Homo Faber Presentation Notes
Homo Faber Presentation Notes
The Chartres Cathedral is a milestone in the development of Western architecture because it employs all
the structural elements of the new Gothic architecture: the pointed arch; the rib-and-panel vault; and,
most significantly, the flying buttress.
The cathedral is also celebrated for its many stained-glass windows and sculptures. Because most of its
12th-and 13th-century-stained glass and sculpture survives, Chartres Cathedral is one of the most
completely surviving medieval churches.
Its spiritual intensity is heightened by the fact that no direct light enters the building. All the light is filtered
through stained glass, so that the whole experience of visiting the Chartres Cathedral seems out of this
world.
The interior of the Chartres cathedral is remarkable. The nave, wider than that of any other cathedral in
France (52 feet, or sixteen meters), is in the purest 13th-century ogival style.
In its center is a maze, the only one still intact in France, with 320 yards (290 meters) of winding passages,
which the faithful used to follow on their knees.
The warm glow of the light inside the cathedral results from the incomparably beautiful stained-glass
windows, which date mostly from the 14th century.
The Chartres Cathedral was built following a fire that destroyed the previous church in 1194, the new choir
being complete by 1221 and the whole building consecrated in 1260 as one of the most compelling
expressions of the strength and poetry of medieval Catholicism.
The city of Chartres owed its prosperity to its bishop and chapter, who had established four annual trade
fairs on the feasts of the Virgin Mary, to whom the cathedral was dedicated – her Nativity, Annunciation,
Purification and Assumption.
The choice was colored by the claim of the cathedral to possess the robe that Mary wore when giving birth
to Christ.
A piece of Asian silk given to Chartres in about 876 by Emperor Charles the Bald, its preservation in the fire
of 1194 was regarded as miraculous. It still survives to this day in the Treasury.
The initial Chartres Cathedral architecture was the clerestory, the upper area of the wall supported on the
arcades, which took the form of a huge glass casket in which the architecture merely serves as a frame for
the stained glass filling the two rows of enormous windows.
To provide stability for the daring construction, immense flying buttresses were used in an unprecedented
way.
The glass, made around 1200-1235, follows a uniform style, with figures in the upper panels related to the
legends of saints, and in the lower panels representing the trade guilds and corporations who paid for
them. Further donations for the glass and sculpture came from the nobility and gentry of the Ile de France.
Chartres Cathedral ranks as a triple masterpiece. Equally superb are its architecture and sculpture,
survivors of two major fires and numerous wars and revolutions.
Its last narrow escape from destruction occurred on a warm June night in 1836, when an unexplained fire
destroyed the roof timbers and melted the lead. The timbers over the nave were replaced by an iron
structure and then roofed over with copper.
The cathedral school at Chartres had been a famous center of learning under the bishop St Fulbert (960-
1028).
This didactic tone was later expressed in the programmed selected for the glass and the sculpture, which
was the product of much learning. It unfolded a vision of the role of the church in world history that was
promoted by Pope Innocent III (1198-1216) when the temporal power of the papacy was at its height.
The program was given expression in the sculpture on the Royal Portal of 1150-1175, on the west front,
and on the two immense transepts that were added on the north and south sides.
Each is a miniature pilgrimage church, with a traditional west front with three portals and porches where
figure sculpture stresses the mission of the church to teach and preach.
The north portal, containing more than seven hundred figures, shows the antecedents of Christ, the south
the era of the church.
Chartres has become the focus of a new type of pilgrimage dedicated to the preservation of the Latin
Mass, which, following the Second Vatican Council, was replaced in 1969 by the graceless new liturgy.
Thousands of pilgrims travel to it on foot, saying the rosary, to hear the timeless words of the old Mass in
this darkly glowing interior.
1. I learned that the Cathedral was celebrated with its many stained-glass windows and
sculptures.
2. Also, I learned that the Royal Portal was built from 1150-1175, on the west front, and on the
two transepts that were added on the north and south sides. Each is a miniature pilgrimage
church, with a traditional west front with three portals and porches where figure sculpture
stresses the mission of the church to teach and preach.
3. I also learned that the north portal contains more than seven hundred figures.
4. I also learned that the word miniature means a much smaller size than normal; very small.
Question 1 It is 320 yards (290 meters), it is (*fifty-two feet, or sixteen meters) it has stained-
glass windows and sculptures. Also, it was one of the most completely surviving medieval
churches. It was built during the 12th-and 13th-century and it was put together.
Question 2:
Question 3:
Question 4:
Question 5: