozenge, is
depicted.
We
can also see Charlemagne’s return to France, Roland blowing a horn, and Roland attempting to break his sword, Durandal. All this is
obviously an illustration of The Song of Roland, a text that was
enormously popular during the twelfth and thirteenth
On
the south porch, the statue of
centuries.
Roland himself, the pedestal
The
64
Sites
of which carries a strange scene, extends these depictions of the leg-
end of Roland. In the center idol.
To
while
its left is
On
a
column supporting
crowned king holding
a
lifting his right
the ground.
is
hand toward the
idol
a
a grimacing
sword (now broken)
and bending
a knee to
the other side, a knight in a coat of mail kneels
extends his right
arm toward
the idol. This
is
and
clearly the episode of
Ganelon’s betrayal. Roland’s “stepfather” swears an oath to the
pagan king Marsilla king swears to
kill
to deliver the hero into his power, while the
him, an evident attempt to establish a parallel
between Ganelon’s betrayal and that of Judas
Iscariot.
In medieval imagery, as well as in the traditions, a kind of martyr
who
Roland became
saved Christianity from the threat of the
Saracens.
A
in
The windows of Chartres accord Roland
Italy.
similar
example can be seen
at the cathedral of
a
Verona,
distinctive
importance, while oddly alluding to the allegedly irregular nature of the hero’s birth. In fact, the stained-glass
window
dominated by the Mass of Saint
legendary episode in which
Gilles, a
of Charlemagne
Charlemagne does not have the courage to confess incest he has
committed with
birth of Roland.
ing of
The death of Roland
cathedral
— on
a
Mass
a grave sin, the
his sister Gisele that has resulted in the
Charlemagne thus take on
the motif of the
is
a
in
Roncevaux and
the suffer-
redemptive value. In any case,
of Saint Gilles reappears three times in the
window,
in a painted
mural
in the crypt,
and
in a
sculpture on the south portal. In emphasizing the sin that presided
over the birth of Roland, there appears to have been an intent to
show
who
the spiritual journey of the hero,
the Chronicle of the Pseudo-Turpin,
a
became, according to
“martyr of Christ”
at the
time of his death. Moreover, this was the time of the Crusades, and
Pope Alexander
who went
II
had
in
1063 promised remission of
sins for all
to Spain to fight the Saracens.
There are many other historicized
tales
the
in
windows
of
Chartres whose subjects are as likely to have been pulled from folk
hagiography as from the is
Bible.
The parable
placed parallel to the story of
Adam
of the
and Eve,
as
Good Samaritan if
to establish a
The Vibrating Stones
wounded man who
connection between the assistance
received charitable
and the cursed human race that was redeemed by the love
One could
of Jesus Christ. ture novel that
is
the
life
just as easily
follow the veritable adven-
of Saint Eustache, the story of Joseph with
ups and downs, the caravan of the aged Jacob on the road to
all its
Egypt, the episodes of Noah’s
and the
windows
stained-glass
Thomas
interest,
and
century cathedral, even
from
predecessor.
its if
of Saint Lubin, not to
life
a Becket.
would
of Chartres
week. All are worthy of All these religious
against the backdrop of the Flood,
life
from the
delightful images
tion the sober tragedy of
find,
65
and
all
artistic riches
The reading of
require
week upon
menthe
all
patient
are exceptionally beautiful.
form part of the
thirteenth-
the building inherited a few remnants
if
beneath the current sanctuary where
It is
we
not the archaic edifice, then the most evocative and moving
remains of what was once there upon the sacred
mound
of Chartres:
the crypt that set the conditions for the definitive construction of the
monument and This crypt,
the broad lines of
named
ship only in the
its
after Saint Fulbert
morning and
—which
is
complex.
It
raises issues that
open
—
extremely
is
have never been resolved or whose
olution has been actively avoided.
immense horseshoe, two
The
crypt’s general design
galleries
is
world
after that of Saint Peter’s Basilica in
Canterbury Cathedral, but
from 1120
to
it
offers
its
res-
that
connected by a curved cor-
ridor beneath the chevet of the cathedral. Saint Fulbert’s crypt largest in the
wor-
for
accessible to visitors only at certain
and then under the watchful eye of a guide
times,
of an
architecture.
own
peculiarities.
1130 under the direction of
Fulbert,
is
the
Rome and It
was
built
bishop of
Chartres, following the burning and destruction of the ancient
Carolingian cathedral, built after 858, of which nothing currently
remains but the crypt of Saint Fubin, on a hardly explored) just beneath the
was
to
make
Romanesque
it
into an
cathedral
what remained of
site
level yet
of the high
altar.
lower (and
The
intention
underground sanctuary above which the
was
built.
But to do
this, the builders
the Carolingian cathedral’s walls.
used
The crypt of
The
66
Sites
Saint Fulbert
hence
was the
its
wraps around the cathedral that was destroyed by
horseshoe shape.
fire,
follows that the Carolingian cathedral
It
situated exactly at the actual level of the crypt,
which was then
ground floor on the top of the mound. This in no
way
Lubin crypt, which
resolves the questions surrounding the Saint at a
is
lower
as the Carolingian sanctuary or
level.
a
is it
Was
it
remnant of
ument? From the composition of the walls
Gallo-Roman older.
that
substrata),
it
built at the
(a
lower mon-
a yet
blend of stones and
seems that the Saint Lubin crypt
Furthermore, before 858 another church existed on
had long served
as a cathedral church.
The baptismal
fonts were in
the assumption that
it
is
this site
life
of the cathe-
southern gallery, which leads to
was necessary
entering the upper level. This
demanded
its
even
is
But the crypt of Saint
Fulbert played a very important role in the religious dral.
same time
to go through the crypt before
reminiscent of the ancient initiation
of the catechumens, in which they
had
to trace a spiritual
and sometimes material journey before being accepted into the mysteries of the Eucharistic celebration.
Most important, in the crypt it
on the north
was subsequently
that sank a
the strange Well of the Saints-Forts
little
side.
filled in
An
is
located
object of veneration for centuries,
by the clergy to avoid displays of piety
too deeply into paganism, and was later restored.
This extremely ancient well was located outside the Carolingian cathedral,
and of course outside the original building on
Chartrian tradition
is
ship that surrounds
it.
it
was
not very clear about
this well
and the wor-
According to the chronicle of the
in this well that the
this site.
monk
Paul,
bodies of two Christian victims of
Danish pirates were cast by Norsemen during the 858
siege of
Chartres, hence the veneration that surrounds this
its
of Saints-Forts (strong saints). All this
is
site
and
name
subject to caution, because
the old Chronicle of Chartres recounts that during Saint Peter’s time, Saints Altin
and Eodald,
whom
life-
he sent to Gaul with Saints
Savinien and Potentien (more specifically charged with spreading the Gospel through the land of Sens,
where the
religious metropolis
The Vibrating Stones
67
was), had discovered a church already founded in Chartres that
needed only
their consecration.
wrath of the including his
and
slain
But
in
doing
this they incurred the
Roman governor Quirinus, persecutor of Christians, own daughter Modeste. He ordered the missionaries
their corpses tossed in a well located close to the local
church.
There
no way
is
to sort out this confusion in the accounts, espe-
because the medieval clergy spared no effort to connect the
cially
founding of a diocese, or even a famous parish, to the apostolic it
was thought
that such a connection provided absolute proof of the
authenticity of the foundation. But Altin the later chronicles, leaving only the
These two saints have their the chapel of
who wrote
Our Lady
of
own
and Eodald vanish from
names of Savinien and Potentien.
chapels not far from the well and
Under Ground. The chronicler Rouillard,
during the time of Henri IV, even reported that behind
the Virgin’s altar “there
was needed ing place”
was
a small hiding place.” This
for imagination to begin embroidering.
was made
was
all
that
The “small
hid-
and Potentien and,
into the prison of Savinien
according to the Old Chronicle, Altin and Eodald were able to In fact, this
famous hiding place
is
merely a
rediscovered during excavations in 1976.
might be about the well and
its
as
the
closet,
it
And whatever
has solidly retained
flee.
which was the truth
very likely ancient origin
nection with pre-Christian cults), tion
era;
its
(in
con-
reputa-
Well of the Saints-Forts, thereby emphasizing the
connection between Savinien and Potentien, whose chapels, dating
from the eleventh century, reserved for
Our Lady
of
still
open onto the
one
crypt, like the
Under Ground. At the beginning of the
thirteenth century, four other chapels were added, characterized by their
rudimentary ogival vaults and larger windows.
During the course of the efforts,
is
and excavation
murals were discovered that had been concealed beneath
several layers of coatings.
that
different renovation
One,
in the
strangely reminiscent of the
from the Saint-Savinien Chapel
is
southern gallery,
famed Bayeux
is
tapestry.
a fresco
Not
a depiction of the Virgin.
far
The
The
68
Sites
characteristics of this painting date
its
creation to around the end of
the twelfth century:
The Virgin and Child
display the frontal posture that characterizes
Romanesque
the Majestic Virgins of the
crowned but with
a flat
and flowerless diadem.
tures bear a serious expression.
of a child,
it is
Romanesque tures.
artists, this face
left
hand
Our Lady
duction.
The Virgin
.
Christ’s face
is
is
Her
is
facial fea-
no longer that
Wisdom;
for
to possess adult fea-
is
7 .
fairly similar to that of the ancient
Under Ground, but
of
Byzantine depictions. type,
.
probably holding a scepter
it is
definitely not a repro-
seated on a throne, the upper portion of
which extends quite high, revealing the
Wisdom
.
of eternal
would have had
is
This type of representation statue of
.
.
The Virgin
blessing with an expansive gesture of his right
is
hand, whereas his
.
God made man
the face of
The Child
period.
painting’s kinship with
incontestably a Virgin of the Throne of
It is
which conforms to the general
signification of the
Chartres sanctuary. But the discovery of frescoes in the crypt of Saint Fulbert gives the impression that in the tion the cultural displays extended
on both
Romanesque construcwith the crypt
levels,
then playing a very important role, not only through but also by the link
what had been are just it
what
established with the past, for
the original sanctuary.
galleries of the current crypt,
might remain beneath
cated to Saint Lubin.
would be
The
What remain
it
decoration
was
closer to
to be determined
sanctuary was, what there
this original
between the two
still
it
its
and
may
be
left
especially
of
what
this level, in addition to the crypt dedi-
Our understanding
of this whole
complex
facilitated greatly thereby.
Saint Fulbert crypt
is
remarkably interesting for
its
use in
worshipping the famous Our Lady of Under Ground. Currently, there
7.
is
a statue that goes
by
this
name
Notre-Dames de Chartres 26 (March 1976): 20.
in
one of the chapels of the
The Vibrating Stones
crypt, but this ously,
what
is
not the ancient statue, which, as mentioned previ-
was destroyed during it
looked
well as to the
like
the Revolution. Nevertheless,
we know
thanks to numerous drawings and engravings, as
two copies
that are currently housed in the Carmelite
Order of Chartres. One of these copies, which original,
69
was carved from oak
smaller than the
is
was
in the seventeenth century. It
oddly covered with black paint, no doubt from a desire to establish
and the Black Madonna who
a parallel
between
the
The second and more
Pillar.
it
elegant copy
is
Our Lady
is
a “transposition,” in
early-eighteenth-century style, of the ancient representation of
Lady. The
anonymous
sculptor did take
upon himself
it
of
Our
to alter any-
thing that appeared too crude or barbaric to him, but overall this
work can provide in the crypt
a fairly exact idea of the appearance of the statue
worshipped for so many centuries.
The crypt does hold
work by
a statue of
Our Lady
the Parisian sculptor Fontenelle that
September 15, 1857. The
artist
had access
cerning the original statue, but he First, the original statue
to
8
of
Under Ground,
was put
all
the
made something
in place
a
on
documents con-
entirely different.
was no more than 31.5 inches
(80 cm).
tall
The new one measures 36.2 inches (92 cm), not counting
the base.
Next, the face of the Virgin, instead of being majestic, even without its
archaic features,
is
truly sweet
and
characterless. Finally, the
embellishments of the chair and the gilding of the essarily in the best taste. This lends supports to
archaeologist Paul
It is
Durand
regrettable that the artist
most
irritating
is
what
not nec-
the Chartrian
said even as early as 1869:
who
form with scrupulous exactitude still
risers are
executed this work did not con-
to the original sculpture.
the mediocrity of this sculpture.
What
When
one
is is
accustomed to the serious and elevated nature of the ancient works, one cannot look without bitterness at
8.
These two copies housed
public.
at the
all
these figures
Carmelite Order of Chartres are not on view to the
The
70
Sites
depicted with these contrived and insignificant physiognomies that
bad
the
And
this
taste of
our day
accumulating
is
in
our churches
9 .
unfortunate Paul Durand did not even have the leisure of
contemplating the horrors to be found in the sanctuaries of Lourdes
and Fourviere!
Whatever the case may in her place, to
Our Lady
be,
of
it
was a
on the pedestal of the
with the dative Virgini pariturae, informs those pilgrims and
statue,
tourists
who
find their
Of course,
way
here of this Druidic tradition.
the former statue
the Druids worshipped;
it
dates
was
definitely not the
same one that
no further back than the twelfth cen-
Moreover, the tradition that maintains the Druids would have
foreseen the Virgin
Mary appeared
only in the fourteenth century
and without mentioning the Druids by name. They were such only in the Chronicle of Rouillard, the a
contemporary of Henri
a “Virgin
IV.
The
title
identified as
character of which
story of a statue dedicated to
about to give birth” that would have foreshadowed Mary,
mother of
Jesus,
Chartrian clergy,
is
merely a fable invented after the fact by the
who wished
to establish the great antiquity of the
worship and pilgrimage of Our Lady of Chartres. But
this fable
have an origin; there was no lack of faces of mother goddesses Celtic Druidic tradition.
It is
the inhabitants of the region
and channel
Our Lady
this tradition,
does
in the
probable that during the Middle Ages,
had
a vague recollection of the Druids’
worship of some mother goddess.
to
there,
Mary, that the Druids worshipped
virgo paritura. Furthermore, an inscription
was
is
remind us of the tradition according to which
here, long before the birth of
tury.
Under Ground
It
was
necessary, then, to revive
which was managed successfully thanks
of Under Ground. This gave everyone an easy conscience.
But we should not underestimate the profound value of the presence of
Our Lady
of Under
Ground
Well of the Saints-Forts, inside
9.
this
in the
immediate proximity of the
somewhat enigmatic crypt
at a site
Paul Durand, Archaeological Society of Eure-et-Loir, Proces-Verbaux 4: 235.
The Vibrating Stones that could well be the telluric center of the cathedral.
certainly not
It is
by chance that a statue of the Virgin was situated here throughout site’s
Nor would
entire history.
Black
Madonna was
above
all,
this
be by chance that the statue of a
placed on an upper
on
level,
a pillar, which,
symbolizes the world’s axis and which, on a practical scale,
connects in some
And
it
71
way
Our Lady
the cellar of
below with the one above.
the sanctuary
of Chartres
systematically explored. There has been
is
from having been
far
much
about a cave
talk
located far beneath the crypt of Saint Fulbert, even farther
down
than the crypt of Saint Lubin. The opinions of archaeologists and
on
researchers diverge
found does not mean that cave
this
is
accepted,
The
this point.
what
it
does not
is it?
It
exist.
Surely
the Celtic priests officiated only in the
top of the mounds.
fact that
it
it
But
if
was not
open
has not yet been the existence of
a Druidic grotto;
air in clearings
could have been a Gallo-Roman
or on the
cellar,
because
once Gaul had been Romanized, the Celts began building temples,
which they had never done previously. Given the succession of gions and civilizations,
it
could also certainly have been a dolmen or
covered alley dating from Neolithic times, which
from 2000 to 4000 on in
Numerous
B.C.E.
megalithic
their interior supports depictions of a
Armorican Brittany and
rich in
monuments
reli-
Ireland.
is
to say
anywhere
monuments
reveal
goddess mother, 10 mainly
The region of Chartres was once
of this kind, and there
still
exists,
not far from
here in the Eure Valley at Change-Saint-Piat, a covered alley that includes a representation of
shaped idol
in
which
it
is
what archaeologists not
Goddess of the Beginnings. So know. But is
it
just
what
is
recognize the ancient it
exactly?
We
do not
cannot be by chance that the worship of the Virgin
so magnified at Chartres
Carnute people
may have
10. See Jean Markale, 11.
difficult to
bud- or pot-
call a
The etymology
Carnac
of the
et
name
Mary
on the sacred mound from which the
taken their name, and the city as well. 11
Pygmalion, 1987).
Venigme de I’Atlantide
(Paris:
of the Carnutes
disputed, but
is still
it
derived from a pre-Indo-European word, car or cam, meaning “sacred
may have been mound.”
72
The
Sites
Whatever the truth may be concerning by the Saint Fulbert crypt, there currently dral dedicated to the in her
triumph and
all
exists in Chartres a cathe-
delicate
human world is
who is presented Wisdom on a place
worship of the Virgin Mary,
in her role as the
Throne of
that has been since time unrecorded a sacred
where the
these problems posed
site,
one of those places
exchanges between the divine world and the
are achieved. Furthermore, this cathedral of Chartres
one of the most beautiful and most complete monuments
bequeathed us by the medieval past. sidered the very
If
the Virgin
Mary can
be con-
embodiment of perfection and completeness, then
the cathedral of Chartres
is
the
symbol of
pleteness inscribed eternally in stone.
this perfection
and com-
Chartres over the Course of History
hartres
owes
its
name
who,
to the Gallic people of the Carnutes,
during the time of the Gallic War, occupied a vast territory consisting of the Beauce, Orleanais, and Blesois. the
Dreux
which separated
Forest,
It
was bordered on
the north by
from the domain of the Aulerci
it
Eburovices; on the east by the Rambouillet Massif, which separated
from the
Parisii;
now vanished
on the southeast, beyond Saint-Benoit-sur-Loire, by
forests that separated
it
from the Senones; on the south,
beyond the Loire and encompassing the Sologne, by the Cher which separated Massif and the
it
from the
first hills
Bituriges;
and on the
east
was considered
of the Maine, which separated
great sanctuary
During
where
this
all
1.
1 .
The name Adour was
was incorporated
the Druids of
and
it
it
from the
this
Carnute
was home
to the
Gaul would gather once a
year.
time Chartres was called Autricum, which means
“ford on the Eure,” the
European Altura
the center of Gaul,
River,
by the Vibraye
Turones and the Aulerci Cenomani. According to Caesar, territory
it
river’s earlier
name having been
the pre-Indo-
Caesar makes no mention of Autricum, and the
also derived
from
into Gallic as dubro,
this term. It
should
mean “running water” and
which can be recognized
in
Dore and Dordogne
(deep water), and then became dour (the Vannetais deur) in Armorican Brittany.
73
The
74
Sites
name does not appear
until the
second century
Geography, then on the famous Peutinger Table third century, in
which
it
B.C.E., in 2
,
Ptolemy’s
created during the
can be seen that the town
is
connected on
Mans
one side to Dreux and the Seine estuary and on the other to
and the Aquitaine. During the time of the Gallic wars, Autricum not supposed to have played a major
however, which
now
is
role.
Cenabum
(or
Genabum),
Orleans (or Gien; opinions vary), seems to
have been the most important center of the Carnutes, which cal given
more
its
logi-
is
position on the banks of a large river that allowed for
intensive sailing than did the Eure.
Everything indicates that tary center of the Carnutes,
Cenabum was
Gauls,
furthermore,
and
the political
mili-
which reinforces the hypothesis that
Among
the
southern zones influenced
by
Autricum was a sanctuary rather than outside
the
a fortified town.
Mediterranean urbanism, there were never actually towns and in the sense that those his
is
terms are understood today.
Commentaries, speaks of Gallic towns, he
fortresses that
were occupied only
and gatherings, or
When
cities
Caesar, in
actually referring to
is
war or
in times of
fortress sanctuaries (such as Alesia).
for
But
markets this
does
not imply that the Carnutes had no other important centers. While
place-names of Gallic origin are rare there
is
a wealth of
Dreux (from Chateaudun
duno have
its
perimeter, as
Beauce region
shown by
(“castle-castle”;
names
the
the French chateau and the Gallic
same meaning), Vendome (literally
(a superlative
meaning “the
“the wolves”; see the Breton bleizh ), the
(“river of beavers,” like the Parisian Bievre),
(“bridge over the Sauldre”), not to mention the
(Novientum, “new
most of the waters
village”),
mainly
[The Peutinger Table
in the
and
Salbris
numerous Nogents
Eure Valley, to which
in this region flow.
The importance and extent of
2.
the
itself,
the Durocassi, a subject people of the Carnutes),
very white”), Blois
Beuvron
them along
in the
is
the medieval
rich source of information.
— Trans.]
the Carnutes should not obscure
copy of a
Roman map.
Historians find
it
to be a
,
Chartres over the Course of History
the fact that this valley
was inhabited long before
Celts. In the vicinity of Chartres,
mainly
in the
75
the arrival of the
Eure Valley, numer-
ous dolmens have been found, evidence that the megalith builders
between 4000 and 2000
settled this area
These settlements
B.c.E.
must have existed throughout the Bronze Age. But valleys carved
by
rivers
were inhabited. The
it is
likely that all
should have been
rest
an immense forest that can hardly be imagined today, and of which only fragments remain on the perimeters. All traditions, including Caesar’s historical testimony, agree that the land of the Carnutes
was
a huge forest.
This
name
is
where the problem of the name Beauce comes
incontestably comes from a Gallic term that
in the
form of
Belsa,
and
it is
for the “clue” tral
about
into Latin
a vast clearing sur-
which provides ample
forests,
this site
The
claimed that belsa meant “clearing.”
The Beauce around Chartres would have been rounded by impenetrable
moved
in.
justification
dropped by Caesar about the great cen-
we know
sanctuary of Gaul, because
that Druidic worship
was
celebrated in the nemeton, meaning a clearing in the middle of the
Chartres would then have occupied the
forest.
kind of sacred geography, and
it
midway
point in this
could well have been an omphalos
a symbolic center of the world. But belsa also contains the
which
the generic root of the
is
names of
term bel
the Celtic deity of light,
Belenos (the Shining One) and Belisama (the Very Shining One),
who was
Beli in
Welsh mythology.
We
could then consider the
Beauce as the “clearing” or “sanctuary” (which amounts to the
same thing
for the Gauls) of Bel or Belenos. This epithet
most often
designated Lugh, the Master of All the Arts, the god not assigned any
one function. Caesar, that he
was
mology of tuary
is
who
identified
the
most honored of
Belsa,
we should bow
in the sacred forest of the
No
Gallic deities.
to the evidence.
Whatever the
The
ety-
idea of sanc-
connected to the idea of the clearing, and there can be no
clearing or sanctuary unless there
back
Lugh with Mercury, indicated
is
a forest.
Thus we
find ourselves
Carnutes mentioned by Caesar.
decisive archaeological traces of the Celtic period have been
76
The
found is
in
Sites
Chartres or
its
surrounding area. All that can be established
Roman
that long before the
Autricum, was
if
occupation, the
site
of Chartres,
not a town at least a fortress sanctuary of the
Carnutes. Data brought to light in the nineteenth century but dis-
puted today, however, might offer some Autricum’s exact
role.
They concern
new
elements concerning
traces of significant
ground
undulation that followed the contours of the city of Chartres from northeast to southeast for visible
more than
a mile
and which was
still
quite
during the nineteenth century before the growth of Chartres’s
urban area:
This ground displacement, definitely achieved by
appeared
like a ditch
feet apart. It
from the rue de Fresnaye to the borders of the visible,
could be followed
hospital.
Today
it is
except at a place called the Citadelle, immedi-
where
ately to the south of the rue de Rechevres,
most abrupt
means,
bordered by slopes whose parallel crests
appear to have been more than 125
no longer
artificial
at the time
it
was mapped.
this
work was
3
Nineteenth-century archaeologists viewed the undulation as
remnants of a
Roman camp, which
is
impossible given the surface
area involved. According to Joly,
The examination of
this
map shows
both directions to meet the Eure
that this
in the
work could extend
in
north at a point called the
Barre-des-Pres (denoting an ancient defense work) and to the south
by following the rue de Reverdy, which gives street in the sector of Saint-Martin-en-Val.
described an arc of
more than 25
It
way
to an ancient
would thereby have
miles containing a space of
than 250 hectares. 4
3.
Roger
4. Ibid.,
Joly, Histoire
9-10.
de Chartres (Roanne, France: Horvath, 1982).
more
Chartres over the Course of History
This
is
77
both significant and intriguing. Never was
this construc-
when
Chartres was
tion mentioned in ancient times, but in 1438,
threatened by the English,
it
was
said that “the trenches of Nicochet,
Mautrou, and Saint Lubin” were repaired. These three names
desig-
nate the places where the circumvallation in question cuts the roads
from Mans and Chateaudun and the ancient way known
as the
Countesses Road. It
was
an encircling wall that had
clearly, then,
and which the French
fronted by English troops. But fortification it
so
it
and not the actual
would have been impossible Could
far.
this
make
tried to
fallen into disuse
operative again
when
con-
could have been only an advance
city defenses; given the population,
to defend a perimeter that extended
circumvallation really have been a defensive mili-
tary construction? Joly speculates,
In the light of theories recently
vations
formed based on numerous obser-
made throughout Western Europe,
couldn’t this be seen as
one of those proto-historical enceintes whose role seems to have been more symbolic than defensive and would therefore denote the antiquity
and importance of the
site
of Chartres? Only an archae-
ological excavation, a particularly delicate endeavor, this
But
would allow
hypothesis to be verified. 5
a very attractive hypothesis, especially with respect to the
it is
great Druidic sanctuary of the land of the Carnutes. Wouldn’t this site
have had a sacred enclosure wall?
Once became
a
the
Roman
conquest was ensured, Autricum gradually
Gallo-Roman town and took on
tants. In three centuries the settlement
the
name
of
its
inhabi-
developed on a surface that
hardly varied until the eve of the Second World War. archaeological testimonies are not lacking.
And
for this,
The most important rem-
nants were found on the borders of the cathedral, whose crypt
5. Joly,
Histoire de Chartres, 11.
The
78
Sites
reveals clearly
Roman
structures. Saint-Andre
of a theater or amphitheater
site
the topography of the quarter.
Church
rises
on the
whose curved remains influenced
And
the remains of significant con-
on the Faubourg Saint-Brice have been unearthed near the
struction
spot where the roads out of Blois and Orleans join in order to cross Eure.
the
The study of Roman roads has
further
shown
that
Chartres was an important crossroads; privileged relations had
been established with Orleans and
Blois, but there
were also roads
toward Rouen by way of Dreux and toward the Armorican peninby way of Le Mans, as well as toward Cotentin (and Mont-
sula
Saint-Michel) by
way
of
Mortagne and Domfront. Relations with
however, did not seem at
Paris,
all
ensured, at least directly.
Chartres during the empire was subordinate to Lyon (Lugdunum),
but by the intermediary of Sens, the capital of the Gallic Senones,
which during the Christian era would be the metropolitan archbishopric on
whom the
bishopric of Chartres depended. In the mid-
dle of the third century, Chartres
second
had the reputation of being the
Fourth Lyonnais
city of the
[the
Fourth District of the
Lyonnais province], after Sens. But a period of decline began around 270, prompted,
by the
and
first
German
entire quarters
invasions.
The
it
seems,
city suffered great destruction,
appear to have been abandoned. Only the sum-
mit of the plateau, for strategic reasons, and the banks of the Eure, for
economic reasons, maintained
their activity.
At the same time,
Christianity began invading the empire, considerably influencing lifestyles
and behaviors.
Local hagiography pushes Christianity to apostolic times, tury.
The Chartrian
back Chartres’s conversion to
toward the middle of the
clergy deliberately
promoted
this
first
belief,
doubt better to incorporate what remained of ancient pagan tions that
were particularly
vital
and
spiritually
cen-
no
tradi-
prominent. The
medieval clergy saw no hiatus between Druidism and Christianity; the transition occurred as a matter of course at the time the evangelical
message arrived to confirm historically what Celtic myths
Chartres over the Course of History
had been teaching over the long
79
theme of
centuries, starting with the
We know now for certain that all this A legend never exists without a hidden
the Virgin about to give birth. is
only legend. But pay heed:
The Chartrian
reality.
we
clergy, as
shall see,
were not
totally in
error in asserting a continuity between the Christianity they
and
Druidism they imagined through oral
a
knew
traditions, not all of
which were necessarily dubious. Certainly, as in all the other
most
likely small
communities of
creet, clandestine existence.
the
West
and more or
Bear in mind that Christianity began in
grouping of small
as a
less
Roman Gaul, there were Christians who maintained a dis-
towns of
sects
more or
less
outside the law
persecuted by imperial authority. But
we have
to
wait for the year 340 for Chartres to be endowed with a bishop, in the
person of Aventin. Before there,
much
in private
this, there
less a cathedral. It
homes, mainly
was no reason
to have a church
can be presumed that Christians met
in the
suburb where stands Saint-Martin-
au-Val, one of the places housing the sepulchers of the
first
bishops;
or even in the Saint-Cheron quarter, the supposed residence of a
mythical Saint Cheron. (The
name
caraunus, meaning a sacred pagan
is
derived from the term sanctus
mound, which was subsequently
mistaken for a proper name.) Greatly revered throughout the Beauce, Saint Cheron, like Saint George and Saint Christopher ther of
whom
exists,
Roman Catholic who beseeched him.
according to the contemporary
Church), performed numerous miracles for those
Thus, starting with Aventin, the Church had an in Chartres. It in
(nei-
may have
official existence
dated from the edict of Constantine,
313 gave Christians the
who
right to worship, but only that right.
Christianity then coexisted with other religions, including matriar-
chal religion (the worship of Cybele
more or
less
blended with that
of Mithra). Soon, however, the edict of Theodosius suppressed these
other religions and instituted Christianity as the empire’s one gion, at
which point Chartres became an
active center of a
reli-
campaign
to convert the countryside, in conjunction with the preaching of
Saint Martin de Tours.
