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- 日10
- 2025年5月23日金曜日 9:49
- ☀️ 13 °C
- 海抜: 38 m
フランスParis48°51’13” N 2°20’55” E
Notre Dame: Phoenix Rises from the Ashes

Another great day today, this time in Paris. 13,356 steps! We went on a guided tour of Notre Dame this morning and visited the Palace of Versailles in the afternoon.
First, the Cathedral of Notre Dame.
We walked for half an hour from our hotel. to meet our guide Pierre, providentially outside a coffee shop near the Church, that understood what “Flat White” means. Young Pierre led us for an hour through the streets around Notre Dame, entertaining us with a number of stories (part fact, part maybe!). For example:
* Outside a police station, we were introduced to the “real” story that became Sweeney Todd (“English people often steal our stories”). A butcher was enticing homeless kids into his basement, murdering them, and selling the meat to his neighbour, a butcher who made pies that became enormously popular. “The king came and enjoyed one”, we were told.
* We passed by Paris’s “first” restaurant Au Vieux Paris, started in 1512. There are of course others who covet that title!
* We stopped outside a house in Rue de la Colombe (“Dove Street”), At one time the owner had a pair of doves at his house when the Seine flooded, and the house collapsed, burying the doves’ cage. The male dove was able to escape, but it was only later when the owner was able to rescue the female that the two lovebirds were reunited, and flew away together. The house became a place where young lovers would come to pledge their troth.
We moved on to the forecourt outside Notre Dame. The Church was begun in 1163, but was worked on by nine generations of architects, stonemasons and labourers before it was completed. The French Revolution in the 1790s desecrated the church, and much of its religious imagery was damaged or destroyed. Napoleon used Notre Dame for his coronation, but by the mid-19th century it was in such poor condition that there was a move to demolish it. Then the overwhelming success of Victor Hugo’s Notre Dame de Paris (English title, The Hunchback of Notre Dame) led to the Church being restored fully.
Desiree and I visited Paris in 2010 for our 40th Wedding Anniversary, and my memories of the inside of the church are of it being very dark from centuries of candle smoke and grime.
Wow, the difference now! Following the devastating April 2019 fire, in which the beams holding up the huge bells came within 20 minutes of burning through, which would have collapsed the towers , and taken the church with them. French President Emanuel Macron quoted Victor Hugo, describing Notre Dame as being “the heart of France”, He swore that the Cathedral would be open for religious services within five years. He was right.
One interesting sidelight: Before the fire, the church spire was topped by a gilded copper cockerel. After the fire they found it in the rrubble.
As you can see from the photos, the interior of the Church is now light and airy. As Macron said, the outcome of the restoration is nothing short of miraculous.もっと詳しく

You both look deliriously happy.....and so you should with that magnificent bachdrop! [Marley]

I didn't realize that there was still so much work going on outside. [MT]

Busy as a bazaar. [MT]

That's the one thing I find annoying in famous churches: the noise level.My first experience of this was in St. Paul's in London. I was fresh from NZ and had never visited anything famous before, except maybe Whakarewarewa, where noise was not an issue. It shocked me to the bone to hear a raucous american woman bellow."Oh Harry LOOK at the High Altar! Isn't it CUTE! I hope you were able to enjoy some semblance of peace inside, despite the hordes. [Marley]