The
80
As
in
Sites
many
other towns, there were different sanctuaries inde-
pendent of one another
in Chartres,
bishop’s authority, forming different intentional or
what
but they were united under the
chance excavations performed during urban
construction have revealed an impressive
number
of
now
churches. West of the current cathedral square there
Sainte-Meme Chapel, which tuary in the
is
the
first
in
And
to store grain for a long time.
was older than
vanished
was even
a
believed to have been the oldest sanc-
was demolished
city. It
The
called a cathedral group.
is
1790
it is
after
having been used
possible that Saint-Aignan
cathedral edifice, but
we can do
all
is
hypothesize about this until some intensive excavations have been
made beneath Chartres It
was not
the former Carolingian cathedral.
itself
was not
until the
customary to name of such
names
initially
second half of the sixth century that
certainly
Lady. This
intention to
is
it
became
a sanctuary after a saint. Nevertheless, the use
became fashionable
of the dedication of the cathedral
Our
dedicated to the Virgin Alary.
is
early on.
September
8,
The
feast
day
the Nativity of
quite revealing of the Chartres community’s
highlight the Virgin about to give
and
birth,
it
explains the subsequent diffusion of the legend of the virgo paritura.
Was
this
based on a desire to ensure the Chartrian church a
certain preeminence in the devotion to Alary?
Or was
it
instead
seeking to incorporate the worship that a mother goddess had received for centuries on this site?
The question remains open.
Starting with the reign of Julian the Apostate, however,
Gaul
began receiving large infusions of Germanic immigrants, both as federated communities that lived under their
which meant they were given
The town
became the residence of
486, Chartres, one of the
tion,
was made part of
the
Chartres, Saint Solennus,
towns under
new kingdom was one of
them
Alains. Chartres,
a prefect of the
last
letes,
to
of Allaines, for example,
was created near Orleans and populated by
in
laws and as
a special status that obliged
contribute to regional defense.
while,
own
Teuton
Roman
of Clovis.
letes.
mean-
Then
administra-
The bishop of
the three clerics chosen by
Chartres over the Course of History
him
the king of the Franks to instruct
81
in the faith of Christ.
Following the death of Clovis, his sons fought bitterly over the succession of power, and Chartres changed masters often for close to a century. In the year 600, Thierry, son of Childebert, lay siege to
the
city.
Chroniclers have recorded
by ruse, but the bishop, through
how he
captured Bishop Bethaire
his strength of character,
earned the
respect of his opponent and therefore obtained the safety of the
city.
This shows the importance of the Chartrian church from both a political
and
a religious perspective.
reunify the Frankish
made At
When
kingdom following
Clothaire
managed
II
to
the death of Thierry, he
Bethaire his chaplain. this time, efforts
were begun to found numerous
ecclesiasti-
cal establishments, particularly Saint-Martin-au-Val, Saint-Cheron,
Saint-Maurice Abbey, and Saint-Pierre-en-Vallee Abbey, which benefited
from the generosity of Queen Bathilde, wife of Clovis
well as the priory of Saint-Lubin-des-Vignes.
It
and Magdalene of Saint-John were
at this
same
time.
as
can also be presumed
that parish churches such as Saint-Michel, Saint-Saturnin, Faith,
II,
Holy
built outside the city walls
At the close of the Merovingian
era, Chartres
was
both a powerful fortress and a kind of “holy city” in which religious life
was considerably evolved. In 743,
Hunald of Aquitaine,
Carloman and
in revolt against
Pippin the Short, son of Charles Martel, burned
down
Chartres
“without sparing the church consecrated to the Mother of God,” as declared in the Annales de Metz.
It
was perhaps
in reparations that
Pippin the Short donated part of the Forest of Yvelines to the
church of Chartres,
became
king.
a
donation confirmed
the cities of Neustria, its
768 when Pippin
According to the chronicle of the
Chartres was then “a city of
beauty of
in
buildings,
many
renowned
monk
Paul,
inhabitants and the richest of for the height of
and the culture of the
its
fine arts.”
all
walls, the
But the son
of Charlemagne, contesting the succession of power, very nearly
destroyed
it.
Finally, Chartres
was
allotted to Charles the Bald.
But
at this
The
82
Sites
time of the Carolingian Renaissance, another peril was looming on
Normans. When
the horizon: the
the Beauce
was
directly threat-
ened, Bishop Helie received the mission to reinforce the troops he
was already charged with maintaining on
permanent
a
Nevertheless, the Norsemen, after ravaging the Perche, to take possession of Chartres
basis.
managed
on June 12, 858, under the leader-
ship of their chieftain, Hasting.
The
city
was
pillaged
and burned
and part of the populace massacred. Bishop Frotbold was mur-
when
dered in his church, or perhaps thrown in the Eure River
caught trying to
According to the chronicle of the
flee.
monk
Paul,
the survivors, after gathering the scorched remains of the victims,
down
once again cast them cathedral
a well that tradition says
was
inside the
and which was called from then on the Lieu-Fort
[“strong place”] because “the merits of their ashes produced
many
miracles.” This seems to have been the origin of the Well of the Saints-Fort,
which was actually located outside the Carolingian
cathedral. In
any case, nine years
Bald
after Hasting’s strike, Charles the
convened a general tribunal
in
867
to determine
what measures
to
take against Salaiin, king of Brittany. In 876 he solemnly offered
Chartres the precious allegedly given to
The
known
relic
which was
Charlemagne by the emperor of Constantinople. 6
was entrusted
treasure
as the Virgin’s Tunic,
to Bishop Gislebert,
who,
as imperial
notary for thirty years, was an intimate of Charles the Bald.
It
was
under these circumstances that Gislebert undertook the restoration of the cathedral, and
named 6.
According to
Joly,
“Two
appraisals,
that the embroidered cloth
1927
was
Histoire de Chartres, 220). This
to the “relics” that
many
a
one performed
at the time of the
in
Marian
Muslim work from
tells
us
1793 following the vandalism festivals,
have concluded
the eighth or ninth century”
what degree of importance we should attach
were miraculously rediscovered during the Middle Ages. With
all
the
pieces of the “True Cross” that are spread throughout the world, a several-story
dwelling could be tibias
the crypt
Saint-Lubin.
of the reliquary, the other in
(
was probably he who worked out
it
and several
built, as
it
could with the
skulls each).
relics
of certain saints (which include three
Chartres over the Course of History
83
In the spring of 911, the Viking chieftain Rollon laid siege to
Chartres with a large army equipped with siege machines. This was
not a campaign for plunder but an actual war. Rollon sought to put
an end to a hub of resistance that threatened
his
communication and
supply lines on his expeditions toward the Loire. Defense of the city
was again ensured by The
resistance held
its
on
bishop, a certain Gaucelin or Ganselme.
for several months, allowing the reinforce-
ments to arrive that had been requested from Francia, Burgundy,
and even to
mount
a sortie.
To
same
year,
year, 911, the
inspire his troops, he
displayed as a standard. of the
same
Poitiers. In July of that
bishop decided
had the
Virgin’s Tunic
The Normans were routed. But
at the
end
Rollon married Gisele, daughter of the king of
France, Charles the Simple, and with the signing of the Saint-Clair-
sur-Epte
obtained
treaty
the
territories
that
would become
Normandy. This shows
how
important the battle of Chartres was
course of French history.
None
failed to attribute the
tory to the presence of the venerable
about such an event, but
it
relic.
There
is
Frankish vic-
nothing novel
further fueled the fervor of the
cult in Chartres, as well as the devotion to the holy relic.
than ever Chartres was the
city of the Virgin
who
in the
Marian
Now more
protected her chil-
dren, the Christians. Politics and religion were closely aligned in the exercise of a worship
inherited
people.
from the
whose
earliest antiquity,
The consequences of
incalculable.
It
origins appeared to be spontaneous,
and
clearly
founded among the
the Christian victory at Chartres are
changed the destiny of France and of Europe.
Henceforth the Norsemen, converted to Christ, would become the
most
faithful supporters of a
triumphant Christianity.
This failed to prevent one of Rollon’s descendants, Richard of
Normandy, from sacking and burning
a large portion of the city of
Chartres in 962. The situation at this time was rather muddled. For
one thing, the count of Chartres, known as Thibaud the Deceiver,
was
a
somewhat
Yes, there
restless
and bizarre individual.
were counts of Chartres. The
institution of the office
84
The
Sites
dates from the time of Charlemagne. Originally, the count (from the
Latin comitem, “companion”)
was
a faithful ally of the king or
name one
emperor, appointed to administer in his his empire. In Chartres itself there this institution until
named
is
of the territories of
no evidence of the existence of
806, at which time there
mention of a count
is
Gunfridas. Only after 877 did the office of the count become
hereditary.
The documents concerning
contradictory.
They
this period are
confused and
claim, for example, that Hasting himself
would
have been count of Chartres, but there was confusion among viduals sharing the
The
fact
is
same name,
all
indi-
of Danish origin.
that in 886, Eudes, count of
Dunois (Chateaudun),
made by
the Danes,
then besieging Paris, to pillage the Chartres countryside.
Was Eudes
vigorously and successfully opposed an attempt
also count of Chartres?
declares that
power over
it
the
Another document, the
was Bishop Hardouin, city,
who
to establish a separation is
true that
would
Vieille
sole holder of Gallo-Frankish
first instituted
the role of count as a
between the temporal and the
Charlemagne had
mind
in
Chronique,
jointly administer the territory
that the count
way
spiritual. It
and bishop
under their charge, thereby
implementing the old Indo-European rule symbolized by the Indian mythological duo Mithra-Varuna and in Celtic society by the Druidking pair (of which the Arthur-Merlin pairing personification). But this Vieille
is
the romanticized
Chronique also claims that even
before the birth of the Virgin, the prince of the city and territory of
Chartres had given these two to the Virgin and Jesus, and because of that the bishops of the city and
its
would have
originally been the counts
and lords
land. All this, of course, belongs to the tradition
of the virgo paritura and should not be given any credibility.
Thibaud the Deceiver
He was
however.
left his
mark on
the earldom of Chartres,
the son of a viscount of Tours,
who was
vassal of the Robertians in their struggle against the
dynasty.
Thibaud owned
authority,
a
tower
in Chartres as a
Carolmgian
symbol of
which extended over not only the Chartrian
also that of Dunois, Blesois, Tours,
a loyal
his
territory but
and Saumur, with several
fiefs
Chartres over the Course of History
He was
scattered along the borders.
who
85
a figure of boundless ambition
vainly attempted to establish his
power
turned against Richard of Normandy. The
in Brittany
with the help of
latter,
Danish pagans, made Thibaud pay dearly for
and then
this,
and the inhabi-
tants of Chartres suffered the consequences in 962. These
were so
extensive that, as the chronicle said, “not even a dog could be heard
barking in the earldom.” Thibaud the Deceiver died around 9 77.
His youngest son, Eudes, succeeded him, followed by his son
Thibaud,
who
Eudes
already count of Blois, Tours, and Chateaudun.
II,
died on pilgrimage, leaving the earldom to his brother
This did nothing to solve the problems that had arisen. In the
mother of Eudes and Thibaud had wed
Robert the Pious, son of consanguinity.
Hugh
Queen Berthe
fact,
second marriage, to
in a
Capet, and had been repudiated for
retired to live near her sons but
man-
aged to inspire them with a certain amount of bitterness. Seeking to avenge his mother, Eudes
Melun. Then
his wife,
II
attacked the royal domain and captured
Mahaut,
sister
of the duke of
Normandy, died
before leaving a child, and he refused to return Dreux, which
her dowry. Richard of
and
assisted
Normandy, supported by Robert
was
the Pious
by the Danes, attacked Eudes’s domains. But the Danes
ravaged the royal property as well as the lands of the count of Chartres. to retain
A compromise was Dreux
if
Eudes would be able
clearly necessary.
he returned Melun. Definitely quite impatient, he
also attacked the count of Anjou, Foulques Nerra, but he
was
defeated and lost Saumur. By the play of inheritances, however,
Eudes came into possession of the powerful earldom of Champagne in
1019.
From then on
he lived in Troyes and
left
the city of Chartres
in the care of his viscount, Gilduin.
At
this
time the bishop was Fulbert,
who had
Gerbert d’Aurillac, the pope in the year 1000, tor in Reims. Fulbert
teacher;
was
been a student of
when he was
a remarkable scholar
many compared him
to Socrates.
Under
and his
a
a doc-
famous
aegis the
schools of Chartres became famous and went on to play a signifi-
cant role in the diffusion of scholastic philosophy for at least two
The
86
Sites
centuries, until the founding of the University of Paris in
brought about their decline.
was during
directed the reconstruction,
which resulted
was Fulbert
it
in the building of
and the Romanesque cathedral. Thanks to the friendly
the crypt feelings
Fulbert’s episcopacy that
was burned down, and
the Carolingian cathedral
who
It
1215
and
had inspired throughout Europe, Fulbert
interest he
obtained significant funds for the reconstruction from a number of
monarchs, including the king of France, Robert; the king of England, Canut; the duke of Aquitaine, William IV; and the duke of
Normandy, Richard; not
to
mention the counts of Chartres and
Champagne. The new cathedral was almost completed of Fulbert’s death in 1028, but another tion,
which did not take place
that Fulbert, through his
an organizer,
until
wisdom,
1037. But
delayed it is
his influence,
an undying memory
left
fire
its
consecra-
beyond question
and
in Chartres
at the time
his talents as
and
its
cathedral
sanctuary. Fulbert’s successors, such as Bernard de Chartres
Yves (who died
and Gilbert de
1117 and was known
four years,
1180, a
retary of
who
Porree,
la
But the most
lectuals.
in
in
was John of
Salisbury,
who occupied who was born
brilliant theoretician, a great mystic,
Thomas
King Henry
II.
a Becket,
Why
though England
who was
his brother
as Saint Yves de Chartres),
died in 1141, were
illustrious,
and
all
eminent
intel-
the seat for only in
1110 and died
and the
faithful sec-
assassinated on the orders of
was Chartres given an “English” bishop (even
in that era,
was more French than
under the tutelage of the Plantagenets,
English), especially given that prelates of
French origin often held British Episcopal seats? It
has been claimed that during his youth, John of Salisbury had
finished
some of
his studies in
France and had spent three years in
Chartres, retaining afterward very pleasant memories of that time.
When
he arrived on the Continent, he went to the school where
Pierre Abelard taught in Paris dialectics.
But Abelard, as
and there learned the rudiments of
we know, was
of Salisbury changed disciplines, learning
forced into exile, and John
grammar from Guillaume
—
,
Chartres over the Course of History
de Conches, a true philologist.
Conches taught
is
possible that Guillaume de
where John of Salisbury would have
in Chartres,
met him and benefited from
It
his teachings.
Whatever the truth of the
John of Salisbury acquired an extensive and
matter,
87
multidisci-
plinary education, becoming a fourteenth-century humanist
who
He
lived
was very much ahead
among
the high
of his time.
and mighty of
He was
never a teacher.
world, such as the pope, the
this
kings of England, and the archbishops of Canterbury. This
was
first
Thomas
servant, then secretary, to
a Becket.
is
He
how he traveled
widely and wrote several books, including the Historia Pontificalis; the Metalogicon, in
which he touched on the problem of
and most important, the famous Policraticus
a political treatise of
and audacity not previously achieved.
a range
John of Salisbury did not conceive of philosophy learning, but rather as ulative
dialectics;
wisdom and
a discipline of
life.
as abstract
Purely spec-
problems seemed a waste of time and energy to him; he pre-
maxim “Know thyself.” He was
ferred the Delphic in the sense that
he sought to describe
relation to a divine plan in
losophy for him was “love of God” and to
“The measure prescribed of charity
is
that
man
of
wisdom
material structures in
real,
which he firmly
a
believed.
know
it is
The
true phi-
the divine plan:
necessary to love
God
with a love beyond measure.” John of Salisbury was certainly friends with Bernard de Clairvaux,
and
his
works
give off a certain
monastic aroma. To define his works with a single expression,
might say that they
reflect
an
intellectual asceticism.
we
The views he
lays out in his Policraticus, however, are quite amazing; although
they smack of the purest orthodoxy, they are nonetheless innovative.
The on the his
Policraticus
is
institutions of the early
own
conclusions.
It is
of thought from which to original sources
but
is
an extensive, theologically based meditation
Middle Ages, from which John draws
independent from the Continental schools
Thomism would
later arise,
and
is
a return
—the Bible and the works of the Church fathers
also a resurgence of
what
the Celtic Christian Church, a
church that was heavily influenced by Druidism, was saying and
The
88
Sites -
thinking at the time. entirely
It is
approach to the
a feudal
normal given the time
in
which
was
it
written.
and
the relationship that should exist between a ruler
should involve not merely an oath that
commitment on
topic,
which
is
John defines
his subjects.
It
a formality but also a total
is
the parts of both parties.
John of
Salisbury’s prefer-
ence was for a form of government similar to that of the Hebrews
under the leadership of the Judges, before the throne of
Israel
was
established.
His basic postulate
The
scendental law.
any people
who
need of a king.
the existence of
is
first
logical
some
consequence of
follow this law and submit to
It
may
prior, higher, tran-
this postulate its
is
that
demands have no
be surprising to find here the same mentality
that inspired the libertarian theories of the end of the nineteenth century, but this
is
indeed the case.
It
also explains this philosophy’s
kinship with Rousseau’s Social Contract, for John of Salisbury also asserted that
human
if
beings are fundamentally good, they cannot
help but obey the higher law: “The the best guide in
patriarchs followed nature,
They were succeeded by
life.
ning with Moses,
first
who
a line of leaders begin-
followed the Law, then by Judges,
the people through the authority of the Law.
more
recent of
them were
the Lord, they
whom
had
kings,
were wicked”
this rule
priests. In the end,
some of
whom
(Policraticus). If
And we
who
ruled
see that the
because of the wrath of
were good but most of
we understand him
correctly,
by the throne was a punishment. This agrees with Saint
Augustine’s thought (De Civitate Dei, XIX, 15) that “the just of earlier ages were
more
like
men
shepherds of their flocks than kings of
men.”
John of Salisbury that there
another:
7.
is
no need
“Men
is
not too far from Diderot
for the subordination of
will only find
See Jean Markale,
Background” 1994), 59-64.
in
asserts
one human being to
harmony and connection with each
Le Christianisme primitif
also an analysis of the theories of
when he
et ses survivances populaires.
John of Salisbury
in the chapter
“The
There
is
Political
Jean Markale, King of the Celts (Rochester, Vt.: Inner Traditions,
Chartres over the Course of History
other
if
89
they group or have been grouped together under the dispas-
And
sionate reasoning of divine law.
It is
group by
a
undoubtedly not by chance that John of Salisbury
became the bishop of Chartres. the Virgin as the
form
better to
by the authority of a government”
oneself, than to be organized (Policraticus).
it is
Is
not Chartres the glorification of
Throne of Wisdom,
the absolute keeper of knowl-
edge of the divine law?
But existed.
he
all
this
was mere
John had to define the
The king
is
an
is
the
Universitas, the organized is
fully serving his fellow servants (of
God
the
inter-
upon himself
which means
as his
that he heads:
“The
duty by
faith-
fulfills his
or the Law), in other
those called his subjects” (Policraticus IV,
is
own; they are those of
community
the servant of the Lord, but he
common
the
officer,
to act, but his actions are never his
role
and foremost,
head”). As such he
“first
bears the “public persona” and must look
the servant of the people.
prince
remains that kings
fact
community and minister of
representative of the
He
The
role of the king. First
only the princeps (Latin for the
is
est.
theory.
But
7).
how
words
should the
king be chosen?
John of Salisbury
work (from
rejects the
notion of hereditary power, and his
already intimates the Thomist prescription a
God through
the people),
Deo
per populum
which assumes the acceptance,
not selection, of the king by his people. “Whereas public offices be passed
down
It is
a
down
accorded to the individual
knowledge of the Law”
in the
who
same way
as a matter of right.
has in him the
spirit
is
longer obeys his duties, he becomes a “tyrant”
remove the crown from the
king’s
is
con-
compelled to respect
because they represent a force higher than his own.
the order
of God, and
(Policraticus V, 6). Thus, the king
fronted with a series of obligations that he
may
government of
to the heir of the current holder, the
the people does not pass
if
— so
And it is
if
he no
“better to
head than allow him to destroy
and the best part of the community
at his
good pleasure”
(Policraticus VII, 30).
Popes certainly always reserved for themselves the right to
The
90
Sites
depose kings, but in the thought of John of Salisbury, even revolution as
and tyrannicide can be
it is
to kill a
legitimate: “It
sworn enemy”
is
as legal to kill a tyrant
(Folicraticus VIII, 20). But tyranni-
cide should not be considered an act of private vengeance;
of
act
collective
responsibility.
Salisbury’s attitude following lessly
Thomas
explains John
easily
He
a Becket’s murder.
memory
him
as a
Thomas
all
he
to Chartres itself, pre-
model not only of holiness but
insofar as the archbishop
of
of the holy archbishop of Canterbury.
introduced the worship of Saint
senting
an
cease-
denounced the “tyranny” of Henry Plantagenet and did
could to magnify the
He
This
it is
had stood up against
also of civic duty,
all
the abuses of the
English king.
The wisdom, honesty, and
insight of
John of Salisbury make him
one of the most appealing figures of the twelfth century, and Chartres’s
homage
of the Virgin Mary:
was nothing without can
still
to
honor that he was chosen bishop. This, more than any
previous act, gave
womb
it is
to the It
Holy Ghost descended
was acknowledgment
love, love
the cathedral
is filled
if
wisdom
Who
was nothing without wisdom.
honestly claim that this was the
Chartres gleamed with a light
that
into the
all its
Dark Ages?
own. There
is
In
any case,
good reason that
with depictions of philosophers and inspired
prophets.
Accordingly, the city of Chartres enjoyed considerable growth
during the eleventh and twelfth centuries, as
and renown of its counts
as for the
much
supremacy of
its
for the
schools.
power
Toward
1060, the upper city was encircled by an imposing fortified enceinte that
on
its
most vulnerable
Percheronne Gate.
On
the Evriere Gate, as
its
side could be passed
through only
the rim of the plateau facing north
name
at the
and
east,
indicates, gave access to the river, the
Cendreuse Gate, and the Foucher-Nivelon postern, which was protected by the Count’s Tower. Beneath the cathedral there at
were also
one time a gate called Saint-Jean-de-la-Vallee and, on the right
bank of the Eure, the Morard and Aimbard Gates,
as well as the
Tireveau postern. The defense of the city seems to have been quite
Chartres over the Course of History
91
well organized. In addition, a prodigious expansion of Church properties also
ing richer
took place
at this time. All the different
and expanding. Of course,
as
was
abbeys were grow-
true everywhere that
monastic establishments were located during the Middle Ages, there
were a large number of vineyards, especially on the sun-drenched hillsides of
The
Champhol and Saint-Cheron and around
surface area of vineyards sometimes reached as
Saint-Lubin.
much
as four
hectares for a single landholder, a considerable figure that attests to the
demand
for wine, both for
Inside the
and working,
city, it
worship and for everyday drinking.
numerous merchants and
artisans
were established
seems, under the best possible conditions. Large fairs
took place, namely during the four Marian
feast days: the Nativity,
the Annunciation, the Purification, and the Assumption.
Some mer-
chants enjoyed special privileges and the protection of the cathedral enceinte,
which would
ble city inside a city,
it
was
“sworn” of Notre-Dame this juridical status,
Cloister
which
would seek refuge
comed them
gladly;
the chapter house, there
powers. The
also increased the prestige of the chapter.
in the
and
civil
were by and large beneficiaries of
Certainly, in the case of a conflict or quarrel, the ter
A verita-
so happens that ecclesiastical
It
demanding than that of the
less
Cloister.
escaped the count’s jurisdiction and was under
the authority of the bishop alone.
authority
Notre-Dame
later be called
if
sworn of the chap-
homes of the canons, but
these latter wel-
the count’s officers forced their
was always recourse
to
way
into
excommunication to
persuade the representatives of the count’s power to back
off.
It
would sometimes happen, however,
that quarrels of this nature
degenerated into battles, even all-out
sieges.
always easy, even during
this
period
seemed to be able to get along for It
fire
was
in the
midst of
when
Cohabitation was not
Church and the
the
state
better or for worse.
this highly
prosperous time that the great
of 1194 broke out on June 10, lasting into the morning of June 11.
Fulbert’s cathedral
crypts, icles
was heavily damaged. Only
and the recently
built
of the time describe
the Royal Portal, the
West Towers were spared. The chron-
how
the populace
fell
into deep despair
The
92
upon
Sites
seeing their magnificent sanctuary in a state of almost total
destruction and believing that the precious relic of the Tunic of
Mary had been
lost to the flames.
The
day
third
after the fire the
pope’s legate, Cardinal Melchior of Pisa, gathered everyone in front of the ruins of the cathedral and exhorted the people to
At
effort to rebuild the sanctuary.
appeared, carrying with
the intact
it
this
moment
very
relic.
The
where they waited out the
inside the crypt,
legate immediately proclaimed this a sign
clerics
fire
make
every
a procession
had brought
it
underground. The
from Mary
to build a
church that would be even more magnificent than the old one. This wish was carried out. With delirious enthusiasm, the local
men
gathered in the quarries of Bercheres-les-Pierres, some six miles
away, to help extract blocks of stone, then transport them on carts to the worksite that
had sprung up
flooded in from
over
all
in the heart of the city.
Donations
—from the various barons of the kingdom,
the king of France, Philip Augustus, and then Louis VIII.
Richard the Lion Heart, although a prisoner the priests of his
Among
the
domains
in
Even
Germany, authorized
to gather offerings to send to Chartres.
generous donors were Blanche de
Mauclerc, and Alix of Brittany; the king of
Castille,
and the count of Champagne, Thibaud VI, whose the stained glass in the choir. In
Castille,
Pierre
Ferdinand
gift
III;
was some of
1220 the cathedral that we know
today was virtually completed. But the
festival of the
dedication did
not take place until 1260.
As an earldom, however, Chartres was enjoying independence.
In
its
final
days of
1234 Thibaud of Champagne, the trouvere
[troubadour] prince, ceded his right to sovereignty to the king of France. By inheritance the earldom
came
into the possession of
Jeanne de Chatillin, wife of the third son of Saint Louis, Pierre de France.
Upon becoming
a
widow, she sold
all
her rights to her
brother-in-law, Philip the Bold, in 1286. Seven years later Philip the Fair gave the
but
was
when for
earldom of Chartres to
the latter’s son, Philip,
all
intents
his brother
Charles of Valois,
became king of France, the earldom
and purposes part of the royal domain.
,
Chartres over the Course of History
The Hundred
Years’
War
93
destroyed the splendor of Chartres.
The Beauce was located on
a very strategic
site:
guarded the
It
approaches to Paris from the west and sat on the road leading from
Normandy
to the
banks of the Toire.
was even
It
most
the
direct
route connecting the English territories on the Channel to those in
would bring
the southwest. This position
great suffering to the
entire Chartrian region.
In 1358, Chartres large
was
practically blockaded for six
company bivouacked
famous Anglo-French Poitiers,
which
was signed
in
in a small
end the war of succession
in
in Brittany,
hamlet right outside the gates of Chartres,
company
of archers
was
established in service
of the king of France and under the direct orders of the vidame
had
a
1360, the
8,
John the Good
treaty ratifying the defeat of
also strove to
Bretigny. In 1367, a
On May
Epernon.
months by
originally been the leader of the bishop’s
men
who
at arms. It
was
again in Chartres, in 1392, that King Charles VI gathered an army to invade Brittany. forest of
word
Mans.
During
In
he went
this expedition,
mad
while in the
1409 the cathedral was the theater
in this instance!) for the reconciliation
(a perfect
between the duke of
Orleans, Louis, and the duke of Burgundy, John the Fearless.
This was a false peace, however, and the following year between the
The notables of Chartres had 1417 they surrendered
to
civil
war broke out again
Armagnacs and
the Burgundians.
sided with the duke of Orleans, but in
the
Burgundian leader Helion de
Jacqueville. Then, following the treaty of Troyes in 1420, the city of
Chartres recognized the king of England as heir to the crown of France. But the dauphin Charles, after a futile attempt to gain possession of Chartres,
finally
recovered
it
thanks to Dunois, the
Bastard of Orleans. The Chartres economy, which had suffered greatly
from
all
the wars,
was rapidly restored
help of Charles VII and Louis XI,
both a strategic
site
and
a
who saw
to health with the
in this
Beauce center
commercial crossroads of the utmost
importance.
A
charter
was granted Chartres
in
1296, but
this
was not
the
The
94
basis for
Sites
its
becoming
a
commune. To
the contrary, everything
was
put into place for municipal administration to originate solely from royal authority. Nothing could be done without the assent of the bailiff,
representative of the count, then the king. In
nor was installed the bailiff.
who performed
the
same
1562
a gover-
duties concurrently with
The former earldom of Chartres, which had been con-
nected to the crown for two centuries, was elevated into a duchy and given to Hercule d’Este, duke of Ferrara, son of Lucrezia Borgia and
husband of the second daughter of Louis XII and Anne of Renee of France
(in fact, heiress
of Brittany). But the
Brittany,
title
was an
domain were
honorific at best, because the revenues from this
mediocre. In any event, the duke and duchess of Chartres never lived in this
Beauce
This was the beginning of the decline of the
city.
wealthy bourgeois class composed of merchants and artisans. The bourgeoisie found
its
way
to the vocations of the robe
and the
eral professions but did
not ignore literature and the fine
old Chartrian mentality
was not dead, and
ory of the time
from
when
fresh
was
The
arts.
the
mem-
the cathedral schools attracted intellectuals
over Europe.
all
New
sources of turmoil
made
their presence felt, this time over
religious issues. In 1523, a heretic
was burned
having overturned a statue of the Virgin
was then
Marot
still
lib-
the formidable Louis Guillard,
in prison for
having written
alive in Chartres for
in the cathedral.
who
— and
The bishop
held the poet Clement
published
—poems
that
were hardly orthodox. The Reformation made considerable head-
way
in the
Chartrian bourgeois milieu, but despite everything, the
population remained divided into two camps, Protestant,
although Rouen and
Protestants.
Conde
8.
[Louis
eral.
I
was
de Bourbon, prince of
Orleans were held
and was captured
at
and
by the
fighting in the nearby countryside but
Conde (1530-1569), was
a Protestant leader
Although he enjoyed the favor of the regent, Catherine de Medici, he had
port in the French court.
in
8
Catholic
He took command
Dreux (1562). Following
1567 against the Catholics and was
of the Huguenots in the his release in
Wars
and genlittle
sup-
of Religion
1563, he again took up arms
killed at the battle of Jarnac.
— Trans.)
Chartres over the Course of History
failed to capture Chartres.
He
95
ultimately collided with the duke of
Guise near Dreux and was captured.
A
fragile
peace was established during which Catherine de
Medici and Charles IX stayed
endeavoring to reach a
in Chartres,
compromise with Conde, who was being held
Abbey
at that time in the
of Saint-Pere. But the Huguenots regained the upper
hand
in
1567, and during the following year Conde laid siege to the city
with a massive force. The to
lift
fered
from
was not
taken, and
Conde was forced
suburbs and surrounding settlements had suf-
his siege, but the
greatly
city
this
action.
The Abbey of Saint-John,
the
Cordeliers Convent, and the Hospital of the Six-Vingt aveugles had
been destroyed. All the outlying areas of Chartres had been put to the torch, by both Catholics
and Protestants. This did not prevent the
Catholics from claiming victory against the heretics, a victory they attributed to the intercession of the city’s guardian, the Virgin Mary.
This did not end the troubles; Chartres was similar privations
and
battles against the royal troops
its
who was
heir to the throne of France. In 1588,
throne.
whom
Henry of
under threat to
Henry
still
III
and against
the sole legitimate
met
in Chartres
with
he rightly suspected of having designs on the
Valois, seething with rage,
had been compelled
invite the Chartrians to declare their
support for the
duke of Guise and the league. But stricken by the news of the sination of the
[the
to accept the rule of a Protestant king
Henri of Bourbon, the nonbeliever
Henry of Guise,
to suffer
from the disorder sparked by the League
Holy League, which refused
— Translator]
doomed
assas-
duke of Guise on order of the king, the Chartrians
declared themselves body and soul for the duke of Mayenne, the
new
leader of the league.
The year 1590 saw permanent
battlefield.
Mayenne’s army
the Chartres countryside transformed into a
Henry of Navarre besieged Dreux and fought
at Ivry, while league troops
then lost and recaptured Courville and
Illiers.
took Nogent-le-Roi, But on February 10,
1591, Biron, commander of the Navarre troops, laid siege to Chartres. There
was
a long series of skirmishes, various maneuvers,
The
96
Sites
and heavy destruction. Henry of Navarre joined Biron on the and personally organized the lated,
siege.
On
April 10, Chartres capitu-
and the royal army took occupation of the
Henri of Navarre made
and was welcomed clergy,
who
led
ing. Instead,
him
his
city nine
solemn entrance into the
at Saint Michael’s
field
city
days
later.
on April 20
Gate by the residents and the
to the cathedral. But he did not enter the build-
he attended a Calvinist sermon the next day, while
40,000 people followed a procession to Saint-Pere to give thanks for the restoration of peace.
The
was taxed 36,000 ecus
city
put up resistance to the king of France. But soon, to calm
Navarrais pardoned those
the
spirits,
who were most compromised and made
efforts to ensure that the city’s inhabitants did
from the
for having
not suffer too greatly
situation.
Chartres then became a kind of capital of a torn French kingdom in
which the legitimate king was
subjects. Visits
from the
July 25, 1593,
one
greatest leaders followed
and negotiations were pursued more or
Henry of Navarre and
conquer the hearts of
striving to
less
his
after the other,
openly, especially between
representatives of the Catholic Church.
On
Henry renounced Calvinism, and on February 25,
1594, he was crowned king of France in the cathedral of Chartres by
Bishop Nicolas de Thou, because Reims was
in the
still
hands of the
Holy League and thus unavailable. The coronation and the vow taken by Henry IV to support the Catholic religion would open the gates of
the
him
three
weeks
later.
The
This does not
mean
that
all
Paris to
Edict
of Nantes,
Catholics was delicate.
civil
war was
disorder
cohabitation
came
finally over.
to an end. Despite
between Protestants and
The Huguenots made
several attempts to
take possession of Chartres, but the vast majority of the city
remained Catholic. In 1607, Henry of Savoy inherited the duchy of Chartres from his mother, but in 1623 he sold in gold to
brother,
King Louis
XIII.
The king gave
it
it
for
250,000 ecus
as prerogative to his
Gaston of Orleans. Of course, Gaston’s rebellion would
have serious repercussions on Chartres and
its
region. This
was
equally true at the time of the Fronde, in which the same Gaston
Chartres over the Course of History
97
played a leading role. 9 In 1651, extensive rioting took place in Chartres. This
was followed by an attempt by an army supporting
army abandoned
the Fronde to capture the city; the after being paid
but Chartres
plans only
its
an indemnity of 16,000 pounds. Peace was restored,
fell
hands of a central authority and could no
into the
longer claim any municipal freedom. Gaston of Orleans died in
1660, leaving no male
heir,
and the duchy of Chartres reverted to
the throne. But Louis
XIV
placed
Philip,
and
it
Although
remained civil
in the
in the
it
hands of
his brother
Orleans lineage until the Revolution.
autonomy was
practically nonexistent in Chartres
during the final years of the ancien regime, this was not true of the
Church, which continued to evolve, even authorities.
The
if it
led to conflicts with civil
chief concern of the Chartres bishops
the faithful of the diocese
was defending
from both poverty and ignorance, thereby
renewing the old tradition of the medieval schools of the Daughters of Providence was established tion of preventing
members cating
in
1643 with the
women from turning to
poor
city.
The
chief inten-
prostitution. In 1692,
of the Daughters of Saint Paul devoted themselves to edu-
women and
large seminary
training
was
them
installed
household
in their
on the
Madeleine du Grand-Beaulieu. But
1695, the diocese of Chartres,
heir to the ancient city of the Carnutes, lost a large part of after the creation of the
new
1659, a
of the ancient hospice of the
site
in
duties. In
its
territory
diocese of Blois.
During the eighteenth century, the population of Chartres dwindled.
From 20,000
the population
had
inhabitants at the end of the sixteenth century, fallen to 15,000, then to
13,000 due to the
attraction of the nearby capital as well as in response to the decline
of economic activity.
The
great property owners were the monasteries
and the bishopric, and
their holdings consisted of large green spaces
inside the city walls.
The Place des
9.
[The Fronde (1648-1653) was a
civil
war
(1653-59). Fronde means “sling” and refers to
dows (belonging to
Halles,
in
France that led to war with Spain
how
to supporters of Cardinal Mazarin).
impose limitations on the king’s authority.
where an important
Parisian
The
— Trans).
mobs threw
stones at win-
revolt originated in an attempt
The
98
market
Sites
in grains
was
was
located,
the center of interurban activity.
There were eleven parishes, seven of which were inside the
Now
walls.
within a
more than
Notre-Dame
ever,
poor thatched cottages. Even the
no longer had
privileged families,
it
a city
city.
The suburbs meanwhile re-formed
The
formed
Cloister
drab villages of
as small,
leisure classes, outside of a
mansions
fine
when
often said that “the Beauce gentleman his breeches
among
the different parishes,
perfect
had weathered every storm.
part,
symbol of
this
profoundly Catholic
on September 11, 1788, the
that
known
as the Franchise
first
took place
Beauvais, an association that
in
bed
The Revolution unfolded
wealthier. It
Yet
clear that
it
The
remained the
was
also here
meeting of the Masonic Lodge
modest house on the rue de
in a
would
city.
was
it
more numerous and
those of the upper city were its
would remain
and
were being mended.” Although the populace was
unevenly distributed
cathedral, for
few
at their disposal.
nobility of the Beauce did not have a reputation for wealth,
was
city
last until
1840.
in Chartres just as
it
did elsewhere in
France, although with fewer exactions and less disorder than in
some other
cities.
There were some pillaging, some brawls, some
reversals of fortune,
and some executions, but the biggest
lay in the acquisition of fresh supplies
unemployment, and brigandage sinister
and
in the
difficulties
high cost of living,
(particularly the misdeeds of the
Orgeres Band).
Chartres emerged from the tempest considerably impoverished. Its
religious
Church and
movements had meanwhile Saint- Aignan
suffered a sad fate. Saint-Foy
Church were sold
to a private citizen
who
sought to demolish them. But the owner wanted to turn Saint-Aignan into a performance
site,
which allowed
it
to escape destruction.
Eventually the Saint-Foy would become a theater. Saint-Saturnien
was demolished, and to the
memory
the space
was used
to create a square dedicated
of the heroes of Chartres, such as General Marceau.
The churches of Saint-Maurice, Saint-Michel, Saint-Bartholomew, Saint-Cheron, and Saint-Brice were demolished, and residential
Chartres over the Course of History
housing was built on their former Saint-Martin-le-Viandier, a square
Upon
sites.
was created
99
the destruction of in the space
had
it
occupied. Saint-Hilaire served to house the local chapter of the Folk Society before
it
too was demolished. But Saint-Andre was turned
into storage for fodder
and was spared despite various degradations.
The Carmelite Convent,
Abbey was turned
prison. Saint-Pere saltpeter,
as well as that of the Jacobins,
became
a
into a plant for manufacturing
and the convent buildings were turned to other
uses. Saint-
Martin-au-Val was converted into a hospice, and the Episcopal palace served as a prefecture until 1821.
The cathedral
itself
barely escaped demolition:
the congestion caused by the handling
It
was deemed
and transport of the
that
building’s
materials through the city
would cause more problems than
The municipal
were content with removing the lead from
the covers
This
is
and
how
authorities grilles
of the chapels to
the magnificent cathedral
these dark times
—
if
make
we
into bullets
benefits.
and
picks.
today emerged from
see
not unscathed, at least generally protected.
During the consulate and the empire, but also during the restoration, Chartres fell into the
who had
hands of one of the families
acquired wealth and influence through the purchase of national properties, the Billard de Saint-Laumer family.
of the bourgeois class,
who
They were members
turned everything to
its
profit
and did
not hesitate to swear loyalty to every regime, empire or royal, it
was not
a foreign occupation, as
was
the case in 1814.
when
The
dis-
ruptions of the traditional hierarchy caused by the Revolution had benefited
some but not
the majority of the Chartres population.
Generally speaking, the time of the empire was a period of stagnation for Chartres. The local tanning and textile industries hardly developed. Certainly Chartres remained one of the most active
wheat markets
in the
Beauce, but that was
all.
There was no longer
any dynamism and no opening to the Industrial Revolution, which
had
just breasted the horizon.
emphasized the
mayor
anticlerical
The change
of regime in
components of municipal
of Chartres, Adolphe Chasles,
was
the
1830 only life.
The
nephew of the former
The
100
Sites
cure of the cathedral. in his convictions.
He was an
Once
Orleans supporter but quite modest
from Eure-et-Loir, he presided
elected deputy
over the inauguration ceremony of the chapel for the Aligre Asylum in Leves,
which replaced the Sainte-Marie de Josaphat Abbey, which
had been bought and demolished by
from which they had elected, Chasles
On
had
grandfather and father and
his
And
realized a substantial profit.
yet to be
to run a resolutely anticlerical campaign.
the other side, the
Church was
getting
its
head back up. The
Concordat of 1802 had attached the Eure-et-Loir Departement to the diocese of Versailles, created specifically for this purpose
occasion.
The government had then decided
divided into
two
that Chartres
on
this
would be
and the ancient Saint-Pere
parishes, the cathedral
Abbey, renamed Saint-Pierre, which would be ample for the needs of a populace that
was slowly becoming
de-Christianized.
tion of the Episcopal seat of Chartres
was decided
in
not take effect until 1821. In this year, Monsignor de
The
restora-
1817 but did
Latil, a
former
chaplain of the earldom of Artois, became bishop of Chartres and strove to reorganize the local clergy, often with regrettable displays of
open
much
clumsiness and
bias.
His successor, Claudel de Montals, a
man
of the ancien regime
but of clearly Gallican tendencies, held this position for thirty years, but he spent his time fighting against the religious
life
all
sides
of his diocese. In 1833 he
a serious riot sparked
by
II
was even confronted by
his refusal to authorize a priest,
Ledru, in Leves, to celebrate the ioners wanted. Vatican
without any benefit to
was
Mass
still
far
Abbe
in French, as all his parish-
from the horizon, and the
bishop barely had time to take refuge in the cathedral while his bishopric
was plundered by
the populace. In 1836, a fire destroyed the
timbered framework of the cathedral, which was called the Forest.
The framework was to
custom but
10.
The
first
rebuilt in iron,
which
is
quite contrary not only
also to the energetic value of the sanctuary. 10
churches built by the Celts contained no nails or iron
the property of diverting so-called telluric currents.
fittings, as iron
has
Chartres over the Course of History
Academic quarrels began poisoning
was already appearing
that
life
and the
in Chartres,
would eventually expand
101
into the
line
moat
separating the proponents of the so-called school of the devil from
Good
those of the so-called school of the
continued to
city
market. April
9,
live
— or
Lord. During this time the
at least to survive
1848, saw the
first
The mayor-elect, confirmed by
—thanks
elections
the
to
by universal suffrage.
Remond,
Charles
prefect,
declared as a Republican, just like the future Cardinal Pius, resented the bishop at the planting of the that
same
who
rep-
Freedom Tree on April 11
year.
The Second Empire,
despite a fairly strong opposition to the
plebiscite, inspired the local legitimist or rally. It
grain
its
was only
in
Orleans bourgeoisie to
1865 that the Republicans managed
force to the Chartres city hall.
That
prosperous during
A theater was
this period.
by a hospital several years
later.
said, Chartres did
built in
for Paris
exposition that provided a veritable place; even the
become more
1861, followed
Old-fashioned houses were razed,
and an urbanization scheme along the broad
Haussmann had planned
to return in
emperor paid a
lines of
was implemented.
panorama
visit.
what Baron In
1869 an
of local activity took
The head
of the foundry,
Alexandre Brault, and Mayor Billard de Saint-Laumer
(of the
same
family mentioned earlier) were awarded medals of the Legion of Pionor.
A
traditional tannery continued to persevere, while printing
and window-making
industries took
on new
life.
Meanwhile, the
vineyards continued to be quite prosperous, curiously enough, until the phylloxera epidemic in 1881.
During the Franco-Prussian War
1870, the Prussians occupied
in
March
The
begin-
nings of the Third Republic passed without causing too
many
the
city,
where they would remain
clashes, but
until
18, 1871.
soon the academic quarrel would rekindle the hothead-
edness of the different parties. At
first
there
was
a
semblance of bal-
ance between the lay schools and the confessional schools, but the Jules Ferry laws [which
long time to be applied.
mandated public education
A
state school for girls
— Trans.) took a
was opened
in
1880
The
102
Sites
on the rue Sainte-Meme
to
ers training college, but
it
remove some of the load from the teach-
would not be
until
1891 that the Saint-
Andre and Saint-Ferdinand schools would become state-run institutions.
Debate was endless on the transformation of the college [private secondary school] into a lycee [high school], and the
would not be inaugurated
much
until
lycee
1887. Discussion continued for
of this time over the opening of a secondary college for
young
This college would be established in 1885 in the former teach-
girls.
ers training school. Saint-Pere
itary barracks.
Abbey, meanwhile, had become a mil-
Water conveyance had become
train station
was
rebuilt
on the
site
a
major concern, and
in
1906. The central
of the former
Notre-Dame ceme-
an ozonization process was applied starting
tery.
new
Various urbanization construction projects were implemented.
But Chartres continued to stagnate under the influence of a smug conservatism that only a few newspapers, such as La Depecbe,
founded
in
however,
1899 by Georges Fessard, managed the
Chartres
area
Freemason, and somewhat
to disturb. Eventually,
would become
radical-socialist,
anticlerical.
But the approach of World
War
I
in
1914 brought about the
establishment of a military presence in Chartres, which was aided by a popular desire to avenge the former defeats suffered at the
of the Germans.
The garrison consisted
hands
of a cavalry regiment, an
infantry battalion, a squadron of train crews, and an artillery regi-
ment. Above
all,
a large drill
to Nogent-le-Phaye
ground between the roads to Sours and
was reserved
for testing airplanes. This
would
be the origin of the Chartres Air Base.
Spared during the
back into
its
First
World War,
torpor between 1918 and 1939. Chartres was no longer
anything but a small provincial
diminished
the Beauceron capital sank
activity.
city,
a farm-product
The animal auctions were
market of
in a state of collapse.
Sheep were no longer being raised on the plains. Meanwhile, the rich
Beauce landowners were gradually abandoning the countryside to
move
into the city,
which sparked the construction of new apart-
Chartres over the Course of History
ment buildings and houses. Neglected be
The
repopulated.
Mans
Paris-Le
line
train
was
station
electrified,
103
sections of the city began to
was modernized when
the
which coincided with the disap-
pearance of the old Ouest-Etat network and the creation of the S.N.C.F. [Societe Nationale des
—
road system
in
branch
and shunting
lines
France
became
capacity, line
Fer, the state-run rail-
The Chartres
Trans.].
new
construction began on a
Chemins de
It
was around
this
with
quite important,
its
and
from Montparnasse that would
pass through Fimours and Gallardon. This line pleted.
station,
was never com-
time that rumors of war began to alarm
the local leaders. Precautionary measures were planned for the populace, primarily because of the nearby air base.
One
of the most
important safeguards was the removal of the stained glass from the cathedral.
We owe
our
ability to
admire these windows today to
these precautions.
The Second World War was bombed
left its
several times by the
mark on
Germans
Fortunately, the cathedral suffered very despite the
was
suffered
in
little
from these
and 18, 1944,
ture Chartres
a handful of resistance fighters
American troops could
arrive
which
The primary
in the Aviation Quarter, then
June 1940,
and contain German
perils,
station,
at that time.
again between September 1943 and August 1944. 17,
it
as well as the Americans.
burdensome presence of the neighboring
was an important communication hub
damage
the city of Chartres;
On
August 16,
managed
to cap-
efforts to retake the city until
and bring a successful conclusion to
the battle for freedom.
Chartres has
grown nonstop
since the
task immediately following the Fiberation that
was
26,000 inhabitants
in
industrial society
The population, which was
1946, rose to more than 42,000 in 1951.
neighborhoods were
first
to rebuild everything
had been destroyed, but the requirements of
shattered the traditional city limits.
city
end of the war. The
laid out, first in Bel-Air
and
in
New
Rechevres,
then in Beaulieu, Saint-Cheron, and Puits-Drouet, and finally in the
Madeleine. Three
new
parishes were added: Saint-Jean-Baptiste de
The
104
Sites
Rechevres, Saint-Paul de Beaulieu, and the Madeleine. Urban prob-
lems of Chartres were those of
automobile
had
traffic
all
old
to be regularized,
An
zones had to be laid out.
Renovation was needed,
cities.
and commercial and trade
industrial zone that
grouped together
nonpolluting industries (perfumeries, electronics, printing, and small
mechanics) was accordingly established in the south along the Paris-
Rennes highway. But Chartres offered few
real prospects,
inhabitants, taking advantage of the rail connections
roads, most often found effect that the old
employment
Beauceron
and
in the Parisian region,
has become a kind of
city
and the direct
with the
bedroom
community. Chartres has lost none of
its artistic
After 1964, in the context of the
(and
made
official in
and
touristic value,
Malraux Law,
1971) to protect the old
which
tion of sixty-four hectares,
The
the space inside the walls.
have participated jointly
is
city. It
was created
concerns a sec-
equivalent to three fourths of
state, the region,
in the
a plan
however.
and the commune
renovation of the old dwellings as
well as the enhancement of the environment. In this regard, the
work undertaken has been crowned with hand has restored
success,
and
a very sure
the old quarters. Furthermore, the old artistic pro-
fessions such as stained-glass
making have been restored
In fact, the International Stained Glass Center
is
to honor.
located in the old
wheat-storage buildings in the medieval neighborhood of Loens.
The center was inaugurated
in
1980, and since that time has spread
the prestige of this medieval French art far
The choice of Chartres logical.
and wide.
for this international center
The cathedral incontestably
is
perfectly
constitutes the richest collection
of twelfth- and thirteenth-century stained glass in existence, and these
windows
intact.
are, for the
They have
most
part, although carefully restored,
traveled through the centuries without having
been deformed or destroyed by wars, revolutions, or even the negative effects of sites
bad weather. Chartres
chosen for inclusion
published by
UNESCO
in the first
in
figures
among
the fifty-seven
World Cultural Heritage
1980. This
is
a
list,
marvelous honor for
Chartres over the Course of History
105
Chartres. Art lovers, tourists, historians of the Middle Ages, musi-
and music lovers drawn by the renovation of the Great
cians,
Organs,
all
join with the
in the crypt, near the
Our Lady Black
of
crowds of pilgrims
to meditate
Well of the Saints-Forts, before the statue of
Under Ground, or
Madonna on
who come
her
pillar.
in the cathedral itself, in front of the
More than
ever,
beauty and faith are
indissolubly linked in Chartres for the greatest exaltation of the spirit.
The Cathedral of Our Lady of Chartres,
beacon
in the center of
remains what
it
an immutable
storms that emerge from every direction,
once was and what
Throne of Wisdom.
like
it
was ever intended
to be: the
PART
2
The Virgin's Great Shadow
The Mother of God ^In
431 the Council of Ephesus
proclaimed as
definitively
Christian doctrine the concept of Theotokos, meaning “mother” or rather “genetrix” of
God, applied
figure of
of the Gospels, she
who
this date,
numerous controversies swirled
Mary among
the various Christian theoreti-
gave birth to Jesus. Before
around the
Mary
to
now known as the church fathers. It is obvious that the incarnation of God cannot be accepted without reference to a physical
cians
domain, pre-Christian religious traditions have always
birth. In this
vacillated
between incarnation properly speaking and epiphany
theophany), meaning the manifestation of a higher being in
form by
his
own power
in
(or
human
pure and simple materialization.
a
Accordingly, in the Iliad and in the Odyssey, divine figures appear to
humans
in
an almost natural fashion, although
disguises better to test those they
want
to guide or provoke. Athena,
Aphrodite, and Circe are personified deities to speak, to invisible
meet
at a
world once
The same holds of
it.
bend
at times they use
in the road,
but
their intervention has
whom who
it is
disappear into the
been achieved.
true in Celtic tradition, at least
The gods take part on
normal, so
certain occasions in the
what we know life
of
humans
and bear the exact same appearance (with the addition of characteristics indicative
of their higher status, even sometimes in the form
of a physical handicap), and they disappear once their mission has 108
—
,
The Mother of God
been accomplished. But what
Germans
as well
—
is
is
involved here
much more
109
— as with the ancient
the concretization of a functional
aspect of a single deity rather than the strict “materialization” of a personified divine being.
Hindu thought introduces another notion, The avatar
is
not a materialization but rather a veritable embodi-
ment. Given the doctrine of reincarnation,
gods
that of the avatar.
may from
normal to think that
it is
time to time incarnate under different identities
while retaining their divine quality, concealed beneath the natural
human appearance
they have donned. This
what
is
is
known
in reli-
gious history as a hypostasis which means the temporarily inferior status of a superior sacred being. In Indian logic the avatar does not
pose a problem.
Many Hindus
are ready to accept the divinity of
why
Jesus as the hypostasis of a higher being, and
But the mentality
slightly different in the
is
not Jehovah?
Middle East con-
cerning the Mithraic religion. Mithra, an ancient god inherited from Iran
— and
in the final analysis India
being, but his birth
dered by the earth
is
—truly incarnated as a human
irregular because he
—that
is
was mysteriously engen-
to say, the original
which matches the ancient Greek theogonies
in
Mother Goddess which Gaia couples
with Ouranos to give birth to the race of gods. But taking into account, on the one hand, that Mithra’s birth
December 25, and, on
was celebrated on
the other, that the Mithraic religion experi-
enced significant growth during the
first
centuries of the Christian
even threatening to supplant Christianity, certain questions
era, arise.
Human
beings have always held the concept of an incarnated
or manifested god, even
if
only to allow them to communicate and
establish a dialogue with a higher being that ter of all,
the creator
this
it is
infinite
and absolute.
point Christianity offers something completely different
and completely new. Jesus can certainly be considered but he cannot be considered an avatar.
one
—that
and mas-
but which remains inaccessible, unnamable, and incom-
prehensible because
On
is
is
He
is
a hypostasis,
the envoy, the anointed
to say the Christ, the only son of a Father
God
of which
— The Virgin's Great Shadow
110
he
only an integral emanation embodied in humanity. Jesus
is
not
is
who abandons the invisible world to incarnate as an avatar on earth. He is still in the invisible world, but he is also in the visia deity
ble
world through the process of
his
complete humanity. This
is
his full
no doubt the
human
notion appeared in the history of
makes
and
notion poses more problems than
it
first
time that such a
thought, and
Christianity profoundly original. But
by
total incarnation,
it is
it
is
what
obvious that such a
seems to resolve
if
we
stick to a
historicizing explanation of the facts.
Historicizing has
ing the
prompted the sharpest controversies concern-
“mystery of the Incarnation”
and the concept of the
Theotokos. The Christian message, of Hebrew (and even Aramaic) origin, traveled
heart of the
sage by the
Roman
through the Hellenistic world before reaching the
Roman world. The incorporation of Roman mentality was not without
—
established:
It is
in contrast to the philosophical
historicizing
demanded
the concrete before
strength of ancient
Rome on
all
.
The Roman
Greek mind-— created history
everywhere, even where there was no basis for
itary,
consequence. The
mentality had one characteristic that, while not widely
known, has been firmly
mind
the Christian mes-
else.
it.
The Roman mind was
the
on the
mil-
This, moreover,
the political plane as well as
economic, and juridical planes.
But as Georges Dumezil has shown, while the Indians and Celts
thought mythically, the
Romans were
as anything other than history that
and is
incapable of grasping myths
had been actually experienced
arbitrarily situated at a definite time.
that of Horatius
Codes (Horatius
The most famous example
the One-Eyed),
who, according
to Titus Levy, defended the Sublician Bridge against attack by the
Etruscans. Horatius heroic
Roman
was
patriot. In fact, his tale
myth of Odin-Wotan, same was
the one-eyed
was an
Tyr, the
less
than the Germanic
one-armed god
existing story
from the
god of Germanic mythology. The
true of another “historical” hero,
was nothing more or god
therefore presented as a historical figure, a
who was
Mucius Scaevola, who
—and Indo-European
not afraid to swear a false oath
The Mother of God
and thereby
lose his
three Curiatii,
arm
in order to save his
who became
so hard to see in
them
community. As for the
famous thanks to
so
the multiple-headed
111
Corneille,
it is
Hydra of Lerne
not
that the
no-less-renowned Hercules-Heracles fought against.
There are numerous other examples, the so-called historical king
Numa
Pompilius,
cussions with the goddess Egeria (from
concerning
in particular
who had
whose name
secret dis-
the term egerie
[“oracle”] derives); she whispered wise counsel into his ear so that
he could enact laws to govern his people, enabling him, like Moses,
was beyond challenge by human
to give the laws a divine value that institutions, a
procedure that has been
much used
to give legitimacy
to government.
That
Romans
said, the historicizing mentality of the
influenced
the interpretation, even the drafting, of the scriptures,
Roman Church was imposed gious edifice of the West.
were victims of ing
if
the
this
same
Romans had
the
as the cornerstone of the entire reli-
How
can
we know whether
historicizing process?
treated
It
institution with a hierarchy
when
and rough
the Gospels
would be
pagan mythologies
Christian religious texts. Starting from
human
when
surpris-
differently
from
Church became
the
drafts of
a
dogmas, the
Christian message necessarily became a page of world history.
The
historical existence of Jesus, his divine mission, his nature as
both
God and man were
accepted in a pinch, but
explain his incarnation in one
way
accorded the mother of Jesus,
who
was
Hence
was made
to be
could not be just anyone, for she
quently, the event
tion of avatars in It
seems that
was
certainly
an exceptional human, especially given that
explicit that Jesus
was
the only son,
and
would never be repeated, unlike
Hindu
it
that, conse-
the materializa-
belief.
at the very
mother of Jesus had only
beginning of Christianity the image of relative importance.
The
little
attention
paid her by the Evangelists, aside from Luke, bears witness to
As
to
the importance
the receptacle of the Divine. Thus, although she
human, she had
the
or another.
was necessary
it
this.
for Saint Paul, the true founder of the Christian religion, the
The Virgin's Great Shadow
112
question of
Mary
circles that the
barely interested him.
It
was
essentially in Gnostic
concept of the Theotokos was developed. Gnostic
which flourished throughout the eastern Mediterranean
sects,
region, sought to establish a connection between the
most ancient
mystico-philosophical traditions and the message of the Gospels.
This connection
more often
as
sometimes presented as a vague syncretism, but
is
an attempt to create a thorough synthesis.
the rediscovery of an image that
from folk memory,
was
quite difficult to uproot,
from the
at least
allowed
It
unconscious
collective
if
not
—the
image of a primordial female deity worshipped throughout the
And
entire East but particularly in Ephesus.
Theotokos was
the concept of the
first
it is
not by chance that
proclaimed at Ephesus, for
Ephesus was from the time of greatest antiquity the central and essential sanctuary of all the
To
worship given to the Mother Goddess.
the various Gnostic theoreticians, the image of the universal
Mother Goddess, under whatever name was used capable of crystallizing
to invoke her,
the impulses of the
all
human
supreme wisdom. The Holy Ghost was then considered representing the ignate the
Mother of
Holy
the
Holy Ghost was neutral
Trinity.
being to
symbol
a
The word used
Greek but feminine
in
was
in
to des-
Hebrew
and Aramaic. The Gnostics soon replaced the neutral Greek pneuma (literally
was used
“breath”) with the feminine sopbia (wisdom), a term that for both masculine
and feminine
in the texts of that time,
but which clearly designated the female aspect and nature of the deity.
in Constantinople.
lute
name
This explains the famous
The sopbia
mold of everything
which
Of of the
all
is
for the Basilica of Saint Sophia
the divine creative breath
and abso-
that exists, the essential breath through
must pass before acquiring form.
course, Saint Sophia
Good News
is
a
is
a
name
name, and
is
in the
of
same way
little
as
Our Lady
consequence on any
plane other than that of popular liturgy. But the Gnostics did not
understand
it
in quite the
same way
as did
Orthodox
Christians. For
them, not only was Sophia the real mother of Jesus Christ, but she also
was
the
Mother Goddess
that every believer
had
to
worship
— The Mother of God
God
equally with
the Father
113
and Jesus the Son. The Trinity was
therefore expressed this way: God-Father, Jesus-Son,
and Mary-
Mother. The sole problem was to reconcile
demonstra-
tion (perfectly logical insofar as
two parents and
this brilliant
proclaimed a divine family with
it
Gospel of Luke, where
a child) with the
it
clearly
appeared that the Holy Ghost was the genitor of Jesus and could not in
any way be considered a feminine element. But certain theoreti-
cians found their
way around
kind of androgynous entity
by making Mary-Holy Ghost a
this
who
temporarily
split in
two
to
fulfill
her procreative mission.
Furthermore, that
it
was not
this contradiction
—however
prompted the indignation of the church
more
the fact that
footing with
God
was much on equal
the Father, whereas according to the Gospels
Mary was
the divinity of Mary,
assume that she
it
led to the concept of a female deity
it
their historicizing nature,
To accept
fathers;
essential
herself
was
it
only a
and
human chosen by God.
would have been necessary
a female hypostasis of
antifeminist nature of Judeo-Christianity, this
to
God. Given the
was properly
inad-
missible and, given the absence of any references, canonical or otherwise, absolutely unthinkable. This
was how Epiphany, one
of
who lived between 315 and 403, unequivocally condemned all those who would be tempted to offer Mary her own worship: “The body of Mary is holy, but it is not
those distinguished church fathers,
divine; she
is
a virgin
and deserving of high honors, but she should
not be an object of worship for us.”
It
was
in this protest that
Mary’s virginity began to be magnified, although we have no clear idea of
what
specific
meaning Epiphany and
his
contemporaries
attached to the term virgin. That was a different problem. first essential
to demonstrate that
woman, even
if
father, Saint
Milan who had such
“Mary was
Temple. That
is
a
woman and
was
only a
she could be acknowledged as a saint.
Another church
declared,
Mary was
It
a
the
why we
strong
Ambrose, the famous bishop of influence
on Saint Augustine,
Temple of God and not the God of the
should worship only
Him whose
presence
The Virgin's Great Shadow
114
gives
to the Temple.” This involves, as does every other theolog-
life
commentary, an assertion that
ical
based on nothing.
is
It
accepted as an article of faith but not as a demonstration.
beyond appearances, however, the assertion If
Mary
is
is
given that Jesus-God took form in Mary,
it
.
is it
we
If
laden with ambiguity.
means
sidered to be a container Because Jesus-God
contents ?
that
would
Mary
is
con-
in this case be
correct to consider the container as inferior to the
we would
follow Saint Ambrose’s reasoning,
cally be led to claim that the perfect (Jesus-God)
imperfect (Mary-woman). tion
we go
Temple of God, which no one dreamed of contesting,
the
the contents ,
If
can be
We
was born from
an open door to the worst
the
might suspect that such an observa-
had emerged from very heterodox horizons, and
was hardly compatible with
logi-
the original assertion.
any event,
heresies. In
It
it
in
any case
was
it
therefore
inspired a long
process of theological speculation concerning Mary, mother of God,
which would not
until the nineteenth century lead to the
tion of the
dogma
lesser
as
equal larity
evil,
—
prevented
it
words
in other
among
of Immaculate Conception. This
the
Mary from
a “goddess”
human
proclama-
was
finally a
being considered God’s
—while recognizing her singu-
race.
The Gnostics would not have been
satisfied
with the Immaculate
Conception of Mary. Furthermore, the Gnostics expressed themselves not in theological terms, but rather in philosophical ones that
amassed together mystical elements, mythological mological speculations. Their idea was to
make
in the
What
pagan
they found
pagan traditions was the universal worship of the
Great Goddess with tions, but in
and cos-
the so-called
traditions coincide with Judeo-Christian teachings.
most readily
fables,
many
faces,
many names, and
multiple func-
any event the Goddess of the Beginnings, she
Genesis barely dared evoke with
its
whom
primordial “waters” over which
the mysterious “Elohim” breathed.
This
initial
linkage led to other meetings.
contributions to Gnostic thought were
first
The Judeo-Christian
the image of the heav-
enly Jerusalem, an image symbolizing future humanity, then the
The Mother of God
assembly
115
of participants in the heavenly Jerusalem. This was,
itself
words, the Ecclesia, the Church (“assembly,” etymologi-
in other
cally speaking). Jesus himself alluded to this celestial Jerusalem,
and
he always spoke in terms that stressed the femininity of the assem-
and the name and
bly of the elect. Saint Paul repeated the image
defined
it
as “our
mother”
—the origin of the well-known expres-
sion “our holy mother the Church.” She
head of the serpent (and
to trample the
medieval statuary); she
whom is communicated new Adam
new Eve who comes
the
is
depicted doing so in
is
the true mother of the living, through
is
to us the spiritual
life
of Christ, himself the
.
It
from
can easily be seen that Mary, mother of Jesus, this speculation.
The Church has come
as the fiancee (the Shulamite
is
entirely absent
to be considered
more
from the Song of Solomon, she who
is
“black but beautiful”) than the bride of Christ, somewhat similarly to
how
bride of Jehovah.
Mass
was considered
the Israelite nation
And
if
correctly, the priest
faithful!),
we understand (when he
Jewish thought as the
the ritual of the Catholic
officiated with his
cration of the host and the
principle,
Communion
nuptials between this assembly
and Jesus
is
the
prompts, by the conse-
that follows, the veritable
who
Christ,
has descended
altar.
But
this
is all
very abstract and stems from a thorough knowl-
edge of the question of the relationship between ple.
back to the
symbol and sublimation of the assembly that
Church and therefore the female
on the
in
We
can then understand
mother of
Christ, but also
And
if
Mary
is
to the material figure of
mother of all humanity
the
God’s peo-
the concept of the assembly bride
was slowly amalgamated
of Christ
Gospels.
why
God and
mother of
all
,
if
we
Mary,
believe the
humanity, a perfectly com-
prehensible bistoricized figure and tangibly attainable, she acquires
by virtue of
this all the characteristics that
versal Great Goddess,
But
it
figure of
was not
Mary
mother of
the Gnostics
into the
all
once devolved on the uni-
gods and
all
who prompted
human
beings.
the irruption of the
orthodox theology. Oddly enough,
it
was an
The Virgin's Great Shadow
116
authentic heresy Arius,
sible.
known
who was
Arianism that was
as
founder of
this doctrine
Alexandria was a crucible
priest (the city of
in large part respon-
and an Alexandrian
in
which Western and
Eastern influences melted together), refused to recognize the divine nature of Jesus and regarded him as simply an inspired prophet.
Based on
this negation,
Holy Ghost
in the
he had no choice but to refuse the role of the
conception of Jesus and consequently came to
deny absolutely Mary’s
role
and
distinctiveness, thereby also reject-
ing every female element in Christian doctrine of the time. It
so happens that Arius collided violently, through long theo-
logical
discussions,
with Saint Athanasus,
Alexandria in 328, on it
was not
this
who was
bishop of
question of the Incarnation. (At this time
yet a practice to burn heretics!) In reaction to Arius
his negation of
Mary’s role
(the female principle), Saint
and
Athanasus
found himself obliged not only to defend the incarnation of Jesus-
God
inside of
as well. this
According to him,
Word
race,
Mary, but to amplify both her role and if
Mary was
its
uniqueness
not the mother of the Word,
could not be consubstantial (bomousios) with the
human
and consequently the Redemption would be meaningless.
Therefore,
had
it
to be accepted that
Mary was
Christ, with all the consequences that involved,
of Jesus
was
to be demonstrated in
Mary emerged from
this
the fusion of the divine
tandem with
the true if
mother of
the divine nature
his
human
nature.
chain of reasoning as the crucible in which
and the human was
realized in perfect, albeit
mysterious, fashion.
This was the concept that prevailed. In 533 a decree by the
Byzantine emperor Justinian declared quite explicitly that Jesus was “consubstantial with the Father as regards his divinity and consubstantial
with us as regards his humanity.” Accordingly he acts as
mediator between
God and
humanity, for he enables
God
to speak
human words and humans to address the incommunicable God with human words that at times go beyond their strict sense. But here we fall right back into the same problem: What earthly woman, with
afflicted
with
all
the stains of humanity, could be
worthy of being
,
The Mother of God the
Temple of God? This
What weak and
raises another,
imperfect earthly
almost metaphysical
woman would
117
issue:
be capable of with-
standing such a hierogamous union with the Perfect One?
Sacred unions between a mortal and a god or goddess are familiar to us
from the so-called pagan
traditions.
Such unions generally
engender heroes such as Hercules and Aeneas, but they are often dangerous for the of Aeneas,
men
women
or
involved in them. Anchises, the father
became lame following
his
More
union with Venus.
often
than not a curse befalls the individual with the audacity to share,
if
only for a moment, the power of the gods.
it
It is
also notable that
never involves any kind of degeneration for the god or goddess. In
extreme cases, the physical defects and decay that
may
mortal are not signs of degeneration; they are marks
left
who
henceforth singles out this
The comparisons
human
that can be
from
individual
drawn between
concepts and pagan traditions are in no
way
befall the
by the god
his peers.
certain Christian
shocking, and in any
event are never by chance. In the case of physical defects that follow
human
contact with a god, the same belief can be found
among Jews
and Christians. The example of Moses, who can glimpse Jehovah only through the burning bush, regard. Another
is
the hero
is
Galahad looking into the Holy Grail and
dying from the transcendental vision said (Exodus 33:20), still
involves the
imperfect, that the
and
it is
human
fraught with meaning in this
it
produces. As Moses himself
“None can look upon
the
Lord and
same relationship between the
being
is
and the
perfect
only at the end of a slow initiation
(life
live.” It
on
earth)
capable of withstanding the vision of an
absolute and infinite God.
These same comparisons have even greater significance with respect to Mary, lished
mother of God, when they have been
by examining pagan
beliefs
early Christianity throughout the
solidly estab-
and worship that coexisted with
Roman
Empire. The worship of
Mithra and the symbolic value of the Phrygian god,
like his esoteric
meaning inherited from the remote Indo-European
past,
emerge
from the same mold of thought that presided over the creation of the
The Virgin's Great Shadow
118
Christian religion, to such an extent that Mithra barely failed to sup-
among
plant Jesus, at least in the second century C.E., particularly the
Roman
Latin
legions
—who
—that occupied vast
on the limes d tudes:
The
On
this
included every ethnic group but the territories
on the borders of the empire,
point archaeology has provided us with
Mithra was transported
cult of
two
the Christian message. But these
in the
certi-
same baggage
similar religious concepts
as
were
not alone. They faced strong competition from another system that
had originated This ation
is
in Asia
Minor, the worship of Cybele.
where everything becomes
of the
Marian
cult
—not
descended from the Cybele despite a basic parallelism,
that
condemnation of the Christian
the
Marian
directly
cult
but rather that both systems,
cult,
were
decisive concerning the cre-
relentless antagonists.
sect
by
Roman
While the
authorities
was due
to the fact that the Christians, by refusing to sacrifice to the gods of
Rome, placed themselves
outside the law, the worst enemies of the
Christians were the devotees of Cybele, tunity to cast oil
on the
ple will suffice: In cities,
fire
Roman
never missed an oppor-
during their persecution.
A simple
exam-
Gaul, persecutions were ferocious in two
Vienne and Lyon, the two
tration of Christians
who
cities that
had the highest concen-
and worshippers of Cybele. Both systems were
sharing the same terrain.
The
religion of Cybele
at a time
when Roman
loss of prestige.
No
had invaded Rome and
vast territories
was experiencing
ancestor worship
one seriously believed
its
in the official
a great
Roman
reli-
gion any longer; most important, nobody accepted the agnosticism of such a religion, which did not preach the survival of the soul after death.
It
and the
has been too often forgotten that the classical Greek religion official
Roman
religion
were only formal
conciliate the gods in order to allow as best they could.
1.
The same was
humans
rituals
to lead a transitory
true of the
— Trans.]
life
Hebrews, moreover,
[The limes were fortified walls along the contested borders of the
prevent incursions by small bands of raiders.
intended to
Roman Empire
to
The Mother of God
119
before the introduction of Eastern doctrines; even during the time of Jesus,
some Jews refused
Roman
Greek and
the fact that
Pythagoras.
human
It
it
known on
be
countless occasions
barbaric and puerile were
it
speaks volumes about the depth of this agnosticism satisfied the natural
tendency found throughout the
had therefore become a simple
glue that
bonded the members of But for those
ethnicity.
not for
presented certain similarities with the teachings of
race to connect with a transcendent reality. Official
religion
was
it
no way
in
let it
would have deemed
that they
it
authors took offense at the Druidic doctrine
They
asserting immortality.
that
to accept the immortality of the soul.
Roman
patriotic ritual, a kind of
a civitas, citizens sharing the
who went beyond
same
the agnostic attitude,
it
clearly necessary to look elsewhere for doctrines that could sat-
This was the case with the mystery religions
isfy their yearnings.
such as Orphism and the Eleusinian type, then the
Isiac type,
and
Mithra and Cybele, which immediately preceded
finally the cults of
but extended the Christian message that had the advantage of offering a historicized version of the survival of the soul after death.
Like Mithraism, the cult of Cybele was propagated out of Asia
Minor, notably Phrygia. This region was a veritable matrix of gions and played
Church. Wasn’t
own
its
in
it
part in the crafting of the Christian
Phrygia that the
first
around John and Paul, found refuge? Wasn’t the
“evangelization”
actual
reli-
of the
it
Christians, gathered
here that they began
world of those called the
Gentiles? But in this land of violent contrasts, the disciples of Jesus
They were exposed
did not find peace.
to the zealots of
other religions, principally the sectarians of the this
instance
Prostitute
—
by towers
the
(a
Mother Goddess,
famous Cybele, often depicted
in other
words, she
who
gives herself to
symbol of might), mother of
all
numerous
as all
the
in
Great
—crowned
the gods, seated in
great triumph atop the monster she tames, an image that will
become
the Virgin crushing the serpent, or even the
Lady with
the
unicorn, soothing the bellicose ardor of this fantasy creature by
allowing
it
to rest
its
head against her
breast. Cybele, heiress of the
The Virgin's Great Shadow
120
Mother Goddess,
primitive
is
none other than the reborn
face of the
ancient Greek Artemis, the Babylonian Ishtar, the Solar Goddess of the ancient Scythians. She
is
the outcome, in a refined Hellenic milieu,
of a slow maturation of the concept of the female deity of origins.
So
dawn
just
who
is
this
mysterious figure
who emerged from
of time? Cybele, as she appeared in the
Christian era,
was
prehistoric times.
the realistic
still
It is
she
who
is
depicted, in surprising fashion, in
from southern France
statuettes
Paleolithic era, and, in the abstract or at least
schematic form, in the great Western megalithic
found
in Brittany
Cybele
war and
and Ireland that date from the Neolithic period.
who
fertility,
mal. She
monuments mainly
derived from the Neolithic goddess of
is
is
centuries of the
laden with a substratum that goes back to
form of the steatopygic
from the
that date
first
the
is
life
the origin of every creature,
and death, of
human
or ani-
most
the material representation of creative energy, the
popular expression of the generative principle that transmutes and transforms the world
—what some philosophers
a tinge of atheistic materialism, the
will later call,
Natura naturans, “Nature
with
in the
process of becoming nature,” reflective of the permanent creation at
work throughout
the world that transforms primal matter into the
philosopher’s stone, the imperfect into the perfect.
Of
course, missionaries spread throughout the empire to
tell
the
history of the goddess, a tale enriched by the details necessary to the
Roman
mentality of the essential
Mother of Gods. The myth shows Cybele and initiatory,
of the
Mary
but also
creator
outline
of the
unknown and energy of
the
Mater Deum, the
us not only the parallel between
this outline,
which can be labeled
responds to a fundamental need on the part of the peoples
Roman Empire
The
how
myth of
is
during that specific era.
as follows:
universe,
The primordial goddess, who
is
not the
has been given the mission from the
mysterious divine creator entity to implement the
this universe
and ensure
its
harmony. She
demiurge. But dark and adversarial powers (the
is
therefore a
Enemy
in
the
Hebraic tradition under whatever name he bears, or the Giants of
The Mother of God
121
the Germano-Scandinavian tradition) relentlessly oppose the universe,
and the
terrestrial
entire
work
is
compromised (theme of
The
the Fall).
world would have been annihilated were
it
not for the
intervention of another god, son of the goddess but also of the
unknown
god, whose mission
annually renewing the
The
initial
world by
to restore balance to the
is
action of the creator.
effects of the god-son’s role are limited to the length of the
yearly cycle, a solar year to be precise, for the origin of this at the level of a feminine solar deity
who
holds
myth
is
set
warmth and radiance
but needs another god, in this instance the moon, to reflect them onto the world. In one sense, the
Mother holds
the potentiality,
Son, charged with this potentiality, implements ries
out her orders. This
this role,
is
why
was both son and
it
as the
die,
the
in the
domain of
all
of nature.
Son constitutes the
essential basis of this matriarchal religious system.
quite real
car-
At the end of the
then be reborn with
The annual passion and renaissance of sumptuously commemorated
who
the Son, in order to clearly indicate
lover of the Mother.
annual cycle he would have to
one
and the
These events are
the story, but they are
on the material plane: the death of nature on the threshold
of winter and
its
rebirth in spring.
The same
idea
is
present in the
tiatory outline of Eleusis concerning the goddess Demeter-Ceres,
voyaged to the netherworld
in
search
of her
Persephone, held prisoner by Hades-Pluto.
theme of the quest
for the Grail; the
It
is
daughter,
ini-
who
Kore-
also the original
wounded and impotent
Fisher
who already has a daughter, has become sterile in waiting for one who will come and rediscover the Grail. Mythological out-
King, the
lines of the
There all is
is
same nature a
refer to the
are not lacking in Celtic tradition.
wide variety of mythical narratives about Cybele, but
same basic assumptions. The son, who
is
called Attis,
associated with a tree: the cedar in the East and the pine in the
West.
He
dies at the
end of a tragedy equivalent to the Christian
Passion. After several days of mourning, his mother-lover reani-
mates him and marries him creation benefits.
in a
bloody hierogamy from which
all
122
The Virgin's Great Shadow But
soon followed by
in Phrygia,
all
other countries subject to
the worship of Cybele, the tragedy in
which
strange, fanatical coloration that has
its
Christian thought. During the festivals
commemorating
Attis died
took on a
equivalents in medieval
the Phrygian priests, going their predecessors one better
this event,
and proba-
bly under the influence of hallucinogenic substances, surrendered to
which some,
frenzied dances in
in the grip of a mystical delirium,
intentionally castrated themselves to fully identify with the bloodied
son of their goddess. Christianity.
On
Some memories
the one hand, there
is
remain within
of this
phenomenon
the mysterious
that causes the stigmata of Jesus Christ to appear
on the bodies of
certain individuals while they are in a state of mystical trance.
the other, there
is
the celibacy and chastity required for
Catholic priests. This chastity
is
obviously,
On
monks and
on a symbolic
level,
an
exact replica of the castration of the priests of Cybele. In the beginning, the matriarchal religion, with in
cruel rites
its
still
compliance with nature, appeared more as a cosmogonical than a
The performance of
theological practice.
helped nature function for fine herds
better,
and good
the annual rites primarily
with a material profit
harvests. But
little
by
in
mind: the hope
little this
primitive nat-
uralism became charged by a series of metaphysical considerations on the
meaning of
and the
life
and humankind’s
The
different mystery religions are clear.
Attis illustrate the death
a
fate.
model and example
influences of Eleusis
While the mysteries of
and resurrection of a god-son, he had become
for
all
humanity. Through Attis, through his
personal evolution as well as through the help of his divine mother,
human
beings had hope of being reborn to a higher state after death.
Death was no longer an ending but instead a passage. The very notion of the “departed” indicates a passage toward an “elsewhere,” going
beyond the world of
The
visible realities to attain a
religion of Cybele therefore
became
suprahuman world.
a religion of salvation, capa-
ble of transferring the benefit of the resurrection, previously reserved
for Attis, to
all
human
beings, even foreigners. This important point
explains the stunning success of the
new
system.
The Mother of God
Probably sometime during the second century
C.E.,
123
the worship of
Cybele was enriched with a heterogeneous element, tauroboly, or sacrifice
of the bull, that formerly belonged to Mithraism (as well as to
ancient Western religious rituals that have
behind only a few
left
traces ). 2 Symbolically, the death of the god-son responds to that of the
The
sun-bull.
blood of the
humans
part is
practice that consists of having the faithful receive the
bull,
an act equivalent to baptism by water, displays the
how, when the matriarchal
ralistic
human
take from the god, followed by religion
was completely
attachments and had abandoned
poses, the sacrifice of the bull
Once
initiatory value.
resurrection. This
its
freed of
natu-
its
transitory material pur-
and the baptism by blood took on an
from the trench
the initiate emerged
in
which he
had received the blood, he was, according to the accepted expression, in
aeternum renatus, “reborn for
the analogies between these practices that there
may not
human
systems offered only a happy
liturgy.
is
no need
to extend
—not
and those of Christianity
be reciprocal influences, but they are both a response
to the anguished pleas of
The
There
eternity.”
sacrifice of the bull
life is
beings, while the traditional religious
that
was
limited in duration.
thus closely connected to matriarchal
But the sectarians of Cybele added something to
not enough to spread the blood of the bull on the faithful;
customary to tear off the
testicles of the
animal. These
It
it.
it
was
became
would be
solemnly carried with the horns into the temple of the goddess and placed beneath a commemorative tion of relics, so
with
2.
common
The
practice of the adora-
in Christianity, also has
some connections
this rite.
For example, according to Pliny the Elder, the harvesting of mistletoe, a famous
ual but one that rifice
is
generally presented in an incomplete form,
from the Ulster Cycle, bull,
was followed by
rit-
the sac-
of a bull, which clearly indicates that the Druids practiced tauro-bolium. This has
been confirmed by numerous
to
altar.
which
mind
in
Irish stories
from the early Middle Ages, notably those
which implacable wars are waged
will finally be killed during the battles.
a pastoral kind of civilization
prosperity of the entire herd.
of bullfighting.
The
where the
for possession of a divine
Furthermore,
bull sacrifice
is
this entire cycle brings
essential to ensure the
idea of bull sacrifice can also be seen in the practice
The Virgin's Great Shadow
124
Moreover, to ensure the triumph of Cybele had the
brilliant idea of associating
and the emperor. In the emperor was
their religion, the priests of
Rome Roman
with the cult of
religion, the
dead
(ceremony of the apotheosis) and then wor-
deified
shipped in the same
Roman
official
it
way
as the other gods. Far
practice, the priests of Cybele
from scorning
went further and presented
this
their god-
dess as the protector of the emperor, thereby incorporating the his-
with the god-son, something that the Latin mentality
torical figure
did not find objectionable. Soon, the goddess adopted the
name
Cybele Augustus, and the priests obtained an important place in the municipal cult of the emperor. This speaks volumes about the significance of the bull-sacrifice
ceremony. In the year 160 an that time,
was
Anthony was it
offered for the
a devotee of the
was conceivable
Roman
precisely
would become
the
as “savior” of the world, the regen-
and the model of
which was
of Gods, and during this time
Empire, making the emperor the son of
dition. This strengthened the
origin,
Mother
He was promoted
erator of nature,
up to
“emperor’s salvation.” Emperor
that the worship of Cybele
religion of the entire
the goddess.
official bull sacrifice, the first
life,
like Attis in
concept of a
what
mythological tra-
human mediator
of divine
the Christian message revealed in
an entirely different context. Here again we find a response to a pro-
found request from people haunted by the idea of a salvation that could be both collective and individual. All this largely spills over the cal speculation. This
was denoted by
new
narrow framework of metaphysi-
religious attitude
permeated daily
a precise solar-based calendar that
life
and
gave a privileged
position to spring, the season of renewal, and hence the resurrection.
The
Believers
great matriarchal festivals began
were expected to observe
marked by absolute sexual
place.
A
March 21 tree
was
Ides of
one-week period of mourning
dawn on
the day of the spring
or 22, the Procession of the Pine
cut
March.
abstinence. Something of this remains in
the Christian Lent. Then, before
equinox,
a
on the
down by
would take
the priests, the dendropbores (leaf
The Mother of God
and adorned with
bearers),
was carved on one of
tion of Attis
ized
its
branches.
mummy;
a depic-
The
symbol-
tree
prepared for the funeral ceremony.
himself,
Attis
strips of cloth like a
125
Once
prepared, the tree was led in procession to the temple of Cybele,
where
it
was
erected.
It
remained exposed for three days and two
guarded by worshippers
nights,
and
real dirges
The
who
expressed their despair in fune-
plaintive songs.
Festival of
Blood took place on March 24. The most exalted
of the faithful slashed their shoulders and arms to water the pine
with their blood and thus share in the god’s passion. The pine was
down
then taken
into a cellar of the temple,
and
a long vigil
began
during which the faithful achieved their purification. (Something of this survives in
Masonic
rites, in
particular the sojourn that neo-
On
morning
phytes
make
light of
dawn, when the rays of the sun began penetrating the depths
in the
Tomb.)
of the sanctuary, 3 the
on
a parade
the following
young god
bed arranged
resuscitated
was seen
in the first
stretched out
at the feet of Cybele’s statue.
One
of the
faithful played this highly desired role.
This was the opening of the day of Hilaria, that of universal
The images of Cybele and
drawn by four
a cart
cross, the
The
solstice sunrise of
certain megalithic
first
summer
monuments
youngest 4.
The
if
cymbalists,
players,
New
Grange tumulus
in France).
would
in Ireland,
These monuments were
strike the
some Christian churches, where
someone had sought
in
singers,
Stonehenge
built in
such a
in
way
back of the central chamber. There the sun, passing through the stained
moment
of the day. This
to “harness” the solar energy in
its
purest and
state.
pastoral staff can be seen again
for the cross (already visible as a it
up
procession followed
glass, strikes the altar stone or this or that statue at a given
takes place as
set
or winter played a significant role in connection with
(the
ray of the rising sun
are equivalents in
An amazing
and tambourine
England, Dissignac-Saint-Nazaire that the
were
horses; they carried the pastoral staff of the
symbol of command. 4
consisting of flute
3.
Attis (in Phrygian bonnet)
joy.
would become
monastery.
among
the priests and
monks
symbol of power and command
of Christianity.
As
in megalithic carvings),
the distinctive sign of the Christian bishop and the abbot of a
The Virgin’s Great Shadow
126
torchbearers, and priests and priestesses clad in white and in
crowned
gold surrounding the high priest, the Archigalle, in his purple pal-
The procession made
its
way through
stopping at the temples of
all
the other gods, demonstrating that
lium.
Cybele and Attis were superior to them
the streets of the
—
logically
city,
enough, as
Cybele was the Mater Deum. The day ended with luxurious banquets at which alcoholic beverages flowed in great torrents, which certainly
had an
effect
on the
orgiastic behavior of the participants
throughout the following night. 5
These
feasts
their length
and
form the apex of the matriarchal their solemnity.
But the secret part of the worship
of Cybele should not be forgotten. initiation
The “mysteries,” meaning
the
ceremonies reserved for neophytes, took place on March
The neophytes underwent
28.
liturgy in both
tests
about which we have
information but that included sacrifices and a period of nence. Sacrificial blood
may have been
spilled over the
phytes as some sort of baptism. They
communal meal
them
may have
little
strict absti-
young neo-
partaken of a
to the divine family, as
was
practiced in Eleusis with the sharing of bread and wine. There
may
that admitted
have been a mystical marriage of the new the
Gods (and human
initiate to the
beings) in the nuptial
Mother
of
chamber of Cybele,
a
cave reached by following a long, winding path. 6 In any event, dur-
5.
The
festivals of
Carnivale share this same concern of celebrating the renewal of
through great displays of joy and orgiastic aspects
all
life
the vital impulses of the individual. But once their
have been stripped away, the matriarchal processions can be recognized
quite easily in the Christian processions that travel
from
“altar of repose” to “altar of
repose” and from chapel to chapel at the time of Holy Saturday as well as on Corpus Christi. 6.
The mystical marriage of
a sexual nature) in
there
was
numerous pagan
in the
equivalents (even
Mother Goddess.
unknown woman embodying
noble sense of the word. But the mystical marriage
ture of Christianity, once in the reports of
many
cults of the universal
the union of the believer with an
Great Prostitute,
found
the neophyte to Cybele has
it
has been emptied
— theoretically— of
all
is
In
some of Babylon
Ishtar, the
also a fea-
sexuality, as
can be
Bernard de Clairvaux and other illustrious saints of their sub-
lime relations with the Virgin Mary.
The Mother of God ing the course of these ceremonies, the neophyte
was
identify with Attis. This
127
would formally
the guarantee that the neophyte
would
share in Attis’s resurrection.
The extraordinary evolution of
the Cybele cult
and the integra-
tion of the Mithraic bull sacrifice took place in a material frame-
work adapted honor of
to imperial
Roman
and her son-lover Tammuz; those honoring
Ishtar
Aphrodite and Adonis, as well as the mysterious Artemis
vowed
priest-lover,
retains
civilization: the ancient rites in
numerous
Isis
and
Osiris;
and even those of
and Hippolytus, her no
less
mysterious
to chastity. Racine’s tragedy about this last pair
features of
original story. But the cult
its
was
obviously an expression of a mythological outline, a metaphysical
human thought through
structure representing the evolution of
the
ages.
The
primitive
was
Beginnings,
divided into as in the a
dyad it
first
the
Great Goddess of the
represented alone. Before femininity became
with condemnation and suspicion, she was sometimes
tainted
and
Mother Goddess,
two feminine
figures,
viewed as mother and daughter,
myth of Demeter and Kore. The dyad of an
elder goddess
younger goddess symbolized the renewal of the former. This is
common
to Greek,
can also be found
in
Roman, and Etruscan mythologies, but
Japan with the goddess Amaterasu,
often accompanied by her double. Because Amaterasu deity, the
dyad involves the image of the
setting
is
who
is
a solar
sun (Amaterasu her-
prolonged by the rising sun.
self)
Once
the transition
from the
original matriarchy to patriarchy
occurred, the daughter became a son; the myths became those of
and
Osiris,
Cybele and
Venus and Adonis, Attis.
Ishtar
These myths are
and Tammuz, and
identical, involving,
Isis
finally
according to
Przyluski, a “descent into hell that suggests death followed by a resurrection,
and
a
dyad formed by two
deities of different age.
But
whereas Demeter and Kore are two goddesses, Astarte and Adonis are of different sexes.
dyad
We
have therefore moved past the female
to the two-sex couple.
It is
the application of the principle
The Virgin's Great Shadow
128
that fertility requires the union of both sexes.”" Previously, fertility
was
domain of
believed to be the exclusive
Thus, there
must be taken
is
a constant in the
into account
and
reborn,
is
centuries of Christianity that
first
when we examine
Mary: the widespread image of tragically
making
of humanity. This image of the
a female deity
God, who was portrayed during
after
almost total
the
savior son dies
Roman Empire
is
The
testifies to this.
surrounded by male apos-
place for
women,
of
mysterious
elimination
Magdalene and what the Gospels
God-Son
the figure of Jesus, son of
his life as
left little
the
whole
collective unconscious.
The Christian message emphasized
This androcratic message
whose
Mother Goddess and
success of the worship of Cybele in the
tles.
the role of the Virgin
possible the resurrection of the
an archetype, a property of the
clearly
the female. 8
the
group of
call the
especially
Mary Holy Women. A
reading of the canonical Gospels, however, leaves no doubt as to the
importance of the female element Jesus.
Most
crucial of
all,
group of those following
in the
God had
the son of
woman’s womb. Whoever she may have been,
to be born
this
woman
mation
with the picture of her furnished by the rare
in these
Church had
same canonical
to find a solution to the
of Jesus, and
One way
texts.
a
acquired
considerable importance in the eyes of the faithful and had
common
from
little
in
bits of infor-
or another, the
problem raised by the mother
did exactly that at the Council of Ephesus in 431,
it
when Mary was
declared Theotokos,
Mother
of God.
This decree, perhaps one of the most important in the religious life
of the West,
a very concrete
was immediately extended
and
practical way.
It
into popular
worship
in
answered an unconscious desire
of the faithful haunted by the image of the Mater
Deum. As Lederer
explains:
7. J. Przyluski, 8.
The
La Grande Deesse
(Paris: Payot,
reversal of the matriarchal tendency,
of the Celts (Rochester,
aware of
his
own
1950), 163.
which
I
Vt.: Inner Traditions, 1986),
role in procreation.
in
Women
the male
became
have analyzed at length occurred
when
The Mother of God
make
Alleged portraits of the Virgin began to
One is
by Empress Eudoxia
Pulcheria,
icon
their appearance.
of them, the Hodegetria attributed to Saint Luke,
said,
who had
was given
the point that the
army
the Infant Jesus
her,
it
on
as once
Cybele. 9 At the beginning of the
churches to
to
C.E.
sent,
it
her sister-in-law
of intense adoration for centuries, to
carried
campaign against the enemy,
icate
438
was
placed in the church of Constantinople. The
it
own brand
its
in
129
a chariot
was done with
fifth century,
and during the
became one of
when going on
a
the effigy as
people began to ded-
sixth century,
Madonnas with
the favorite subjects of Christian
iconography. The symbolic colors are the same as those used for icons of the goddess; even the accoutrements
wears a crown of
upon
the
stars
and
moon; and she
is
seem
familiar:
Mary
a star-covered cloak; her feet are placed
strangely reminiscent of the effigies of
Aphrodite. She sometimes carries an ear of wheat, like the Virgin of Epis (Spica Virgo), or to Ishtar, treading
is
upon
accompanied by the dove that was dear
had
the serpent that
until this time
been
invariably associated with representations of the goddess; her his-
tory teems with legend that had once been those of Ishtar or Juno. 10
This
is
how
the high figure of the Virgin Mary,
was
thus mother of God,
One
thing
is
certain:
injected into Christian devotion.
You cannot speak
members do not understand. The
it
to a people in a language
internal structure of the collective
unconscious needs concrete images, and
them when
mother of Jesus and
it
seems necessary to supply
wants them, although sometimes the original mean-
have been changed. De Smet, a Belgian Catholic
ings
priest,
observes:
9.
According to the tenth-century document Annales Cambriae, the fabled King Arthur,
who
is
Badon
based on a historical figure of
c.
500
C.E.,
won
the three-day battle of
against the Saxons because he had an effigy of the Virgin
Mary
carried in front
of his troops. 10.
W.
Lederer,
Gynophobia ou ,
la
peur des femmes
(Paris: Payot,
Mount
1970).
The Virgin's Great Shadow
130
Although guided from the very
on
tion typifies
own
its
interior of Christianity, this devo-
three currents: Jewish (the daughter of
Zion), early Christian (Our
Mother
the Church),
and pagan
(the
goddess). In fact, the nostalgia for the feminine deity and the adoration of maternity is
impossible to extirpate
the
human
Conforming
completely.
it
heart and against dogma, the cult of the
eventually prevailed.
became the
.
.
.
The Artemis of
“great, glorious,
the
But
most noble of
this
human
the
all
Isis
the goddess of
law of
the Ephesians thereby
the
fills
fertility,
love,
most
Horus
returns with
known
those history has
in
and beauty,
11 .
concerns the folk image of the goddess, which lurks in
subconscious and whose functions, on a primary and
concrete level, are above
The problem
all
it.
Jesus, as
only Son born once and for
all,
with Tammuz, Adonis, or
and
sexuality, reproduction,
the church fathers faced
while going beyond
cal
to the
it
Mother of God
religion of nature
glaring gap in the religion of salvation.
Mary becomes
heart that
and sublime Mother of God.” The
most beautiful flower from the
her arms.
human
so deeply rooted in the
is
God
was accepting
fertility.
this
image
incarnate and especially as the
could not, however, be fully identi-
Attis. In
following up a Greek philos-
ophy, Christianity had taken on the task of spreading the idea of transcendence. Also, the necessary but ambiguous image of the goddess
had
“All that
to be refined,
Mary
if
not rendered sublime, as de Smet explains:
could not reuse from the dark and destructive figure
of the goddess, principally her sexual worship, the church fathers, the Councils, theologians,
appearance of a
and preachers then took by giving
living, spiritual
being
who opposed
God: Satan .” 12 Hence the emphasis placed on ing the very
common
11. A. de Smet,
La Grande Deesse nest pas morte
12. Ibid., 178.
it
the
the Virgin and
reutilizing
and extend-
representation of the Virgin crushing the head
(Paris, 1983).
The Mother of of the snake or the dragon.
Hence
the emphasis placed
and the foolish
ble of the wise virgins
with
virgins,
God
131
on the para-
all
the associa-
tions triggered by such a fundamental opposition. Hence, even, the
curious relationship in astrology between the sign of Virgo and the sign of Scorpio, the Virgin assuming an ambivalent
meaning (pure
Virgo and Virgo-Scorpio), which shows the difficulty in considering the Great Goddess of the Beginnings in anything but her totality.
A ible
form of dualism
developing.
is
with the Mother of
God
is
What
cast into the
sulfurous appearance of the Enemy. Giving
of a horned or monstrous deity enables a
appears to be incompat-
shadows, taking on the
him
him
the disturbing guise
to act as a kind of
foil,
mediating object intended to externalize and concentrate the base
impulses of the subconscious. Once those have been extracted from the subconscious
and
objectified, they
dangerous. But this dark side
is
become
less virulent
and
not thereby annihilated. In
less
fact,
it
returns in force, although quite marginalized. Przyluski observes:
The witchcraft beliefs
and
trials
of the Middle Ages reveal a curious set of
practices, or
Christian elements.
pagan remembrances combining with
The witches’ Sabbath took place
places under the invocation of Diana role of the
god of sun and
ual: there
is
moon, and
light.
The Sabbath
the orgy that brings
it
to a close
Lucifer,
Here the dualism
a tangible connection
night.
and
who
is
in deserted
played the
astral
and
between Diana, witches, the
recalls the ancient mysteries, is
sex-
and
related to the ancient ceremonies
13 of the cult of the Great Mother.
In this
way
the path
dental goddess.
13. Ibid., 167.
was
cleared to
make Mary
the great transcen-
Worship of the Virgin
O
ne of the essential characteristics of Christianity, at least in
Catholic and Orthodox formulations, given by the faithful to figures ileged place in a
who It is
incontestably the worship
are not divine but
presumed hierarchy
particularly the Virgin Mary.
is
its
—generally the
also the chief
occupy a
saints,
priv-
but most
bone of contention
between Catholics and Protestants when they seek,
in a laudable
display of ecumenism, to restore their original unity. It is
indeed difficult to reconcile the two extreme positions, one
seeking to maintain direct contact between the created and the divine creator without the help of any intermediary, not even the
pastor (Calvinism and Lutherism), the other defending the role that
some intermediaries can play between the priests in earthly
life,
On
are responsible for their acts before
waste praying or entreating figures
obligatory mediators cates of a sort ers
find
who
and who,
being and God:
the one hand,
if
human
beings
God alone and have no time who have been declared to
an arbitrary and relative fashion.
same individuals should
human
the saints (those privileged by Divinity) in
the world of supernatural realities.
saints in
the
On
to
be
the other hand, these
on the long road that leads to God
serve as examples, intercessors, or advo-
need be, are capable of showing the seek-
which way to go. This debate
is
more metaphysical than 132
theological; the question
—
,
Worship of the Virgin
is
whether
it is
selves or only
possible for
human
who
benefited from transcendental experience.
have already presumably
The
conflict,
distorted at the outset. Because Protestants are
than Catholics (asserting that the
God by them-
beings to grasp
through intermediaries
human
133
moreover,
is
more Augustinian
being can be saved only by
the intervention of supernatural grace), they refuse this aid, whereas
Catholics expect
it
and intentionally
to say, exercises of piety
—
in other
solicit
is
we must
scope
of
find our-
more current expression,
is
from resolved. Rather than attempting
far
a solu-
confine our analysis to a better understanding of the
the
Throughout
We
is
in very soft focus.
The problem tion,
through works that
words, worship.
selves completely fogged in; or to use a
everything
it
between
difference
and
Catholic
Protestant.
denomina-
Christianity, including all the Protestant
tions, salvation
and transcendence are envisioned through the exer-
worship: the most bare-bones possible for Protestants, the
cise of
most sumptuous
Roman
for the
Orthodox, and the most traditional for
Catholics. In whatever form, this worship
is, if
not an essen-
condition, at least an important one in the transcendental rela-
tial
tionship that the creature maintains creator.
Worship
lishing a rapport
worlds.
is
the
most
practical
and
common means
and dialogue between the
visible
are just the abstract
juggling concepts.
its
beliefs as truths.
brilliant intellectuals cut off
satisfy
from
invisible
to prop
Otherwise the
words of metaphysicians who spend
Mere concepts
for estab-
and the
The human mind needs concrete elements
convictions and to confirm
some
— or should maintain—with the up
its
beliefs
their lives
no one, except perhaps
daily
life
who
eventually find
themselves spinning in circles within the higher spheres of speculation.
Worship thus presents actions
as
an action
— or
a
series
of
— intended to establish a durable and permanent relationship
between the It is
itself
the
invisible
and the
embodiment of an
visible, the perfect
and the imperfect.
abstract thought not only in
which are very important, although not exclusively so
words
— but also
in
behavior: in other words, in a series of actions of a religious or
,
The Virgin's Great Shadow
134
magical nature. Despite the prohibitions of horrified
and
magic
religion overlap, especially in the Christian faith. But the border
between magic and religion to a prudent reservation:
a delicate topic, so
is
Magic
of
sists
knowing
it is
better to stick
consists of appealing to supernatu-
powers and compelling them
ral
priests,
obey
to
the designs of supernatural
with them. Amen. But what to say of
whereas religion con-
us,
this
powers and complying
command
magical
of the
Catholic priest that compels Jesus Christ to appear on the altar in
form of bread and wine?
the
Why
bother to
make something simple when you can make
complicated? The witticism
human mind.
nature of the
supports
whenever
it
tions, the
is
based on observation of the twisted
wants to deny the supernatural, but
It
finds the opportunity.
it
it
Under these condi-
worship of any religion appears to be a desperate attempt
to recover the lost primordial unity (no one
hence the symbolic value of original
makes up
tiplicity that
practices (as
same primitive and absolute
at the
dawn
of time, the
was
allow
is
to restore
lost,
humankind
state that characterized
humans
objective of any religion’s worship
first
give back to the creature
—to
it
through the mul-
sin) scattered
Mircea Eliade has shown well)
some way
knows how
the world. Just as the purpose of shamanic
to the
in
it
opening,
its
its
availability
,
its
is
“virginity”
by substitute methods, to contrive
it,
to
return to the alleged original purity, in other words paradise, and
its
all
the confused notions attached to this concept of paradise.
So worship ally
guarantees
aware of
all
its
effectiveness.
substitution. Religion gener-
obliges
human
become
weakness, but also, as Pascal said, their are great until
this.
it is
For them, salvation if
we have
passed
is
earned through
they gather to celebrate what they call
mainly to achieve “communion” among themselves,
not to establish a magical bond with God. This criticize
beings to
the stages of “smallness.” Hardly any but the Protestants
and not by works, and
“worship,”
It
we cannot know that we
have seriously doubted faith
means of
primarily a
their nature, their
greatness for
through
is
Catholics for
what
is
why
Protestants
the former perceive to be crazy supersti-
Worship of the Virgin
and
tions
to
veritable idolatry.
Ecumenism
be expected tomorrow, even
remains sincere. The nates
among
a ritual that
all
spirit of the
in its full realization
135
is
not
the desire for understanding
if
Reformation, which
still
was
the various Protestant denominations,
had become burdened by too many
predomito purify
heteroclite, even
clearly ridiculous, elements.
At the end of the Middle Ages, works had prevailed over and often appeared void of rule
— any
may
all
attempt to change
meaning. is
Now— and this
is
faith
a general
triggered by a radicalization that
not have been anticipated. The abandonment of the ceremonies
and worship of the approach. But
it
by the Protestants formed part of
saints
no way
in
ship of the saints as
it
wor-
invalidates the justification for the
was presented
in the early
this
Middle Ages.
Early Christianity was concerned primarily with maintaining the
memory
of the earthly presence of Jesus during fraternal assemblies.
Ecclesia
means “assembly” and nothing
else. It
God
the assembly convenes in this place or that;
where, and the message tradition.
One
human
spread by
is
often cited example
is
the
does not matter is
if
present every-
voices testifying to the
Roman
catacombs, where
Christians gathered to hide from prying eyes rather than to escape persecution.
They
felt
a need to be apart
from the world, to be
in a
zone of silence and meditation, so as to establish contact with the Divine more
easily.
But
this
allowed a revival of the idea of a
privi-
leged location, a sanctuary despite the instinctive Christian mistrust ,
of “temples” inhabited by It
what they
called false gods.
appears that since the earliest prehistoric times, humans have
continuously displayed their belief that certain capability than others to reunite heaven
and
sites
have a better
earth, offering better
conditions for the subtle and delicate exchanges that take place
between the
visible
and the
invisible.
The
clearing in the middle of the forest,
is
Gallic nemeton, the sacred
one example. But
in the
Mediterranean world, the “sacred groves,” the caves, the summits of
hills
and mountains, the
islands,
these sites, were propitious for
all
and then the buildings erected on kinds of theophanies (the visible
The Virgin’s Great Shadow
136
manifestations of a deity), as well as for inspiring the
human
being’s
passion for the divine.
And
despite the early Christians’ desire to break this habit,
notably through the contention that
God
is
present everywhere, they
did not escape the tendency to favor certain spots. Because they had
and placed
asserted the historical existence of Jesus Christ cific
it
in a spe-
country, they could not underestimate the exemplary value and
“holiness” of towns like Bethlehem, Nazareth, and Jerusalem, for
they were naturally and obligatorily charged with imprints from the
Furthermore,
presence.
divine
by extension,
who
those
all
approached Christ, particularly the apostles, adopted the sacred charge of their teacher and became “saints” themselves. The places
where they
lived
and
traveled, the places
where they were martyred
or buried, obviously benefited from this mystical, not to say magical, aura.
Finally, the first martyrs,
than deny Christ and
who
meaning those who chose
loudly declared their association with the
“mystical body” of Jesus, and later the figures lives, in
to die rather
who
exemplary
led
turn became keepers of this aura, which, of course,
would
be transferred to the places where they had lived or spent time or
were buried. The worship of
saints
stemmed from
a desire to pre-
serve not relics in the strict sense of the term, but rather the physical
remnants
(bodies,
clothing,
(mystical aura) of Jesus Christ
him and
all
those
who had
objects)
and
all
or
remnants
spiritual
who had approached union with him. What
those
confessed their
has touched the divine becomes almost divine
itself,
or at least that
seems to be the assumption. This explains the origin of most of Christianity’s great sanctuaries,
given,
and
especially the
which most often concerned the
saints
and the Virgin Mary.
But the problem appears more complex than
normal and natural the Virgin
and the
they were founded dealing with a
for Christians to saints,
it
that.
While
it
is
found sanctuaries dedicated to
seems neither normal nor natural that
—especially
number
names they were
of rivals
by a young Christianity that was
—
in the sanctuaries of a
paganism
Worship of the Virgin
many
that clung tenaciously to
137
cultures. Nor, in a later period (fol-
lowing Theodosius’s edict making Christianity the sole religion of the empire), were these
same sanctuaries assiduously frequented by
the people before their conversion.
There were two possible solutions. The
first
consisted of simply
destroying the pagan edifices by laying a kind of ban on their installation; the
But the
second involved substituting the
first
solution
was most
places considered sacred
new worship
for the old.
often found to be impractical.
had always been so considered, and
it
The was
next to impossible to desanctify their value through the blackening of their reputation, most particularly by placing
patronage of diabolic powers. Thus
it
them under the
was eventually
the second
solution that prevailed, starting with the imperial territory and
spreading into the newly Christianized countries.
There are
many famous
or significant examples.
sanctuary of Mont-Saint-Michel
Mithraic temple that was consecrated
tuary
to
itself
the
is
located on the
situated
on the
“shining god,”
site
The Christian
site
of a former
of a Gallic sanc-
Belenos
1 .
In
Carnac
(Morbihan), the church dedicated to Saint Kornely replaced a sanctuary of the Gallic horned god Cernunnos built over
Langon
nificent
Notre-Dame
in Paris
was
an ancient pagan temple dedicated to a mother goddess. In
(Ille-et-Vilaine), the existing
patron saint of nursing mothers) ing the
2 .
Roman
era in
Gallo-Roman
from the waves),
after
is
the very building constructed dur-
honor of Venus fresco
chapel of Sainte-Agatha (the
(as
demonstrated by the mag-
showing the naked Venus emerging
having been a sanctuary dedicated to a myste-
rious “Saint” Vener or Venerand.
With respect
to
Our Lady
Chartres, the local clerical tradition loudly asserts that this
site
once
housed a sanctuary where the Druids honored a virgo paritura. list
1.
of similar cases
For more on
(Paris: 2.
A
to compile.
et I’enigme
du dragon
et I’enigme d’Atlantide (Paris:
Pygmalion,
Jean Markale, Le Mont-Saint-Michel
Pygmalion, 1987).
For more on
1987).
this, see
would be too long
of
this, see
Jean Markale, Carnac
,
The Virgin's Great Shadow
138
These substitutions, whatever the circumstances that inspired
may
them, whatever dates test.
be attributed to them, are difficult to con-
from the
Christianity inherited not only places of worship
gions that preceded fraternal
Communion,
the
was practiced during
the
but also cultural practices.
it
sharing of bread and wine,
reli-
Eleusinian mysteries and during the ceremonies worshipping Cybele.
This
is
but one element
ishes the strength it
did not
and
others,
which
in
no way dimin-
new
essential symbolic value of the
But
cult.
occur smoothly, especially because worship of the
all
Virgin and the saints
majority of
among many
whom
illiterate
needed images to support
imperative of religion
number. To do
was required of an
is
to
make
this, Christianity
human mind, which cannot
itself
had
way
to find a
The
to satisfy the
problem and transcend
isolate a
in the
their devotion.
understood by the greatest
This
out recourse to concrete intermediaries.
appeared immediately
populace, the
it
concrete
form of images, mainly
with-
quality
statues, that
were supposed to represent the hallowed deity or pious individuals. Such an attitude has often been considered idolatrous. easy charge to make, so
by
idolatry. Is
it
or the image?
it is
important to understand what
the magical belief that the If
so,
would
is
is
an
meant
present in the statue
the actual presence of Christ in the
Eucharist belong in this category?
“medium” intended
god
It is
Is
it
only a symbolic object, a
to facilitate meditation
and
prayer, that has been
charged with an entirely moral significance? Polytheism has often
been derided because of the ambiguity of the term idol which means simply “image.” Polytheism belief in
the
deities are
its
who
is
one, indivisible, and
unknow-
absolute existence. Only Calvinist Protestantism has
rejected this attitude across the
figure,
identity; in reality,
merely concrete representations of the social
functions imputed to a deity
rilege.
accordingly understood to involve
numerous gods, each with an individual
numerous
able in
is
board as superstition and even
Islam takes a more subtle position: While banning the it
sac-
human
accepts the symbolic decoration of geometrical motifs.
for Druidism, before
it
was contaminated by
the Mediterranean
As
reli-
Worship of the Virgin
gions,
all
testimonies concur that though
imprisoning deities in animal or
human
139
rejected the idea of
it
form,
authorized
it
not
if
encouraged the famous simulacra that Caesar mentions with regard to the Gallic Mercury,
stone or
wooden
There
which were simple, nonfigurative blocks of
pillars.
one additional element
is
centuries of Christianity,
During the
in this debate.
first
and even long afterward, pagan images
became Christian images because of an analogy of form or function.
The medieval depiction broad
of the horned devil, for example, borrows
its
from Gallo-Roman representations of Cernunnos. The
lines
sculpted pairs of Cybele and Attis, Venus and Adonis were easily
transformed into Virgin and Child. Depictions of Demeter and Kore
were
easily
confused with groupings of Anne and Mary. As for the
countless matronae statues, the Gallic child
on her knee, they were easy
Mother Goddess holding
a
to pass off as the Virgin with the
Infant Jesus.
Furthermore,
in ancient times the discovery of a statue
was
always surrounded by miraculous elements that suggested divine intervention. These marvelous elements are of
The
first
two
kinds.
concerns the discovery of a statue thanks to the inter-
vention of an animal, usually a bovine. The scenario
A
steer continually
else stops at the
kneeling
can also tree.
wanders away to browse
same furrow
down when be a cow or
at the
it
to
budge but It
always moos at the foot of the same
who
witness
it.
find beneath the sod or furrow, or in the tree, a generally
shapeless or
Mary. As
same place or
move forward.
These actions excite the curiosity of the people
They then
quite specific:
in the field, refusing to
the farmer tries to get bull that
is
worn
statue that
someone
declares to be the Virgin
Saillens notes:
Such legends invariably remind us that we once worshipped
who was
with
cow
bull,
and the horned god Cernunnos.
horns, Cybele,
Isis
associated with the Mithraic
spontaneously born several times, but
It is it
true that a
myth can be
also true that the bovine,
140
The Virgin's Great Shadow mythologies where
in the
worship.
It
it
figures,
always connected with Earth
is
held this role even as early as Neolithic times.
tradition can be maintained without
it
Now
a
being necessarily under-
stood any longer. Bullfights are one proof, as are the processions of fatted cows
3 .
The second kind of miraculous discovery It is
is
that of the “return.”
widespread throughout Europe. According to
The image having been discovered habitable
if
place where
who
it
it
This
it
it
to the parish, but the next
The
it
and well-known sanctuaries
never
to the local
morning it
it is
back
with cross
4 .
number
of
more or
less
important
—mainly dedicated to the Virgin. And,
of course, whatever reality there
may
be to the marvelous events sur-
rounding the finding of the magical image, the image sarily miraculous,
is
proves necessary to build a chapel
was found
the origin of a large
who
returns to the
priest goes in search of
flees again. It
exactly where
is
it
was found. The peasant then turns
carries
and banner, but it
deserted, even unin-
back home. During the night
in its original location.
for
some
not outright inaccessible spot, the finder,
a priest, brings
priest,
in
Saillens:
and cases can always be
itself is
neces-
cited of miraculous
who came to see how many of these
healings or the granting of simple wishes to those it
on pious pilgrimage. But on further
“miraculous”
reflection,
images were only pagan representations, mainly
mother goddesses, abandoned or buried
at the
whim
of circum-
stance and rediscovered most often out of the desire to maintain the
connection between the ancient beliefs and the new? People are not
fond of absolute innovations and always need to connect with an ancient tradition; this bears testimony to permanence and thus con-
veys a certain sense of security.
3. E. Saillens,
4. Ibid., 58.
Nos
Vierges noires (Paris: Universelles, 1945), 57.
Worship of the Virgin
It
141
goes without saying that these “finds” and the recourse to
images, even those that conformed to official Christianity, were not
always totally accepted by the sacerdotal leadership. For a long time
between town and country, the
there
was antagonism on
latter
considered inhabited by pagani with their nostalgia for pre-
this point
Christian cults. In fact, in most of the regions subject to
save on
trol,
its
the northern
and western areas of Great
many
Britain), the Christian reli-
itself essentially in
reasons for
the
this, in particular the
towns and
and the municipal nature of urban
Gallo-Roman towns were still
vital
still
life .
5
was
it
from the south
But the outskirts of the
virgin ground,
because
cities.
revelation of the
evangelical message through the agency of merchants
paganism was
con-
northwesternmost borders (Armorican Brittany and
gion spread and established
There are
Roman
and the aftermath of
integrated into rural
life itself
(whose conservative tendencies are well known). Furthermore, as a temporal organization, the
Church had borrowed administration. This
is
all
Roman
Catholic
the machinery of the imperial
why, following the disappearance of
Roman Roman
power, only the Church was able to present a consistent, even mono-
appearance
lithic
ing with
it
barbarians
them
ital
(the alliance of Clovis
who had
into the
Rome was
Germanic “barbarians” then work-
in face of the
with the bishops against the other
converted to Arianism), and finally integrating
Gallo-Roman context. But
the capital of Christendom, as
this it
was
possible because
had once been the cap-
of the temporal empire, and because Christianity had
become
urbanized. In spite of missions like that of Saint-Martin de Tours,
5.
The domain
that remained purely Celtic
would be found urbanization; the
from
Rome
—or
Because
it
rural,
and no large settlements
there before the Viking invasions. Celtic society traditionally avoided
phenomenon from Lyon,
of nonurbanization occurred in the zones farthest
capital of the
another form of Christianity evolved Celtic.
was primarily
had no urban
vestiges of Druidism. For
in these
traits,
it
Roman same
Gauls. In tandem, oddly enough,
regions, one that
was permeated by
may
be classified as
ancestral traditions, notably
more, see Jean Markale, he Christianisme celtique
vivances populaires (Paris: Imago, 1984).
away
et ses sur-
The Virgin's Great Shadow
142
rural areas
were
left
to their
own
between former
subtle mergers
devices; they
were where the most
and the new practices were
rituals
accomplished.
—most
particularly
marked by
the archaic
Under pressure from the masses, however the Eastern populations that were deeply cults of the
Mother Goddess and various
following physical death
deities
who were
—the papacy had to resign
itself
reborn
to accept-
ing worship of images as symbolic representations of the divine or sacred. Because
it
was thought
rather than see
it
maintained clandestinely or in some marginal
people
hope of
all, it
Christ. it
to the
same
who
in the flesh).
tuted exemplary support for the is
and altered
new
through
it
his
The worship of images evil therefore consti-
religion’s diffusion,
working
called the substitution of worships.
But the new converts
in the
intellectualized, long
ration of
the old
will allow us,
formerly untainted by any sense of idolatry as
more
in
retained the metaphysical meaning that gave
example, to claim resurrection
what
Church hierarchy
zeal in favor of the Virgin
The new message overlay
strength (a Savior has been born
gently to effect
and chan-
Cybele and Attis in good faith and
their salvation displayed the
certain details, but
better to incorporate
was no inconvenience
who had honored
Mary and Jesus
its
to root out this ancestral behavior
it
fashion. After if
was impossible
belief,
from popular nel
it
towns, whose religious fervor was
remained
hostile not only to all incorpo-
pagan images, but even to the use of purely Christian
images, which were reputed to be dangerous because they were too evocative of a past that
still
clung tenaciously to
life
in the
mind. In
the year 835, a council convened in Paris by Charlemagne’s son Louis the Pious reprimanded
Pope Adrian
for
recommending the worship
of images. Like Charlemagne, Louis the Pious had to deal with the
resurgence of paganism; both were responsible for edicts banning the worship of stones, springs, and trees, a clear indication of a
return in strength of pre-Christian practices. Charlemagne ordered the destruction of a large
mens
number
of sacred stones, menhirs, and dol-
scattered across his territory.
They had begun
to cause offense
Worship of the Virgin
to the official
worship of the Church, of which the emperor was the
chief propagator
and zealous defender. The Council of
prevail against the pontifical decisions,
accept in turn, for good or
We
143
and the French clergy had
to
the extension of worship to images.
ill,
can be quite certain that
Paris did not
were a large number
at that time there
of “finds” of statues buried in the ground or hidden in trees, which
people hastened to recognize as representations of the Virgin Mary. This completely natural confusion has been a constant occurrence even into the present day,
when
it is
possible to scientifically
date archaeological finds with precision. In his
work
Sainte Vierge en Afrique, Father Delattre provided tic
examples of
A
this confusion.
statue representing a
woman
not doubt for an instant that
two
characteris-
holding a child on her knees. it
la
Maltese native had brought him a
was
a Virgin
showed him
his archaeologist friends
Quite de
it
and Child
He
until
did
one of
was an Isis-Horus group
from the Alexandrian period. At the home of another native of Malta
neighborhood,
in a working-class
had noticed
a perpetually illuminated
this
lamp
same Father Delattre
in front of a statuette.
This he instantly recognized as a Carthaginian Tanit of the third century B.C.E. and thought
it
wise to alert the owner to
the gentleman responded, “It doesn’t matter,
church,
it is
I
its
had
But
identity. it
blessed at
completely Christian now”!
This speaks volumes about the permanence of images and worship,
and especially about the serenity with which
lations
make
should
we
the transition
from one
religion to another.
think of this opinion of Gregory of Tours
century), in a letter addressed to eral Christians
who
the official orthodoxy
not really the best
pagan survivals
in
popu-
And what
(in
the sixth
Queen Brunehaut, concerning
sev-
“raced to churches and yet continued, abomi-
nation, to give worship to
is
different
reduced to the rank of the demonic, which
is
way the
Pyrenees native by the
demons”? Everything not recognized by
to get rid of these alternative beliefs, as the
form of witchcraft show
name
of Vigilance,
who
decisively.
died in 410,
A
was
indignant at the sight of the faithful worshipping images in the Holy
The Virgin's Great Shadow
144
Land, where he had gone on pilgrimage.
lodged a complaint with
make him
Even
inside
Church there could be disagreement on the worship of the
saints
Saint Jerome,
the
who
He
and the Virgin Overly
tried vainly to
in particular.
realistic
in the Pharsalia
morphic representations
much more
adds so
however,
representation,
power of images. The sacred needs Lucan wrote
see reason.
lessens
sacred
the
surrounded by mystery, as
to be
concerning the absence of anthropo-
in the sacred clearings of the Druids: “It
to the terrors of not
knowing
the gods
whom
one should dread.” This idea was shared by numerous church fathers,
and
it
was only under popular pressure
that they resigned
themselves to representations of the Virgin and the saints and then
encouraged their worship. This
Roman
Catholicism and Greek Orthodox, claims to be within the
grasp of everyone (although tuals certain notions that if
the It
because Christianity, at least
is
it is
Church has always
was
it
reserves for theologians
difficult
intellec-
not to classify as esoteric, even
officially refused to
a matter, then, of using
and
admit
it).
images to spread ideas, because
the images were better able than theological analyses or homilies to
help the primarily uneducated masses understand the finer points of the Christian religion. In this sense, the cathedral the
Middle Ages, and
its
was
the
Book
of
simple language requires no translation.
Sometimes, however, images do require commentaries and interpretations; even
though they never
being no longer understood social
lose their original power, they risk
when
mentalities adapt to changing
and cultural contexts.
It is
within these complex and problematic circumstances that
the history and significance of the Virgin stood. Three essential dates
mark
Mary
cult should be under-
off the historical journey: 431, the
Council of Ephesus and the definition of the Theotokos; 1854, the
proclamation of the dogma of the Immaculate Conception; 1950, the proclamation of the certain that erations,
dogma
of the Assumption. But
it
is
quite
between these defining events there were many consid-
much
trial
and
error,
and many
hesitations.
Worship of the Virgin
The
church fathers, both Greek and Roman, never directly
first
confronted the problem of race.
The notion of
writings.
145
To
Mary and
human
her uniqueness in the
the Immaculate Conception never arises in their
the contrary, while recognizing the holiness of the
“woman” Mary,
they strove to reduce her by making her the ser-
vant of the Lord, a very convenient subordinate position that
Mary had merely obey God, we should take
avoids the fundamental ontological question.
obeyed God; and, as
Mary
as
all
creatures should
an example of obedience, submission, and humility
in
order to comply, under the best possible conditions, with the mys-
God has drawn for us and the universe. It is for we should honor Mary, mother of God, and accord
terious plan that this
reason that
her justified worship.
Two
ideas were emphasized.
Mary’s purity
mony fectly
The
was
first
(the issue of virginity will
come
that of the Virgin
later), in
obvious har-
with the gynophobic tendencies of early Christianity understandable attitude, for
—a per-
needed to overcome the
it
Mother
eroticism of certain Eastern forms of worship given to the
Goddess.
If
Mary
could be confused with Ishtar and her successive
substitutes in the popular mind, then
sary to amputate from this
Ishtar
It
nated within the
womb
emphasized by the base
was all
was unacceptable
characterized her.
Mary was
new
it
the sexual elements that
that
of a promiscuous
text, the
quite obviously neces-
God
could have incar-
woman, and
this
was
Gospel of Luke, which stressed that
betrothed to Joseph after she found herself pregnant;
Joseph’s doubts and anger in this regard are quite revealing.
The position
of the church fathers
was thus
perfectly clear: For
one to accept that “Mary had been covered by the shadow of
God”
—
in other
that she be all
more or
words, the Holy Ghost
—
it
was absolutely necessary
removed from the retinue of the goddesses of less erotic
and
all
more or
less
antiquity,
suspected of numerous
copulations (which was logical, given that they were primarily tility deities).
his prayers,
“You and Your mother,”
“You alone
said Saint
Ephraim
in
fer-
one of
are totally beautiful in every respect; for in
146
The Virgin's Great Shadow
You,
O
Lord, there
mother.” This
is
is
no
stain,
and there
no pollution
is
in
Your
only one prayer and a gratuitous assertion, but
it is
perfectly consistent with the principle that the incarnation of Jesus-
God
is
a unique event in the history of the world. Jesus-God, even
if
he was born in strange and exceptional conditions, could not share the birth of the other gods of pletely set apart
from the
pagan
antiquity, for he
had
to be
com-
earlier tradition.
Therefore, the image of the Virgin Mary, mother of God,
is
attached indelibly to the idea of6 purity, which leads to another
notion
—that of
And
chastity.
if
the Virgin
Mary
is
the
model
for
humanity, her chastity becomes exemplary and must be encouraged.
Hence
pronounced by
the sexual prohibitions
official Christianity,
hence the chastity demanded of priests insofar as they to laypeople,
who must
perpetuate the
creation of other elects for
Virgin
Mary and
new; the
—to
race
in contrast
and share
in the
—have chosen to serve God and the
thereby identify with their model. This
priests of
of chastity
God
human
—
Cybele castrated themselves
identify with the
god
nothing
— an extreme form and the
Attis,
is
priests of
Diana-Artemis observed celibacy and chastity because they were the theoretical husbands-sons of the goddess, tolerated any failing
The purity of
on
their part
the Virgin
fusion between her and
6.
Racine grasped
this
Mary was
necessary to avoid any con-
some Eastern goddess. The outcome, on
what
virginity,
without any
completely in his play Phedre with the character of Hippolyte. is
why
he so arrogantly
refuses the advances of his stepmother. But (and here Racine innovates
Euripides’ tragedy) Hippolyte her,
is
in love
with Aricie
thereby breaking the
vow
he became a priest of Diana-Artemis. This of
Neptune
—
the
that corresponded to" in terms of the defi-
This individual was sworn to the worship of Diana, and this
posed to marry
never have
.
one hand, was the assertion of her physical clear idea as to just
who would
in reality, negative forces
is
(a
Racinian creation) and
of chastity that
why
on
his is
model,
even
dis-
was imposed on him when
he perishes, victim of the vengeance
unleashed by Diana-Artemis to punish him for
his transgression. 7.
I
have examined at length the possible meanings of the word virgin
ditions, particularly the
Hebrew,
in
Jean Markale,
Women
in the different tra-
of the Celts (Rochester,
Vt.:
Worship of the Virgin
147
on the other hand, was an incitement
nition of the Theotokos; and,
to the chastity of the faithful, priests mainly, through the completely
understandable identification of the priest with the deity
and thus moral plane, there was the prohibition
social
cast
the guilt associated with sexual relations outside marriage
ered merely a stopgap measure
— and the
antifeminism that
is
on
sex,
—considsince
has led to an
sin. All this
idea that prevailed in the creation of the
worship of the Virgin was the
parallel
drawn between
the image of
Eve, an Eve
who
purified or preserved (the subtle distinction between these
two
Mary and
the image of Eve.
Mary became
mony
new
the
who would
terms had not yet been reached) and
woman
will save the world.” This
tion of continuity along with transcendence.
who
is
the
redeemed
permits, through her consensual and exemplary maternity,
had already been born of Cybele
was drowning not
in perdition (this
in sterility, the preface to
myth
in the
the solemn asser-
is
Mary
the redemption of the world by the Son. There Attis
restore the har-
“A woman doomed
of the world disturbed by original sin:
the world, a
Eve
the
sometimes tinged with fanaticism.
The second important
was
On
women, who
exile of
Eve have been held responsible for human
8 .
nothing
to regenerate a
word
is
new
here;
world that
typically Christian) but
death and destruction. The same was true
of Demeter and Kore, in which a “young girl” kid-
napped by Hades-Pluto was the mination.
is
symbol of annual
naturalistic
The pagan myth featured
ger-
notion of a cyclical
the
regeneration in rhythm with the cosmos. In the Christian myth, history
is
inscribed in a linear fashion. In this sense, Christianity can
claim to be outside time and space because
Inner Traditions, 1987), 127-33. Virgin
is
a strong, free,
mediator between
human 8.
race
— and
and
proposes an abstract
Most important, beyond any
available
God and humans is
it
woman, which
fits in
— always attentive to
incapable of ignoring anyone
who
physical qualities, the
with the idea of
all
Mary
as a
her children, to the entire
turns to her in need.
This was accentuated from the eleventh to twelfth century
in the theoretical
and
lit-
erary discussions on courtly love, in which the Lady, the secular image of the Virgin
Mary, was invested with
a certain portion of the
miraculous aura. For more on
Jean Markale, Courtly Love (Rochester, Vt.: Inner Traditions, 2000).
this, see
The Virgin’s Great Shadow
148
drama
version of the cosmic
on both a planetary and
that plays
a
constellational scale.
And
all
—that
of this has been bistoricized
or less artificially in a time that
memory is
Christian teaching or texts into
this
if
presumed
from which
a privileged event
impossible to say
is
real, allegedly to fix in
future history will flow.
a function of the translation of
if it is
more
It
mental system belongs to the original
Aramaic
Greek and then into Latin. One academic theory assumes
that the original Christian message,
the Jews,
all
to say, placed
is
who
was adapted
rejected
it,
which was incomprehensible
no longer needs
to
show proof because
to it
to the Greco-Latin philosophy, by the Socratic schools
in particular. This
would explain
mental myth, whereas
this
myth,
the historicization of the funda-
like all
myths, would be integrated
into another mentality entirely differently, as exemplified by the British-Irish version ;
Christianity
Roman
On
is,
it
was not
for nothing that this so-called Celtic
was attacked and annihilated by
ideology.
question
9
Of
course, this
is
only an academic theory. The
as noted, impossible to resolve.
this linear scale,
two fundamental events oppose each
Listen again to Saint Ephraim:
and Eve, were equal
“Two
in all respects.
innocents, both simple,
But
later,
cause of our death, the other the cause of our
De came faces of
Cbristi, said nearly the
one
the keepers of the
reality; neither
like the purest
same
thing.
the one
other.
Mary
became the
life.” Tertullian, in his
Eve and
Mary
could exist without the other.
are It
two
seems
dualism. Indeed, these are almost the words of Pascal
when
he declares that thanks to Christ, humankind’s greatness
in its
redemption. Pascal appears to be saying that without the
lies
redemption, humans would be insignificant beings with no metaphysical breadth, satisfied with just being and not becoming. But Christ,
God made human,
allows humanity to cross over the stage
of passivity to reach the stage of action: a formidable privilege, and
one that gives Mary
9.
See Jean Markale,
all
her meaning and her fullness.
Le Cbristianisme
celtique (Paris: Imago, 1984).
The redemp-
— Worship of the Virgin tion cannot be spoken of without referring to the one
possible
who made
it
—Mary.
This
what
is
the church fathers grasped
much importance tions,
149
to the
especially
Theotokos.
If
its
Eve
is
Marian
and
images,
this
to assess all the consequences that stem
meaning of
life
on earth
in
terms of
While Eve and Mary are two the negative aspect
and Mary
tional distinction
marked by
moment
is
is
one
sides of
human,
the
is
it is
easy
with regard to the
usefulness
its
Mary
beings,”
this
of the
definition
also a
from
manifesta-
and purpose.
reality,
Eve appears as
as the positive aspect. This opposi-
them
the attitude of each of
at the
of the fundamental choice (which implies from the outset
the existence of free will). Eve the fruit
the
human
God
they accorded so
all its visible
finally
the “mother of
“mother of God.” But given that
and
cult
when
was under
a prohibition:
Do
not eat
from the Tree of Knowledge. The demand was therefore
already negative. She responded to the temptations of the serpent
who is not Satan at all but rather the of human beings, with their defects, acts positively
personification of the free will curiosity,
and questions
—and
toward the serpent but negatively toward God and
God’s prohibition.
It
remains to be seen
if
this prohibition
was not
a snare (“Lead us not into temptation,” says explicitly the Lord’s
Prayer, the primordial prayer of
but in the
wrong
Was Eve free
sense,
and that
all
Christianity). Free will
disharmony
led to
worked,
in the world.
responsible for this disharmony? Yes, because she
was
—not because the divine plan foresaw that humanity had to sink
into
disharmony before being redeemed by another woman, the
Virgin of virgins,
first
creature and perpetual guardian of the “infer-
nal marshes.” In one sense, Eve
was necessary so
help save humanity, in the same
himself
(in
because he
myth, because the
made
it
way
reality
Mary
could
that Judas Iscariot justifies
was something
else entirely)
possible for the execution of Jesus to occur. In
the world of relativities, there are always
tory sides, because without these sible to perceive.
that
What
gives
two
Mary
two generally contradic-
sides, reality
her greatness
would be imposis
the “pettiness”
The Virgin's Great Shadow
150
who saw
of Eve,
them
things only in the short term rather than foreseeing
in their timeless extent.
So
it
was necessary
oppose Mary to Eve, hence the
to
classic rep-
resentation of the Virgin crushing underfoot the head of the serpent
or the dragon of the depths. Without the serpent she crushes,
Mary
would have no power, no meaning, and no grandeur. The same true of Saint Michael,
who would
have no equivalent 10
dragon
figure in a perpetual struggle against the
is
he did not
if
Antagonisms,
.
even mythological ones, are always revealing of a concrete reality that,
by virtue of
tion. This
is
its
materiality, escapes the nonexistence of perfec-
more than obvious;
it is
God, would be nothing without God’s Gabriel’s request
Ghost-
— she
answered the request
woman.
am
the archangel
the servant of the Lord.”
Thus she
was not
a negative
But
positively.
prohibition, as in Eden;
it
After
was all,
this request
a positive request addressed to the
Mary
from
this
longer possible for
notion of a
Mary
essary to strip her of
all
new
would not have occurred.
Eve, or an anti- Eve,
to be an ordinary
woman.
First
Then, to accentuate her fundamental
to blacken
the
purity,
a
it
was no
was
nec-
from the
model of
was necessary
it
Eve by giving her the aspects customarily bestowed on
mother goddesses, who were
cruel, bloodthirsty,
yet played a maternal role, as did Eve for the entire parallel
it
the dubious colorations inherited
pagan worship of the Mother Goddess and turn her into purity.
And
could have answered no.
the redemption, humankind’s grandeur, Starting
To
action.
—the voice of God and manifestation of the Holy
answered, “I
free will of a
Mary, mother of
a golden rule.
drawn between Eve and Mary was
erotic
human
race.
and
The
crucial both for coun-
tering the rhetoric of paganism’s maternal deities
ing the unique nature of the Virgin Mary.
and
and
Mary was
for highlight-
the one
mother
whom
of a single
God and
a single humanity, the
hoped was
fraternal
and the one from which the Cathars asserted
that the
10. See
J.
humanity
world would be saved only when the
Markale, Le Mont-Saint-Micbel
et
last soul
Venigme du dragon.
Jesus
found salva-
— ,
Worship of the Virgin tion. Instead of being
Mary
the Virgin
would hold But
an epiphenomenon
in the Christian doctrine,
occupies a primordial place: Without her, nothing
together.
was
this
all grist
for the mill of theological discussion. For
these sometimes arduous notions to be understood, they
presented in a simplified form placed in the context of the that
is
151
had
to be
dogma
to say, in the context of incomprehensible verities that every
member blindly.
of the faithful obligatorily believes and, in fact, believes
was
It
therefore essential to graft the wording of the
onto customs, practices, and
feelings, those relating to
dogma
maternity
being the most widespread and the most accessible to the greatest
number
of people. And, of course, ritual provided an opportunity to
give greater precision to certain phrases of the
Starting in the seventh century in the a feast
was
instituted to celebrate the
dogma.
Greek churches of the East,
Conception of Saint Anne, or
the passive conception of Mary. This feast soon
moved
into south-
ern Italy and into Great Britain as the Conceptio Beatae Virginis.
But
this
could not have happened were
whom the
ure about
it
not for the agency of a
fig-
Gospels say nothing, the mother of Mary, Saint
Anne. The Protoevangelion of James, which was rejected as apocryphal by the Nicean Council, recounts her story with an extraordi-
nary wealth of
The
detail.
reference to the mysterious Saint
nothing more or she
whom
all
less
beyond
important. She
peoples honored under different names, and
But
it
in strength
was
less
who was
The East and Far East Beginnings. In India she
is
Rome
because
it
was impossible
to get
perilous to transform her into the
mother of the Virgin Mary than
be found again in
is
from the image of Mary to avoid any confu-
had returned
her.
is
than the image of the original Mother Goddess
definitively separated
sion. She
Anne
into the Virgin
Mary
are very familiar with the
herself.
Goddess of the
Annapurna, Anna the Provider. She can under the name Anna Parenna. But
in
between she had traveled through the Middle East under different names, such as Danae and Tanit, and she gave her name to the
Don
The Virgin's Great Shadow
152
On
and Danube Rivers. far
western
side, she
the other end of the ancient world,
the Irish
is
Dana, mother of the Gaelic gods, the
Tuatha de Danann. She can also be recognized
Don, where she
is
in Gallic tradition as
mother of the principal gods, and
also the
Armorican Breton tradition
name Anaon,
in the
Anne
who is
into the fea-
of the Protoevangelion, but Celtified to a certain
was presented
extent, for she
in
the “Departed,”
meaning “the people of Ana.” This Ana soon dissolved tures of
on the
woman
appearance of a Breton
in the
married the Jew Joachim and, after the death of her husband,
supposed to have returned to die
The
Anne
figure of Saint
in her
own
land.
both simple and complex. The
is
woman who man of consider-
Protoevangelion describes her as a virtuous elderly
bemoans her
sterility.
Her husband, Joachim,
able wealth (which invalidates
is
a
the scenarios in
all
poor and Joseph a humble carpenter!
which Jesus was
—-these stories are just right for
bringing tears to the eyes of the simple folk). But Joachim earned the
scorn of the twelve Tribes of Israel for having no child.
He
requested the Lord to perform a miracle. For her part,
Anne
therefore
did the
same:
About
went down
the ninth hour she
there she
saw
a laurel,
and
sat
all-powerful Lord, saying:
grant
my
prayer, as
Thou
give her a son, Isaac.
beneath
O God
Woe
Because
and
I
I
is
me!
And
Who
its
womb
made
begot me?
of Sarah, and didst
a lamentation in herself,
And what womb produced me?
in the
presence of the sons of Israel,
have been reproached, and they have mocked
Woe
me and
gazing towards the heaven, she saw a
have become a curse
temple of the Lord.
And
shade, and prayed to the
of our fathers, bless
didst bless the
sparrow’s nest in the laurel, and saying:
to the garden to walk.
is
me! to what can
I
me
out of the
be compared?
I
am
not like the fowls of the heaven, because even the fowls of the
heaven are I
fruitful before
be compared?
I
am
Thee,
O
Lord.
Woe
is
me! to what can
not like the beasts of the earth, because even
the beasts of the earth are fruitful before Thee,
O
Lord.
Woe
is
Worship of the Virgin
me! to what can
be compared?
I
am
I
not
like these waters,
because even these waters are fruitful before Thee,
me! to what can
is
be compared?
I
because even the earth bringeth forth seth Thee,
Note
O
am
I
its
153
O
Lord.
Woe
not like this earth,
fruits in season,
and
bles-
Lord. 11
the essentially
pagan invocation
At
to the elements.
an angel of the Lord stands before her and
this point
tells her:
Anne, Anne, the Lord hath heard thy prayer, and thou shalt con-
and
ceive,
the world.
and thy seed
shall bring forth;
And Anne
responded: By the
if I
beget either male or female,
my
God; and
This was
it
shall be in
I
spoken of
in all
my
God,
as a gift to the
Lord
shall be life
will bring
His holy service
how Anne and Joachim became
of the Lord
it
all
the days of
parents of a
its life.
little girl
they
named Mary. Day by day old, her
stand,
grew stronger; and when she was
the child
mother
set
six
months
her on the ground to see whether she could
and she walked seven
steps then returned to the
bosom
of
her mother; and she snatched her up, saying: By the
life
my
bring thee into
God, thou
shalt not
the temple of the Lord.
and suffered nothing
walk on
And
she
common
this earth until
made
This was
how
she
her.
a sanctuary in her
bedroom
or unclean to pass through
she called for the daughters of the
and they entertained
I
of the Lord
Hebrews
it.
And
that were undefiled,
12
who would become
the Virgin
Mary was born
and then grew up undefiled.
11. Protoevangelion
Crepon
in
12. Ibid.
of James, chaps. 2-4,
Les Evangiles apocryphes
6, trans.
(Paris: Retz,
Emile Amann, quoted by Pierre
1983), 30-32.
The Virgin's Great Shadow
154
whose
This
is
the origin of the tradition concerning Saint Anne,
worship
is
so important in certain Celtic countries, particularly
Armorican peninsula of
the
devotion to Mary.
It is
Brittany,
where
almost exceeds the
it
somewhat amusing
also
on
to note that this
worship and the basic devotion to Saint Amne draw
their origins
not from canonical texts, but from so-called apocryphal texts that
were rejected
by the
as such
Roman
official
Catholic Church.
It is
an example of the lack of consistency that characterizes Christian doctrine
and
when we make an
refer to the
look beyond the usual sermon
effort to
fundamental
The Protoevangelion allowed
texts.
worship of Saint Anne to be implemented, consequently permitting the emphasis it
is
on the miraculous conception of the Virgin Mary, so
an important element for explaining the Marian
conception of
Mary
in
Anne’s
womb
Mother Goddess) was accepted,
it
cult. If the
(again, identical to the ancient
could allow more mystical
interpretations.
Accordingly, at the beginning of the twelfth century, the Saxon
monks
Eadbert, disciple of Saint Anselm of Canterbury, and Osbert
de Clare, both influenced by Celtic monachism, declared themselves partisans of a (passive) immaculate conception (in other words,
exempted from
original sin) of the Virgin
which was well ahead of
its
time and heavily influenced by Celtic
concepts inherited from the Druidism that cal milieus of
Mary. This position,
still
lingered in the cleri-
Great Britain, was fought by the keepers of
Roman
orthodoxy on the Continent, particularly by Saint Bernard de Clairvaux. Bernard,
who some
in
mockery of
maintain was the “last Druid in the West,” but the
reality
stubbornly
who was above
all
temporal and spiritual master of twelfth-century Europe,
addressed a harsh warning to the faithful of Lyon, a feast of the
who had
initiated
Conception of Mary. Tie fulminated against
“unjustified innovation” (probably because
ryphal text) and developed the theory that sanctified in her mother’s
womb,
it
this
was from an apoc-
Mary had
indeed been
but after her conception.
No
one
could say that Saint Bernard was a denigrator of Mary, however; he
Worship of the Virgin
155
contributed greatly to the development of the worship given to
Our
Lady! Nevertheless, he refused to
an exception to
common
make Mary
who was
into a person
humanity. Under the formidable influence
who
followed
him, such as Saint Bonaventure, Albert the Great, and
Thomas
of Bernard de Clairvaux, the majority of theologians
Aquinas, unambiguously pronounced against recognition of any kind of immaculate conception of Mary. It
was another theologian and
dared oppose the
heir to the Celtic tradition
official doctrine.
who
John Duns Scotus, who died
in
1308, taught that animation should precede sanctification not in time, but only in the natural order.
notion of pre-redemption.
mother
his
solely
It
He
introduced the entirely
was conceivable
that Christ
its
redeemed
through mercy. The Franciscan Order adopted
Scotus’s theory, thereby violently opposing the
and displayed
new
will to
matic element of the
make
Roman
Dominican Order,
the Immaculate Conception a dog-
Church.
But the discussion between the different tendencies of the Church
was
just getting
of Basel in ception,
under way. The thirty-sixth session of the Council
1439 stood openly
and Pope Sixtus
IV,
who
in favor of the
ruled from 1471 to 1484, encour-
aged the celebration of the feast
without
sin.”
Immaculate Con-
in
honor of Mary “conceived
Everything was called into question again, however,
by the Reformation. Luther and Zwingle recognized
Mary
as
an
exceptional individual, even going so far as to assert her virginity after the birth of Jesus. But Calvin categorically rejected
worshipping the Virgin
at
the
any idea of
same time that he denied her
Immaculate Conception. This prompted a reaction from the Council of Trent; without asserting anything, that
it
was
satisfied
with repeating
no creature could be considered exempt from
adding that “God had no intention to include
original sin,
in this decree the
benevolent and immaculate Virgin Mary.” This led to the proposal that
Mary
be given special status
among
all
creatures without
going any further than recognizing her absolute purity. In 1567,
— The Virgin's Great Shadow
156
Pope Pius
V
condemned
no one other than Christ was exempt from death and tribulations of
Mary were
the assertion that the Virgin fate as
All this
Mary
maintained that
original sin
and that the
the penalty for either her actual
sins or that original sin. Officially, the
same
who
the theologian Baius,
Church
left
the door
open
for
could not have been subject to the
most of humanity.
was brought
to an end
on December
8,
1854, by the
solemn proclamation of the dogma of the Immaculate Conception of
Mary by Pope
Pius IX, following consultations with the entire
episcopacy. In fact, this decision, which
of faith,
was only
made
the assertion a matter
the official recognition of
what had long been
believed by the great majority of Catholics, which they expressed
naively or clumsily in their worship of Mary. Without asking themselves felt
thorny metaphysical or theological questions, the faithful had
a confused need for the
Mother
of
God
to be an absolutely
uncommon
individual.
would have
constituted a return to paganism and the archaic defini-
Unable to make her into a goddess, which
tion of the primordial female deity, they arranged for her to be a
human human
“full of grace”
who had
earned the right to transcend her
condition by agreeing to be the “receptacle” of God. This
was an “apotheosis”
to a certain extent in the strict
— and pagan
sense of the word.
But the apotheosis could not be complete
Mary’s death was resolved. From the guise of a privileged being
contradiction
Adam Mary
was
created.
who was exempted from If
certain extent,
theologians.
if
the
original sin, a
the consequence of original sin for
to be relieved of this original sin beliefs
problem of
moment Mary took on
and Eve was the punishment of death,
Here again folk
until the
and
still
how was
the Virgin
be subject to death?
and cultural practices had evaded
to a
not at least outstripped, the problem posed by the
Throughout
the
Middle Ages, numerous legends had
swirled about the Virgin, which, without declaring that
Mary was
immortal, presented her as clad in a glorious body similar to that of the resurrected Jesus, a figure
who had
the ability to appear in flesh
,
Worship of the Virgin
157
and blood each time her intervention was necessary to render aid to one of the
anguish or want. Themes
faithful in
like that of the
Miracle of the Theophile, in which the Virgin retrieves a pact with the devil that the cleric
Dame, the
in
Lady
had signed, and that of the Juggler of Notre-
which Mary plays
poor poet a role similar to that of
for a
concerning popular con-
in courtly love, are valuable clues
victions about the
Mother of God. She was not only always
a virgin,
not only of immaculate conception, but also outside time endowed
with a “permanence” both on earth and
heaven.
in
This idea can be seen in the performance of her worship. is
Mary
invoked not only by reference to the suffering she endured as a
mother
sented a perpetual maternity. She
allows transcendence. She
is,
inherited
the one
is
who
is life.
from the dawn of time, and
This
is
a
fundamental idea
clear that
it is
who
regenerates,
Resurrection and the
like her son, the
She cannot die because she
Life.
because she repre-
at the foot of the cross, but especially
it is
superim-
posed over the concept of the Great Goddess of the Beginnings.
show Mary holding
Accordingly, certain Breton Calvary scenes
dead son on her knees quite in the
same posture
come down below
give
cross, but not in
as in the classic Pieta. Jesus’
the Virgin’s knees, as
Mary had him new life.
nify that
from the
after the descent
the artists
if
in
body does not wanted
to sig-
body within her own
reintegrated her son’s
There are sanctuaries
her
which Mary
is
worshipped
as
to
tri-
umphant, omitting any reference to death, not only her own but also that of
John,
all
her sons, for Christ on the cross had given her as a son
who
symbolized the
Chartres. This sanctuary
is
to the triumphant Mother.
of ancient times, there
is
human
race.
This
is
the case with
dedicated not to the mater dolorosa but
And
this
no tomb
is
why, contrary to the customs
in the cathedral
of Chartres not ,
even the tomb of a bishop or saint that would have shared his ter
lus-
with the cathedral.
But
all this
quite distinct
emanates, on the one hand, from folk religion (often
from the
official religion)
and, on the other, from
The Virgin's Great Shadow
158
marginal
—even
“esoteric”
were no innocents) that dogmatic
— speculations
(the
cathedral
builders
and sometimes strongly shook the
stirred
edifice of a religion solidly established in
sociocultural
its
framework. These kinds of cultural practices and speculations did not
fail
to
provoke theologians. The main goal was to find a consensus that could satisfy everyone while not deviating from the essential outline.
Mary
is
not a
deity, she
sort of materia
is
only the
first
One
creature of the
Deity, a
prima that the presence of the Holy Ghost trans-
formed. The transformation
metamorphosis
similar to the
is
in the
Magister or Great Work, of alchemy, the series of operations starting ;
from a primal shapeless matter that has been chosen and leged,
which eventually leads
privi-
is
to the creation of the philosopher’s
stone, the transcendence not only of matter but of the spirit as well.
The
with medieval alchemy are broader
parallels
philosophers
—which
is
how
described, in veiled terms, the in
Work
Virgin’s body,
dawn
The
consisted of rediscovering the light buried within
raw
philosopher’s stone
alchemical interpretation,
the
In
it.
since the
if
the
implicitly contained within the primal matter
is
of the work, then Jesus-God
—who
philosopher’s stone in
splendor and potency
all its
is,
on
a theological plane, the
held himself inside the body of Mary. This
is
—
is
intrinsically
sufficient justification
Immaculate Conception: Mary as Theotokos has existed
since the creation. She
which the Light
will
is
the container she
emanate, she is
ous object whose contents are divine force,
of gradal
is
is
is
unknown and
that the Grail,
“receptacle”),
and thereby acquires
is
the primal matter from
the Vessel in
some way
in
which amounts
necessarily something absolute
The problem
is
,
substantiation will occur, she
some
— often
of time.
matter and exalting
for the
labeled
“Holy Matter” of the
which the Light had been hidden
Great
were
alchemists
The
still.
to the
which the
tran-
the Grail, the mysteri-
(the
same
blood of Christ or thing), but
which
is
perfect.
which
is
a container (the
permeated by the quality of
a sacred nature
itself.
Even
if
there
its is
meaning contents
no longer
Worship of the Virgin
anything in the Grail, the object that the
problem of the Virgin
or divine nature as the Grail.
Mary, other
A
as a corporeal being,
human
beings. In a
is
similar terms
itself is divine. It is in
posed
Then we was not
she
if
is
given the same sacred
are clearly obliged to claim that
same
able to undergo the
was nonetheless God, underwent
own
despite her unique nature, have escaped the
Mary who
Mary
who
is
who
son,
common
his mother,
fate?
achieved the Redemption,
it
But
was
it
was Jesus
only participated in this redemption, she was not
pivot. In the matriarchal
Cybele
die?
death, and in painful and igno-
minious circumstances besides. So why, then, would
himself.
fate as
word, did Mary, mother of Jesus Christ,
hasty response could be as follows: yes, as her
not the Virgin
159
myth,
in the
same way,
it is
Attis
its
and not
both the model and the artisan of the regeneration.
But to be precise, Cybele no more dies than does
Ishtar,
Artemis, or
These images of the permanence and timelessness of the Divine
Isis.
Mother
lingered for so long in the collective unconscious that they
eventually became indelibly
embedded
there.
sary to find a theological solution that
It
would
was
therefore neces-
satisfy
popular faith
while avoiding a return in strength of the archaic pagan representation.
It
was
a delicate operation that
was not performed without
controversy and was only fully achieved in 1950 other words
The
—
in the
proclamation of the
vides the slightest bit of information
Luke,
Gospel writers did not
of the Assumption.
on the “end” of Mary. More-
who expounded at length on the Virgin, the have much to say about her. She appears only
twice in the course of the active
Cana, then
dogma
belatedly, in
not a single canonical text pro-
difficulty lies in the fact that
over, except for
— quite
at the Crucifixion.
life
of Jesus,
first at
the
John added the famous
wedding
in
detail con-
cerning the “universal Mother” in an episode that leaves the impression that the apostle prayed with his teacher’s mother. This conjecture. Acts
tells
us hardly anything more.
tradition has thrived in the
the “death” of
Mary
in
Church
since
its
And
earliest
is
pure
yet a tenacious
days concerning
Ephesus, where she found herself in the com-
pany of Saint John and where, of course, the location of the house
The Virgin's Great Shadow
160
where she
lived has
been found. The
city of
antiquity, the veritable capital of the
Artemis.
It
Ephesus was, throughout
Mother Goddess,
therefore logical for tradition to place Mary’s house
was
here, as well as for
Ephesus to serve as the location for the council
Mary mother
that proclaimed
Mary was
possibility that
of God. This does not invalidate the
actually in Ephesus, but
on
universal scope the worship of the Virgin took
The
particularly
tradition does have
some noncanonical
does explain the
it
after Ephesus.
scriptural support.
It
involves an apocryphal text (one officially rejected by the Church)
known
as Transitus Mariae.
It is
the sole text to present a story of the
One Greek and two
death and Assumption of the Virgin Mary. recastings of this text
were known, the oldest most
likely being the
Of
course, the late
Greek, which went back to the fourth century.
means only
date of this text
made the
that
had been passed down
that
Latin
it
set
orally.
down
in writing
an older story
The same observation could be
of the so-called canonical Gospels, or for most of the books of
Hebrew
from any
any mythological story whatsoever
scriptures, or for
traditions whatsoever
13
.
Transitus Mariae
was not
There
is
no reason to think that the
the reflection of an authentic reality. In any
case, these three early versions gave rise to
particular to a very interesting
Book on
Mother of God, which was
Virgin,
numerous reworkings,
the Passing of the Very
attributed
—
falsely
—to
in
Holy
a certain
Melito, bishop of Sardes in Lydia, at the end of the second century.
The Book on in
the Passing
which Jesus entrusts
that hour the holy
13.
There
is
emphasizes the evangelical episode
mother to the apostle John: “And from
mother of God remained
no question that the
of earlier oral tales. Ireland.
his
first
Iliad
The same holds
and the Odyssey are revisions or transcriptions
true for
all
the
These were oral traditions transcribed by
seventh century. This in no fications,
some very
prompted by the
way
specially entrusted to
pagan mythological epics of ancient
Irish Christian
reduces their value; at most
legitimate misunderstandings,
it
monks
starting in the
might mean some modi-
and sometimes intentional changes
desire to bring archaic Druidic thought in line with Christian thought.
Should the Finnish Kalevala, a nineteenth-century transcription of oral stories going
back to the most archaic periods of Finnish
What
qualifies as
civilization, be
regarded as apocryphal?
apocryphal and what does not remains a very delicate matter.
Worship of the Virgin
the care of John, as long as she dwelled in this
apostles
had drawn
lots to
life.
161
And when
the
determine the region where they would
preach, she settled in the house of her parents near
There are no other references to
home Mary’s
this
Mount
family
Olive.”
owned
in
Jerusalem. Other traditions mention Ephesus, where John seems to
have gone to spread the Christian teachings.
Then
Book on
the
the Passing,
mute
as to
Mary’s
activities,
sud-
denly leaps to “the twenty-second year after Jesus Christ, having
vanquished death, ascended up to heaven.”
Mary and announces
that her death
cally that she will be “carried
up
requests a favor of the angel: that
back together around
her.
Mary preaching
in
all
and
specifi-
her son’s disciples be brought
“And
“All the apostles will
Christ.” lo
Ephesus on the Lord’s day,
a great earthquake,
more
heaven with her body.” Mary
to
The angel responds:
then prepares herself.
angel appears to
close at hand,
is
power of Jesus
be brought here by the
An
a cloud raised
while the blessed John was at the third hour, there
him up out of
was
the sight of
all
and brought him before the door of the house where was the Virgin Mary.” The Virgin
rejoices at the
him what
had announced and displays her concern about
the angel
coming of John. She explains
to
the attitude of the Jews. “I have overheard the Jews holding counsel
who
and
said: Let us
impostor dies and
we
await the day on which the mother of will
this
burn her body.” She then asks John to
keep watch over her funeral services and to hold before her coffin the
palm given her by
the angel.
“Suddenly, by the order of God,
by
a
all
the spotless were carried off
cloud from those places where they preached the word of
and they were placed before the house where Mary begins.
“On
the third day, sleep overcame
none could remain awake, save the
who were
the
all
lived.”
my
vigil
those in the house, and
apostles,
and the three
virgins
companions of the Eioly Virgin.” Jesus appears
midst of a crowd of angels and speaks to his mother:
by
The
God
“When
in the I,
sent
Father for the salvation of the world, was hanging on the
cross, the prince of darkness
approached me; but when he was
The Virgin’s Great Shadow
162
unable to find any trace of his heart in me, he went away beaten and
trampled underfoot. Such
dance with the
saw him
I
common law
as
you
human
of the
him
will see
race, to
which you have
complied by dying, but he cannot harm you because there in
you that
Then
is
him, and
in
the Virgin
ples to bear the
body of
and to
the East”
down and
lies
lay
it
his
in a
new tomb. A
any
filth.
.
.
.
The
the flower of the
was
It
face of the blessed lily,
and
a great
his disci-
right of the city
toward
description then follows of
Mary’s body, which “shone so brightly that it.
commands
dies. Jesus
mother “to the
bounty that one could touch
naught
is
with you to protect you.”
will be
I
in accor-
was only by God’s
it
and absent of
perfectly pure
Mary, Mother of God, was
like
odor of marvelous sweetness arose
from her body, which had no comparable sweetness anywhere.”
The Jewish
funeral procession
is
then organized. Along the route, a
priest, full of fury, tries to
He
wither into husks.
overturn the coffin. His arms
beseeches the apostle Peter to heal him. Peter
addresses the Lord with a heartfelt prayer. begins
to
Lord.
the
praise
The
Jehoshaphat and place the coffin
anew and The
asks the apostles
apostles answer: “It
just as
apostles
in a
new
would appear
to
Jesus
commands
raise the stone.
is
cured and
the
Valley
to
do
for his mother.
your servants right that in glory,
you
will raise
of joy into heaven.”
the archangel Gabriel to carry the soul of
And
of
sepulcher. Jesus appears
you have vanquished death and reign full
priest
reach
what they want him
up the body of Mary and take her
and
The
Jesus says, “Arise,
my
beloved
who
Mary have
not suffered corruption from contact with man, you will not suffer the destruction of your
body
gives thanks to her son. his apostles,
and
And
in the
in the
tomb.” The Virgin stands up and
he speaks words of encouragement to
middle of a cloud he ascends “back to
heaven, and the angels accompanied him bearing the blessed Mary,
Mother of God,
14. Livre
to the paradise of
du passage de
la tres
God .”
14
Sainte Vierge, chapters 3-18, trans. Brunet, vol. 23 of
Ency dope die theologique of Migne (Amort:
Collet and Vermot, 1856).
Worship of the Virgin
This
The
is
the lone narrative concerning the
details are specific.
just like Jesus himself.
her body
The Virgin died
But
this
like
163
Assumption of Mary.
any other human being,
death was temporary, and
it
was with
—which escaped decomposition—that Mary was “carried words
into heaven,” in other
and
into the timeless
aspatial
world
promised by the scriptures, the place where mind and body harmo-
and
nize once
a
and where contradictions cease to be perceived
all
Mary’s Assumption, on a philosophical plane,
as such. tion,
for
“fulfillment.”
such an event really occurred,
If
become exemplary and would mean
that every
human
a perfec-
is
it
would
being, under
certain circumstances, could attain total transcendence. Certainly
the Christian doctrine teaches that Jesus, a
same transcendence, but Jesus
the
Mary
is
woman, even
merely a
if
is
both
man-god, accomplished
God and man, whereas
she has a unique nature.
importance of the image of the Virgin Mary: She regenerator, the one take.
It is
a
the
way
a maternal image, of course,
vast majority of
new
who shows
human
is
some way
the
that all her children should
and one that speaks to the image
beings. But this maternal
birth, the definitive birth in a
in
Hence the
attests to a
world that excludes the
transitory,
world that does not know the ephemeral. These philosophical
most of the
notions, although they are beyond the comprehension of faithful,
do explain the importance of the Marian
Over the course of the
first
was nothing unique about
the
cult.
three centuries of Christianity, there
Marian
nected to the worship of Jesus himself.
cult; It
it
was intimately con-
was only
starting with the
fourth century, probably under the influence of the so-called apoc-
ryphal tradition, that the ship
inklings of independent
Marian wor-
began taking shape. As an example, the hymns of Saint
Ephraim
(d.
373
C.E.)
to his mother. Saint
on the
Christian to
named
come
birth of Jesus are really songs of praise
Gregory of Naziane,
firmed the worship given
Mary
first
Justine
Mary
in this
who, facing
who
died in 390, con-
time by his story of a young a rapist, begs
“the Virgin
help the threatened virgin.” Epiphany testified to the
existence of the Collyridian sect,
whose members tended
to
worship
164
The Virgin's Great Shadow
Mary
idolatrously,
position of the
and took the opportunity to
Roman
assert the official
Church: “Mary should be honored. But the
and the Floly Ghost should be adored, whereas no
Father, the Son,
one should adore Mary.”
It
was
this position
defended by Cyril of
Alexandria during the Council of Ephesus that became the definition of the Theotokos.
other
women and
Following
Mary
is
only a
woman, but
promised the highest
this
recognition
destiny.
of the
Numerous
mission
specific
Theotokos, the Marian cult developed rapidly West.
blessed above all
sanctuaries, chapels, churches,
in
both East and
and cathedrals were
Next
erected in her honor, and calendar feasts were instituted. Purification
honor of
and the Annunciation, which were
Christ,
new
of the
to the
originally feasts in
celebrations appeared, that of the Nativity
(with the idea of the Immaculate Conception in the background)
and of the Transfer of Mary (which would become the Feast of the Assumption). Finally,
officially,
became the celebration most
in line
Pope Pius XII on November But
it
was
the
1,
Assumption with the
dogma proclaimed by
1950.
especially during the twelfth, thirteenth,
teenth centuries that the worship of the Virgin reached least
August 15
feast of
and fourheight, at
its
with respect to the Christian West, as seen by the number of
feast days; the construction of buildings consecrated to
abundance of sermons,
tales,
and legends; and even,
context, the importance of plays titled Miracles of
The Reformation of
Mary; the
in a theatrical
Our Lady.
the sixteenth century modified this
somewhat. Certainly Futher did not abandon the Marian
swarm
cult, quite
the contrary. While criticizing certain idolatrous aspects of the worship of the Virgin (and not entirely in the
wrong during
this
time at
the end of the Middle Ages), Futher confirmed the traditional belief in the divine maternity, the perpetual virginity of
Mary, the
specific
nature of her conception, and her power to intercede. Zwingle, too, retained the
Marian
faith,
beseech the Mother of God,
not a
but refused to accept that any could
who was
a simple creature of
deity. Calvin, in contrast, refused
God and
her across the board and
— Worship of the Virgin
condemned any form of worship no way prevented the Marian sixteenth
Mary
of
cult as
and seventeenth centuries
165
as pure idolatry. This in
such from developing over the
in rural areas, especially
on the
occasion of the discovery of an ancient lost or buried statue, or even
miraculous phenomena such as the appearance of a white Lady to a
young peasant
girl,
generally poor and uneducated.
Examples of this
nature are countless both in France and throughout the rest of
Europe.
imbued with the
In the eighteenth century, the Enlightenment,
Marian worship
as
and obscurantist. But the revolutionary ceremonies
in
of rationalism and skepticism, dismissed
spirit
superstitious
honor of the Goddess Reason were a rebirth of the ancient
Mother Goddess
—
and heavily
albeit intellectualized
cults of the
filtered
—and
subconsciously extended the processions and numerous feasts of
Our
Lady. Statues of the Virgin were undoubtedly destroyed, but at the
same time new ones were inherited
sculpted, decked out with bizarre
from a distorted antiquity and
same feminine
entity,
even
if
she
in reality representing the
was reduced
to the rank of allegory.
During the course of the nineteenth century, the era of materialism,” the Marian cult took on
names
new
life,
“scientific
mainly as a conse-
quence of the impressive abundance of “apparitions” of the Virgin
Mary
in
remote or anonymous backwaters
—not,
as
one might
expect, in places consecrated to the Virgin since early antiquity that were then transformed into meccas of devotion
The
locations include the
Chapelle de
la
and pilgrimage.
Medaille miraculeuse
(Chapel of the Miraculous Medallion) on the rue du Bac in Paris, not far from where Chateaubriand breathed his the
Maine region on
Pontmain,
last;
in
the Brittany frontier; La Salette, in the Alps;
and, of course, the most famous of
all
the
Mary
sanctuaries,
Lourdes.
Whatever the profound is
reality
may
be of these “apparitions,”
it
impossible to deny that something happened at these stated loca-
tions,
and under certain circumstances. The events
in
question have
been gone over with a fine-tooth comb, are supported by numerous
The Virgin's Great Shadow
166
and have had vast consequences on the behavior of
testimonies, Christians.
They can be
interpreted according to each individual’s
“phenomena”
conscience and knowledge, but the fact remains that
occurred, and they inspired a formidable renewal of worship of the
They should therefore be considered natural extensions of
Virgin.
Mother of God
ancestral worship of the
and famous
Rocamadour, Le Puy, and Chartres. Didn’t Luke the
as
Mary
Evangelist record that 2:27), “Henceforth,
What were rebirth?
On
all
said after the Annunciation
generations will call
me
the reasons for this worship,
the surface
it
seems that
Our Lady was more important to,
in sanctuaries as ancient
God
worship of
blessed”?
and
especially for
in Catholicism,
God
for the faithful to
God, because God by nature
is
its
devotion to
than, or at least of equal importance
himself. All the religions of the
offered hypostases of
(Luke
world have
worship
beyond understanding,
in place of
ineffable,
and
unknowable. Humans can communicate with the Christian God only through the humanized image of Jesus Christ. Jesus, however,
was not only and almost
a
but also God, and he often appeared too remote
inaccessible. Piety, to be fully expressed, requires
intermediary prayers,
man
who
who
an
can understand humans and transmit their
can relay and decipher the message from on high.
Christian saints served as such intermediaries.
who was the most saintly, the most “divine,” if not the Virgin Mary, who had the honor of carrying God within her body? Without making Mary into a divine hypostasis, without turning But
even further to
archaic
reminiscences
Beginnings, from the Christian viewpoint
Hence ill
the success of the
fortunes,
Marian
cult,
was always reborn from
the Magnificat, Luther notes:
its
of the
Mary
Goddess of the
plays a starring role.
which, against ashes. In his
ill
winds and
commentary on
“The blessed Virgin Mary speaks
after
having had a personal experience in which the Holy Ghost illuminated and instructed her.” Then, surrendering to a kind of mysticophilosophical delirium, Luther imagines the message
“She learns that
God
is
a
Lord whose
sole
concern
is
Mary
received:
raising
what
is
Worship of the Virgin low, lowering
what
remaking what
is
The message essential. It
is
what
is
made and
broken.” that
Mary
learned and revealed to humanity it
we can
eternal
Becoming. This
realize that
movement
—
in
a
God
is
concerns the
through the permanent divine creation. By the
of this message,
pagan
high, in short breaking
the purest ontological metaphysics;
entire universe
instead
is
167
light
not immobility but
is
word, that
God
is
perpetual
moreover, what the Druids asserted in so-called
is,
Celtic times
when, according to
tradition, they
worshipped
on the mound that today supports the admirable cathedral of Our
Lady of Chartres,
a mysterious statue of a
paritura, a “Virgin about to give birth,”
foreshadowing of
Mary
perpetual creation of blessed
less
mysterious virgo
which perhaps was not
a
but purely and simply the depiction of the
God
among women.
no
in the uterus of the
Woman who
is
most
The Black Madonna ^In
Chartres there
one thing
no lack of images of the
is
common: They
in
are
majestic
all
and
Virgin,
Madonnas,
all
have
giving the
strong impression that the church wished only the triumphant
God and
aspect of Mary, mother of
(by virtue of her acceptance of the tuary.
But
it
Holy Ghost),
And
to
visible in this sanc-
seems that the different images of the Virgin each have
a particular role to play in devotion,
meaning
keeper of universal knowledge
which the
and consequently
a particular
and emblems contribute.
different postures
while local tradition maintains that the oldest image
Lady of Under Ground Revolution), the Pillar,
it
clearly emphasizes that the
and only
The current
(at least the statue
she,
is
statue of
a Black
just
Under Ground, dates back only
Our
destroyed during the
one named Our Lady of
Madonna.
Our Lady
bay of the north ambulatory,
is
of the
Pillar,
standing in the
first
above the figure of Our Lady of
to the early sixteenth century.
The
Chartres historian Sebastien Rouillard wrote in his Farthenie, published in 1609:
Above
the rood loft
on the southern
side
is
above a round column of very hard stone,
Our
a tall throne is
on which,
placed the image of
Lady. The late master Vastin de Fugerets, canon of said church
during his
life
some hundred years or so ago, had 168
said
image
,
The Black Madonna erected in order that
it
would be
169
worship-
freely displayed to the
pers without disturbing the divine service of the choir. But the
throngs were so constant and their devotion so great, that the
column became
stone
Catholics.
An
in a reliquary
The high
altar
is
on
details
Canon
quite large; there are
no
balusters, only
Above
some cop-
the altar there
only one facing to the reredos, and above that a gilded silver
image of the Holy Virgin. There
is
which
about a foot and a half
is
foot
its
and
a
golden crucifix that
is
a
copper rod behind, on top of in size.
At
another copper rod that sticks out about a foot or a foot
is
a half in front of the altar,
and the holy ciborium hangs from
end. (Voyages liturgiques de France, 226)
its
This
is
obviously not the same statue as
Our Lady
Furthermore, Canon Estienne informs us that vermeil”
month
of
is
three feet high
May
Vendome,
and that
1220 by Monsieur
a priest
and honest
of the benevolent
can glean a
it
of the
scholar,
was donated “during
who had
ordered an image
silver angels that are
what
through other documents and drawings.
this statue
Mary
the
archdeacon
Notre-Dame de Chartres
fairly specific idea of
Pillar.
this Virgin “in gilded
Pierre de Bordeaux,
Mary with two
the high altar” (Cartulaire de
We
Estienne in 1682
this point:
per columns and angels above the sanctuary.
made
Holy Tunic,
account written around 1700 by a Rouen native, Lebrun
and provides some useful
of
these devout
and displayed on the high
des Marettes, corroborates a testimony of
is
all
this statue illustrated the Virgin’s
which was piously kept altar.
from being kissed by
Folio 134, V)
(I,
probable that
It is
pitted
is
III,
above 162).
looked
like
depicted sitting
with her head erect and looking straight ahead, holding the Infant Jesus on her the
left
knee and
lifting
an object
in her right
documents show, the devotion inspired by
the peace of the choir,
hand. But as
this statue disturbed
and the clergy of the sixteenth century strove
The Virgin’s Great Shadow
170
to direct that devotion onto another object. This
Our Lady
of the
which was placed
Pillar,
The documents
screen.
like the earlier one,
tell
its
with the erection of a
definitely dealing
the origin of
rood
right in front of the
us that this image
which explains
was
was intended
to look
we
archaic features. So
new
are
statue at the beginning
of the sixteenth century and not simply the relocation of the older one. But
why
is
this depiction of the Virgin black?
emphasized the
In fact the description of the older statue
“gilded vermeil.” basic features still
not
And
as this statue
— of the
known
an imitation
older one, this raises
Our Lady
if
is
of the Pillar
is
—
at least in its
some questions.
It is
carved from pear or
unknown whether the “gilded vermeil” was painted on later. Some ecclesiastics currently deny that this statue is a Black Madonna, claiming her dark color is merely accidental
walnut.
also
It is
still
due to the color of the wood. That
is
easy enough to say. In any
event, Chartres tradition has clearly spoken for centuries about a
Black Madonna, and this
is
obviously not the sole example of a
on which the Virgin and Child are thus depicted,
statue
carved from dark
wood
either
or covered by a coating that emphasizes
the black color.
There
is
of the Pillar
simply no reason to doubt that the statue of is
what
Madonna, even less
is
if it is
commonly known a sixteenth-century
faithful replica of
known
is
Our Lady
as a Black Virgin or Black
work,
as
it is
the
an ancient statue about which
all
more or that
is
outside appearance. Just before the Revolution, the
its
Chartres doctor Marie Saint-Ursin had seen this sixteenth-century statue
and kept
a description of
it
had been destroyed. According black
wooden
dle of
which
No
1.
figure, clad in rags
a child’s
one knows, but
under the
and tawdry 1
jewels,
What was
any case, no doubt
Societe Archeologique d’Eure-et-Loir, ms. 43 (7),
Library of Chartres.
impression that
to him, this Virgin
head emerged .”
in
false
is
it
was “a small from the mid-
this statue
he saw?
possible concerning the
fol.
213, 5 and 214, Municipal
The Black Madonna
Madonna
existence of a Black
which exact statue represented
171
Chartres cathedral, no matter
in the her.
There are many Black Madonnas throughout Western Europe. These objects of worship and even pilgrimage have been a source of
much
were made of
their origins. If a
list
this category, the
number would be
in
and
fascination, both for their black color
humble
for the mystery of
the statues
all
others are of fairly recent provenance.
statuettes in
Some can
staggering.
rural chapels, others in cathedrals.
and
Some
be found
are ancient
and
Some have been destroyed
but piously replaced by copies or imitations.
Some
are regarded as
miraculous, others are simply worshipped out of tradition.
Some
have been discovered through circumstances bordering on the miraculous or the most wondrous happenstance; others have always
been there, or at each
site
least are
claimed to have always been there.
where a Black Madonna can be found, ancient legends
rounding the presence of a sacred fountain, a sacred ing spring the
awaken
shadows of the
the
Mother Goddess.
it is
a
is
sur-
worship of
deep and subtle con-
and the
lived in folk settings
ollections of religions preceding Christianity. is
at
tree, or a heal-
past, including the
seems that there
It
nection between Christianity as
image
And
And
the
rec-
dominant
always the tranquil, reassuring, or triumphant image of the
Divine Mother. In the
Ain region,
in
Bourg-en-Bresse, there
is
a statue of
Our
Lady of Bourg around thirty-one inches high that was discovered a tree. Analysis of the statue
In the Allier region, in size
Moulms,
it
there
dating from the eleventh century.
century and in the
same
and even a
is
now housed
third,
Marseille, also statue.
The one
was
is It
a thirteenth-century
a Black
But there
in the cathedral.
Our Lady
known in
Madonna
was mounted
kept in the museum, called
city,
The Bouches-du-Rhone has
is
showed
the
as the
work.
of the same
in the fifteenth is
Our Lady
of Coulandon, at the
in
another one of Vouroux,
Grand Seminary.
famous Our Lady of the Guard of Brown. She
Aix-en-Provence
known
is
as
a thirteenth-century
Our Lady
equally famous. In Murat, in the Cantal region,
of the Seds
Our Lady
of the
The Virgin's Great Shadow
172
Olive Trees
Nord,
is
a fourteenth-century
was burned during
replaced an older statue that
Two
Black
the Dordogne.
One
Chartres.
is
Madonna
the Revolution except for
and
its
head,
sometimes connected with the one
found
statues can be
at Saint-Front
is
at Saint-Estienne
is
statue. In the Cotes-du-
Guingamp, the seventeenth-century Our Lady of Good
in
Aid, which
other
wooden
carries
and
is
in
in Perigueux, in
called the Black, the
an inscription reading Virgo
Paritura.
which
In Toulouse,
is
Our Lady
century bust of
in
Haut-Garonne, there
Tourzy, a stone statue that
now
a statuette,
was most
likely sculpted
be seen in Sargues. This heavily painted the thirteenth century. In the Loiret
selves.
This
more ancient one discovered bull that
Known
we
wooden
find the
wooden
Madonna can
itself,
as Saint
stone statue a
statue dates
from
famous Our Lady of
Our Lady
Mary
little
statue that replaced a
in the thirteenth century
always stopped at the place where
In Orleans
before the
which the kings of France would prostrate them-
a sixteenth-century
is
of
held in a private collection, that seems to
have been a copy of Our Lady of Puy. Another Black
Clery, in front of
as
Upper Loire region (Craponne-sur-Arzon)
eleventh century. In the
was
who is also known Pacaudiere), we find Our Lady
of the Gilt-Head,
the Black One. In the Loire (La
there
a nineteenth-
is
it
because of a
had been buried.
of the Miracles can
still
be seen.
the Egyptian because of her color, she
is
a
over three feet in height that dates from the six-
teenth century. In Villeneuve-sur-Lot (in the Lot-et-Garonne region),
Our Lady
of Jubilation
housed
is
constructed so that half of
town of Josselin, original of
the
it sits
in a strange chapel that has
been
over the Lot River. In the Morbihan
famous Our Lady of the Roncier, the destroyed
which has been replaced by
fervent worship. This
is
a typical
a copy,
example of
is still
the object of
a statue
found
in a
bush, removed to a church or chapel, and then found back in the
same bush the next
day. In Sainte-Anne
statue, allegedly of Saint
d’Auray
Anne and discovered by
during the seventeenth century, was a Black
it
seems that the
the pious Nicolazic
Madonna
of the purest
The Black Madonna
173
and repainted by the Capuchins of
tradition, before being recarved
Auray. The statue was later destroyed during the French Revolution. In the northern city of Dunkirk, a fifteenth-century
Dunes was discovered
the
in the
as
Our Lady
Our Lady
wood
World War
II,
to
in
1823)
this statue
Our Lady
Our Lady
carried in procession through almost
to the establishment of a cult devoted
of Boulogne. In the
Puy-de-Dome
rich in statues of this type, the very beautiful
a
wooden
statue dating
Ferrand
in the is
a
immediate
wooden
region,
which
Our Lady
is
quite
of Orcival
from the twelfth century. Her worship
connected to the presence of water, and there
dolmen
of the Angels
an object of major worship. After
is
was
whole of France, leading
the
of the Roads, also
of the Wells. In Boulogne-sur-Mer in the Pas-
de-Calais region, the famous statue of
(remade in
of
sands of the shore. The oratory in
Valenciennes (dating from 765) houses
known
Our Lady
vicinity.
Our Lady
is is
both a cave and a
is
of the Port in Clermont-
eighteenth-century replacement of an older
statue, discovered in a well according to tradition.
In the Pyrenees-Orientales, also
known
Cuxa Abbey
as
we
Our Lady
find
Maureneta, which was once
before being
moved
of the Pesebre,
in the Saint-Michel of
to Corneilla.
And
in the curious
church of Villefrance-de-Confluent, a seventeenth-century statue of
Our Lady
of Life can be found.
houses the seventeenth-century
The Fourviere
wooden
statue
Fourviere. In Pringy (in Seine-et-Marne) a statue a tree next to a fountain. In the Vaucluse ilar
statue carved
Basilica of
of
Lyon
Our Lady
was discovered
town of Barroux
is
of in
a sim-
from cedar that bears the rather obvious name the
Brown One. The two most famous Black Madonnas outside of Chartres are incontestably those of
Rocamadour and
the one in
Puy-en-Velay.
In both these places devotion to the Virgin has been indicated since
time immemorial. These are Marian sanctuaries of primary importance whose roots go back, beyond
all
shadow
of a doubt, long
before the introduction of Christianity into Gaul.
Rocamadour,
in the
Quercy region
(Lot), a
well-known
tourist
The Virgin's Great Shadow
174
It
was
the ancient Vallis Tenebros,
the “dark valley,” a sheer drop of
650
feet that
destination,
quite exceptional.
is
suddenly opens
in
the limestone plateau, with a fortified castle at the edge of the abyss, a
bouquet of churches and chapels on the
ther below, a medieval village. River,
which may mean
At the bottom of the
tree.
valley, the
forest.
Alzon
and turns
“river of the Aulnes,” twists
through what was once a dense
and
side of the rock, and, far-
Here we have water, rock,
These are the customary companions of the Marian cult
(this is true also
one of the most famous Plantagenet
went
II
The pilgrimage
of Lourdes).
in the
to
Rocamadour was
Middle Ages. This
to publicly atone,
on
his
is
where Henry
knees before his entire
army, for the murder of Canterbury archbishop
Thomas
a Becket.
name Rocamadour were
built
throughout Europe as extensions of that devotion originating
in the
Numerous Dark
Armorican
Valley. In
Our Lady
for
bearing
chapels
of
the
Brittany, for example, there
Rocamadour
that
was
on
built
is
a chapel
a kind of natural
dike that extends into the sea at Camaret-sur-Mer.
The Black Madonna of Rocamadour
is
a Majestic Virgin
from the
end of the twelfth century that has been crudely carved and blackened, then partially covered with silver plate. in
a
on
a hollowed-out block
maintains that the publican Zaccheus
Tradition
reliquary.
It sits
brought a statuette carved by the Evangelist Saint Luke to the limestone plateau of Quercy. This the sanctuary
is
something
body was found Mary. For
fairly
is
obviously pure fiction; the origin of
else entirely. In
1166
a perfectly preserved
at the entrance of a chapel dedicated to the Virgin
obscure reasons, the people there regarded this body
as the remains of a mysterious Saint
named. The “saint” was buried
Amadour,
whom this
place
in front of the altar to the Virgin
another legend spread, according to which of Saint Veronica, the one
for
who wiped
Amadour was
Christ’s face
climbing Golgotha. But during the fifteenth century,
the
when
is
and
husband he was
Amadour was
incorporated into the publican Zaccheus, which was a convenient
way
to get the
in the official
two
traditions to coincide.
Roman
Amadour
does not appear
calendar, nor does Veronica or Zaccheus.
The Black Madonna
175
Recent research has found evidence that the hermitage of
Rocamadour
A
bell
existed long before the discovery of the “saint’s” body.
can be seen in Rocamadour that dates before the eighth cen-
tury and
is
said to be miraculous.
It
originally dedicated uniquely to the Virgin
fane legend
tells
mother-goddess
was
so happens that the chapel
Mary. And a local pro-
how human sacrifices were once made to a black known as Sulevia or Soulivia. This black mother-
goddess’s sanctuary
was located
in a cave, the
same cavern where
Zaccheus hid the statuette allegedly carved by Saint Luke. This
is
the
realm of Gallo-Roman religion. The Sulevias were goddesses of uncultivated land, which accords perfectly with the nature of the
Rocamadour The Alzon,
terrain.
village of Alysses, a little farther
is
tinues to
said to have been
roam
known
who
con-
as the Lady’s
incontestably a funerary goddess, a “black
and has more than one connection with the Black
Madonna, whether
Roman
is
the banks of the
founded by a mysterious Lady
the night, mainly in the place
Combe. This Lady queen,”
away on
it
involves the goddess Sulevia or
who
or Celtic deity
some other
both protector of the dead and
is
guardian of the sacred waters. Once upon a time, peasants during times of drought
would come
They would mount
to
Rocamadour
in search of water.
a procession, led by the clergy, to the
many
Ouysse
prayers, one of the priests
would plunge
the base of the processional cross into the spring,
and everyone
Springs. Following
would return home with
the
hope that the rain would soon
return.
Similar rituals requesting rain exist in other regions, Brittany especially.
The Marian
cult
cannot be viewed apart from the ancient
worship of the waters. The same
is
true for Lourdes, as in
all
the
chapels dedicated to the Virgin Mary. In the immediate vicinity of these sanctuaries,
if
not inside the sanctuary
itself,
there
is
always a
well or a spring, or sometimes a simple pond, or often a washing
place that serves as a
Puy-en-Velay
is
swimming
also
pool.
one of the most frequented tourist
sites in
France. But mingling with the crowds of tourists are pilgrims following
,
The Virgin's Great Shadow
176
was
age-old customs. Le Puy
an important center of pilgrim-
in fact
age in the Middle Ages, not only because of the
Mary worship
that
developed there early on but also because the town was an impor-
on the route
tant stop
which ran
to Saint-James of Compostella,
toward Nimes and Saint-Gilles-du-Gard on the one hand, and on
was part of
the other
Regordane Route mentioned
the
chan-
in the
sons de geste one of the rare roads to cross the Central Massif from
north to south and connect the Mediterranean basin with the Loire Valley.
Roman
Le Puy was never a
Romans
ment. The
town, but rather a Gallic
established themselves
settle-
on the Plain by Ruessium.
This has since become Saint-Paulien, and
it is
where they brought
their deities.
In Puy,
whose name was Anicium
at that time, the Gallic
ship survived a long time without any
Anicium
itself offers
as
of the Celtic
Don
in
Gaul and
shadow
ure the
sits,
Mont-Anis. Both
The name
refer to the
Mother Goddess Ana or Anna, who was known as
Dana
in Ireland.
of the Brittany Saint
Furthermore, behind
Anne can be
as that of the Black Annis, or Black Annie,
of Yorkshire.
imprint.
food for thought, as does the name of the butte
on which the current cathedral
name
Roman
wor-
The Black Madonna
some connection with
who
this fig-
discerned, as well
haunts the folklore
of Puy-en-Velay certainly has
this figure inherited
from the purest
Celtic
tradition.
The
site
of Puy-en-Velay
built in terraces
Anis. slope.
quite extraordinary.
The old town
is
up the southern slope of an ancient volcano, Mont-
The cathedral and
Toward
is
cloister are located
the west,
a
particularly
about halfway up the
barren volcanic dike
crowned by the Saint-Michel d’Aiguilhe Chapel, one of the
is
oldest
sanctuaries in the region. Before the introduction of Christianity, a
temple dedicated to a goddess sat at the foot of
promontory. Whether haps even that Anis
it
who
was Cybele, Diana, or inspired the
At the very top of Mont-Anis
is
very ugly but majestic statue of
name
of the
Aiguilhe
a Gallic deity, persite, is
the Corneille Rock,
Our Lady
this
not known.
crowned by
of France.
the
The Black Madonna
It
seems that the placement of Puy Cathedral
Romanesque
construction)
was determined by
(a
177
magnificent
the presence not of a
spring or well nearby but rather of a volcanic rock
known
phonolite, which
This phono-
lite
is
no doubt
slab,
not so extraordinary in
dolmen
a
pagan sanctuary. This high
recut
altar,
and
is
table,
this region.
as a
had been previously used
in a
probably the same stone that serves as the
blessed. Until the seventeenth century, a “fever
stone” lay in front of the altar to Mary. Pilgrims seeking a cure for
would
their illnesses
Friday night.
It is
try to sleep
not clear
why
one night on the stone, particularly
would have removed
the clergy
same custom seems
stone, especially given that the
Chartres before the destruction of the
this
to have existed in
Romanesque
cathedral.
Taking the Eastern influences on the architecture of the Puy cathedral into consideration,
devotion to the Virgin
some have
Mary was
offered the theory that the
inspired by cults from the Middle
East. This provides a practical explanation for the color of the Black
Madonnas. Mary would simply be
the copy of a bronze-skinned
Eastern deity such as Artemis, Cybele, or
name
the very
But
Isis.
this conflicts
with
of the town, Anicium, which refers to a Celtic deity.
Furthermore, archaeologists have found no trace of any Eastern
worship taking place on the Puy
site.
It
is
more
Christianity here directly succeeded a Druidic cult,
was
a
smooth
transition.
in Saint-Paulien.
the
2 .
was only
It
bishop of Vellaves to settle in
left
a
it
settled
converted to Christianity,
is
after the sixth or seventh century that the
Ruessium, which was
community
But Anicium was
Paulien
this region
still
that
danger of declining, in other
had remained prosperous.
associated paganism. In the legal documents
a very hypothetical saint.
Roman name:
in
Anicium (which took on the name of Podium,
words Puy),
2.
and no doubt
The Romans avoided Anicium and
At the time
that
Episcopal seat must have been in Ruessium, thus Saint-
first
Paulien
likely
Ruessium, a Gallic name, made way for a Gallo-
Pauliniacus (territory of Paulinius), which evolved into Polignac, the
of a famous noble family of the region.
name
The Virgin’s Great Shadow
178
from that
words Sancta Maria often accompanied the name
era, the
of Anicium or Podium. Very few towns then bore this
which
title,
was
suggests a very distinctive fervor in honor of the Virgin that
probably quite ancient that maintained
way to
which was
also
Puy during the year 46 or 47.
in
assert the antiquity of the
what
Marian
the Chartres clergy did
much more
of the mountains.
It
was
a very
town,
claiming that the
we
find the
same
ancient worship.
any event, Le Puy was not some remote
In
cult in this
when
Chartres a virgo paritura. Here
in
need to base a cult on a
tion
Furthermore, a legend had spread
Mary had appeared
This was a
Druids honored
in origin.
village in the
middle
important crossroads and relay
sta-
on the Route Regordane. The Etain road always passed through and
there,
3 a very close alliance united the Vellaves people to the
Phoceens of Marseille. Puy
the meeting place of
is
from Lyon goes on from there
two roads; one
Rodez and Toulouse (Route
to
Nationale 88) and a road from Limagne goes on toward Ales and
Nimes
(the via
Regordane). Le Puy was an important communica-
tions center extending
toward
different horizons,
the relationship with Marseille
The frequent
visits
was always
and
in
any event,
4 a beneficial one.
of people from the Mediterranean region
could have inspired the imitation by local
artists
of statuettes of
Greek manufacture, which would explain the “blackness” of these kinds of Virgins. But there existed in Puy.
an
either
Isis
The
statue
is
no proof that
worshipped during these early times was
brought there through the intermediary of the
Phoceens or a Gallic mother goddess. this far
there
a matriarchal cult ever
west and remote as
would have been
it
was
It is
unthinkable, in a country
in the early
a statue of the Virgin
defined by the Council of Ephesus. Mystery
3. Vellavi, in Gallic, is a
word meaning
“the best.”
still
Middle Ages, that
Mary
as she
was
lurks
around
this
The name Velay
derives
from
this
word. The Vellaves were subjects of the Arvernes. 4.
For a long time, Velay was part of Languedoc. The Vellave dialect,
dialect,
is
currently Languedocian and not north Occitan.
like the
Auvergnat
The Black Madonna statue, for the (a
piece of
one that was burned during the Revolution
which was
fitted into the
new
statue)
was not
in
179
1794
necessarily
the ancient one spoken of in connection with the date 225. There are
descriptions of the statue burned in 1794,
and even a copy discov-
ered in Capronne-sur-Arzon. But the characteristics of this Black
Madonna
has been said that no statue ever enjoyed greater renown.
It
statue it
leave a great deal to the imagination.
was
was more
visited,
as mysterious as
more examined, and more it
praised. In fact,
was famous. Kings and popes made
grimages to Le Puy to pray before
it.
earned the nickname “Romee” there. 5
No pil-
Joan of Arc’s mother even
And
of course a flood of leg-
ends has spread from this “podium” charged with history and enig-
mas.
One
of these legends
stained-glass in
Lourdes.
window
It tells
in his castle of
is
depicted (what a coincidence!) on a
of the chapel connected to the medieval castle
how Charlemagne
besieged the pagan king Mirat
Mirambel. The bishop of Le Puy, present with the
army, managed to convince Mirat to dedicate his castle to the Holy Virgin.
Given that Mirat had only been trying to save
accepted baptism, and Mirambel became
Lordum
—
face, he
in other
words,
Lourdes.
The image from Le Puy-en-Velay had
several replicas in France
and Spain. Le Puy was also connected to
Italian pilgrimage sites.
Every year, but especially during Jubilee years
Annunciation coincides with dition of
Good
Gallo-Roman Lyon by
Friday
—those
in
which the
—Le Puy resumed the
calling the neighboring
attend religious feasts, games, poetry competitions, a
tra-
populace to
fair,
and tour-
naments. This was a reminiscence of the Concilia Galliarum, held in
Lugdunum, which
itself
was based on
the Celtic tradition,
strated in Ireland, of four great feasts of the year.
(November
1),
demon-
That of Samhain
during which the entire populace gathered, was the
most important.
5.
The designation “Romee” was given
equivalent location.
to those
who made
a pilgrimage to
Rome
or any
The Virgin's Great Shadow
180
Historically,
Virgin
Mary was
assumed that during the ninth century, the
is
it
the patron saint of Le Puy-en-Velay,
worship was given to a statue whose origin speculations. In 1630, Father after Clovis, sites.
one of
Odo
his successors
and
specific
lent itself to countless
de Gissey recounted
how
shortly
undertook a journey to the holy
Before leaving, he would have passed through Le Puy. Having
spent three years in Jerusalem, he had become a friend of the sultan,
who
him
allegedly offered
sulted the sultan’s favorite,
who
pointed out a black image crafted
by the prophet Jeremiah. Once the king obtained
would have stored the Black
it
Madonna
in
The king con-
his pick of his treasure.
Le Puy. Therefore, given
of Le Puy
would be
this statuette,
role in the story,
its
a fairly ancient Oriental
representation of Phoenician origin. But the testimony of Gissey, published in
1620 and revised by him
examination, especially
when compared
he
in
Odo
de
1644, deserves
to a description
made
in
1778 by Faujas de Saint-Fond, inspector of mines and friend of
who was interested in the extinct volcanoes of Velay and Vivarais. He wanted to understand the method of working hard stone (volcanic rock), which led him to examine the Puy statue. He was very familiar with Odo de Gissey’s testimony and cited it frequently in his own analyses. In any case, he is quite explicit on one Buffon,
point: “It
we have The strikes
is
in
incontestably the most ancient statue of the Virgin that
our French churches.”
statue
it
is
located in a poorly
from behind, on
kind of small canopy.
a fairly high
From neck
lit
area in which the light
marble pedestal beneath
to feet the statue
is
swaddled
a
in a
cloak of gilded cloth, whose conical form displays “the most barbaric taste.” This cloak
is
overloaded with reliquaries, several of
which are augmented with diamonds. “The Infant Jesus,” writes Faujas,
“who from
plays his
little
afar appears pasted to his mother’s stomach, dis-
head through an opening of the cloak; slippers of
gold cloth can be seen on the statue’s feet.” Having obtained permission from the canons of the cathedral to give the statue a detailed
examination, Faujas had her brought
down from
the pedestal.
He
The Black Madonna
took off her robe and saw a statue about thirty inches
.
.
made from
.
cedar, certainly quite old, probably
block, weighing about twenty-five pounds. She
is
modern
from head fully
and
construction.
to feet in
The
bands of very
solidly glued to the
mummies. The
entire statue
is
in the
wrapped;
this
been very care-
manner of Egyptian mother and the
no
the reason
is
think to
I
completely wrapped
cloths are applied to the faces of the
child; the feet are also
single
seated in the style
fine cloth that has
wood
in height
from a
of certain Egyptian deities, on a detached armchair that
be of
181
trace of
any
toes can be seen; similar bands cover the hands, but the fingers have
been emphasized; they are extremely ugly and of the poorest design.
The
face of the
like
ebony: “The face of the mother
mother and the child are both black and polished
shape that goes against
all
is
an extremely elongated oval
the rules of drawing.
of a disproportionate length and width, and Its
mouth By
all
is
small,
and
evidence, this
could label “barbaric.”
work.
Odo
chin
is
.
.
The nose
it
also
shockingly twisted.
shrunken and round.”
was an eighteenth-century work
Now
is
would be described
as
that
no one
an “archaic”
de Gissey said that the eyes had an intolerable sparkle.
Faujas clarified
mon
its
is
.
this;
glass; these
they are “two hemispherical pieces of very com-
two
pieces are concave
the other; the convex side
is
on one
and convex on
side
on the outside and imitates the globe of
the eye, whereas the concave part, being applied to an interior surface painted with the colors of the eye, imitates the iris.” This gives
the figure “a haggard and at the inspires surprise
and even
... a kind of very
terror.”
common
same time astonished
There are no ears or
air that
hair,
but
black cloth that completely covers the
top and back of the head and entirely hides the ears. Beneath this top wrapping, a second can be seen formed from selvedges of black silk,
and
finally a third in
bound and
tightly
homespun; the
wrapped around
entire thing
the head. ...
I
is
closely
should not
The Virgin's Great Shadow
182
when
forget to mention that
pings
I
just described,
from the
This
is
felt in
I
about the
cylindrical relief,
start of the
Was
my
fingers beneath the
size of a little finger, that
It
wrap-
the area of the neck a kind of semi-
neck to the nape, where
a significant detail.
of necklace.
passing
extended
disappeared.
it
seems the statue
may have had
a kind
a torque of the Celtic kind? In this case, the
it
hypothesis would have to be that this was a Gallic mother goddess. In
any event, notes Faujas,
uncovered and inten-
“this singularity, seen
shed light on the essential quality of
sively studied, could
which may well not always have been an image intended the
mother of God." The doubt surrounding
this statue’s
this figure,
to represent
provenance
could not be any more clearly expressed. The drapery
wood. The
sculpted in the
cloths are covered in a layer of white
gouache on which has been painted “thick and tate those of the
crudely
is
solid colors that imi-
Egyptian mummies.” Faujas noted several carved
symbols that could have been writing and small Greek crosses on the child’s
robe “which
may
not be Christian symbols, for the Isaic Table 6
and the obelisk with hieroglyphs It is
was
in
in
Rome
have similar crosses.”
true that at the end of the eighteenth century, Egyptian style
vogue and, probably under the influence of Freemasonry and
the Rosicrucians, the ancient religion of
rediscovered.
Madonna
Faujas
de
and Osiris was being
Saint-Fond concluded that the
of Le Puy-en-Velay
depicted with
Isis
was nothing more or
Horus “that had been transformed
which did no harm totally responsible.”
interpretation.
to the religion because
But something
“The head, which
is
else
less
than an
6.
large
and
[The Isaic Table, also
flat.”
known
good intention was
caused him to doubt
thin, tapered,
Italy,
it is
this
and has an enorfaces,
This led him to a second hypothesis: The
as the
by thirty inches and decorated with Cardinal Bembo, of
Isis
into the Virgin,
mously long nose, does not share the character of Egyptian
which are
Black
Bembine Table,
silver
is
and emerald
a bronze tablet
inlay.
Once
measuring
fifty
in the possession of
covered with hieroglyphs and occult symbols.
— Trans.]
The Black Madonna
183
Madonna came from Lebanon and would have been imported by Adhemar de Monteil, bishop of Le Puy, one of the leaders of the
Black
Crusade and legate of Pope Urban
First
Adhemar de Monteil never
Unfortunately,
II
in
the
Holy Land.
returned to France; he
died in Antioch in 1098.
An made
earlier hypothesis of this nature
on
Saint Louis,
a tradition that
from Egypt, the donor of
his return
Odo
strange statue. But on this point
was based on
this
de Gissey, though not reject-
ing the tradition, displayed great skepticism. Father
Odo
de Gissey,
a good, educated Jesuit, could hardly conceive that a statuette could
have been carved by the ardent iconoclast and prophet Jeremiah,
man
“the
image.” Thus, Saint
was not
who most heartily attacked the cult of the Louis may have brought back this statue, but it
world
in the
ancient.
The notion
that Saint Louis
was
the
donor of the Virgin of Le
Puy, however, smacks into one serious problem: In 1095,
Raymond
IV of Toulouse had offered the cathedral of Le Puy an important
sum
of
money
exchange for which “they would keep a candle
in
and
brightly burning, day
long as he lived.”
We
night, before the
have to believe that 150 years before the com-
was already
ing of Saint Louis to Le Puy, there
image of the Virgin of Toulouse,
who
image of the Virgin as
sufficient
renown
in the Vellave city
an
for the powerful count of
did not lack for famous sanctuaries in his
own
domains, to have sought her protection.
One problem remains work
that
came from
Gallo-Roman
era?
insoluble:
Was
was
the East or
The hypothesis
it
this
image a pre-Christian
crafted
on
site
during the
of a statue carved in cedar does
not hold up. Noting scratches that seemed to have been clumsily repaired over the entire image, Faujas de Saint-Fond voiced the
opinion that these were the result of scrapings by rosaries and other objects used to touch the statue,
and that the black paint had to be
periodically restored in the places that the statue to
make
it
was not
black.
where
it
was
missing. This
originally black , but every effort
means
was made
The Virgin's Great Shadow
184
Furthermore, one peculiarity both Faujas and
Odo
de Gissey
pointed out was that the Virgin’s hands were white. Another detail
somewhat mysterious
supplied by Faujas concerns a
purpose the inspector of mines did not understand.
No
tion of a small reliquary. this specific feature. It
is
cavity
was
It
whose
the loca-
other image in this category contains
explained, says Saillens, “by the excep-
tional nature of the site of Le Puy.
No
other French pilgrimage
has processions that are as frequent and as long, nor such
was
tainous terrain. This statue
a cult statue (because
it
was
site
mouna reli-
quary), but also a processional statue.” 7
But
probable that
it is
this statue
was not
the sole representation
of the Virgin in the cathedral of Le Puy. There must have been
another one, the depiction of which appeared on a medal of 1182. the
It is
same
confused, and no one concerns.
we found
situation
When
is
sure
in Chartres;
which one
the Black Virgin
two
this particular description
was burned on June
eight other statues, the heat of the pyre caused
the surprise of those in attendance, out the “relic” in this statue. This work, statue in compliance with
statues have been
fell
it
8,
1794, with
to explode,
and to
a rolled-up parchment,
seemed, was a reliquary
it
Church standards, an
assertion reinforced
by the distinguishing feature of her white hands. But what we do not
know
is if
the statue that
was burned was
the
been the object of constant worship from the It is
held
same one that had
earliest
Middle Ages.
reasonable to assume that the cathedral of Le Puy-en-Velay
two representations of
wood and
a
Madonna
in stone.
on the 1182 medal and tion of a seal
the Virgin, an ancient Majestic one in
in
held a scepter in his
Nos
tells
is
left
was
its tip
white, as she appeared
O do
de Gissey’s descrip-
us that she looked entirely dif-
was seated and “held
a scepter with a fleur-de-lis at
the image that
latter
accordance with
from 1263, which
ferent then: She
7. E. Saillens,
The
the child in her right
in her left
arm and
hand. The child also
hand. But the figure on the seal today depicts
presently
on the
altar.”
Vierges noires (Paris: Payot, 1945), 91.
The Black Madonna
Could
be the object brought back from Egypt by Saint Louis?
this
some
Surely not, but the fleurs-de-lis imply the king played
Did some kind of substitution of
the affair.
to eliminate
traces of
all
wanted
We
do know that the statue described by
de Gissey and Faujas de Saint-Fond, and thus the same one that
was burned
in
1794, had been intentionally blackened
an easy step to considering
and
the original archaic, cial
when
an object they sensed had emerged from the
purest kind of paganism?
it is
role in
statues take place
the clergy, alarmed at the display of superstitious practices,
Odo
185
this
.
From
there,
image a compromise between
definitely very pagan,
image and the
offi-
Majestic version confirmed in 1182 and 1263.
The debate over
the Black
Madonnas
is
not close to being
resolved. Taking into account the ambiguity of the texts
we
diversity of the artistic evidence,
removal and substitution of
find almost everywhere the
statues, adaptations of their images,
the existence of outright fakes. oldest Black
and the
By
Madonnas Egyptian
this reckoning,
statues of Isis
we can
and
see in the
and Horus, repre-
sentations of Cybele and Attis, and Gallic mother goddesses, with
no
theoretical contradictions or
those ies.
who
erected or installed
any affront to the good
them
in
faith of
medieval Christian sanctuar-
Traditions resist time and religious substitutions, because they
represent something profound that cannot be threatened by styles or
dogmatic in
subtleties.
The Black Madonnas, although
quite Christian
appearance, have their origin in ancient Mother Goddess
whatever name they might individually be known. This
Another
reality
is
that quite often the Black
ened intentionally, as thing
specific.
if
someone wished
is
cults,
by
a reality.
Madonnas were
dark-
the color to signify some-
These purposely blackened Madonnas
exist
in
Chartres and in Le Puy-en-Velay and their meaning clearly appears insoluble.
Why would
the Virgin
Mary
be given this black color?
And why
only in certain cases?
There are multiple theories. One suggestion
Mary had
a
is
that the Virgin
sunburned complexion, appropriate for a Semite, and
The Virgin's Great Shadow
186
that the
custom of depicting her
came from Luke and
the Hodegetria, the mythical portrait attributed to Saint
said to have been sent
law Pulcheria,
same
these his
who
placed
Bible,
like the
burned by the sun. The
fact
this
is
in
Rome
mere
sister-in-
church of Constantinople. Along
Van den Steen (1556-1637) declared
and almost black skin
Luke worshipped
by Empress Eudoxia to her
in the
it
lines, the Jesuit
Commentaries on the
But
as black or simply dark-skinned
is
“The Blessed Virgin Mary had Egyptians and Palestinians
in
a dark
who
are
proven by the portrait painted by Saint
at the Basilica of
fiction.
We
Santa Maria Maggiore.”
should remember that Saint
Mary
Augustine insisted the alleged portraits of the Virgin
exist-
ing in his time were too different from one another to be authen-
He goes on to say, “Furthermore, we know not what face the Virgin Mary wore.” This did not prevent Saint Epiphany in the fourth century from asserting that Mary had
tic
(De
Trinitate, VIII, 6, 7).
skin the “color of wheat, blonde hair, and pupils the tone of ripe olive.”
A
blonde with black eyes?
Why
not? Marie-Bernarde
(Bernadette) Soubirous described the apparition of the Virgin in the grotto at Lourdes as white and blonde.
suntanned skin of the Virgin Mary
in this
What happened
to the
heap of visions and var-
ious interpretations?
A second hypothesis contends that the prototypes of the European Black
Madonnas were executed by
artists
who were
themselves dark-
skinned and simply reproduced their ethnicity in their artwork. not? But Crusaders brought back Black
Madonnas,
Why
as Saint Louis
brought the Puy image from Egypt; and the Black Virgins of France
were worshipped long before the time of the Crusades. In
must assume that the
first
less
who were
commingled with Madonnas by very
ignorant of archaeology. This hypothesis
does not hold up, however, because
been
listed
A third statues
all
the Black
and described bear obvious Christian hypothesis
is
we
depictions of the Black Virgins were Eastern
mother goddesses more or zealous Christians
this case
even more simplistic.
Madonnas
that have
characteristics.
It is
merely that some
were carved from black wood or sculpted
in
dark-colored
I
Fop:
An
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ancient engraving depicting the cathedral of Chartres
bottom: The cathedral seen from the Eure River
The south fagade
Top: The cathedrals Royal Portal
Opposite page: Frontispiece from Rouillard’s Parthenie depicting the virgo paritura
worshipped by the Druids
J$3g
m
>>mm &j0W si
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