Holy See Chappelie (Sainte Chappele)

Picture 1 of Holy See Chappelie (Sainte Chappele) Looking from the courtyard of the Castle of Justice (Palais de justic) through an arched path will encounter a masterpiece of Gothique style, the Sainte Chappele (Holy temple, God).

It was built for King Louis IX to preserve the relic of the crown of the king whom he had purchased in Venice in 1239. This relic was brought to Venise from Constantiople. An architect who developed the temple is most likely Pierre de Montreuil, the architect of Sainte Germain des pes. Here, he designed two temples; they overlap and were created in 1248.

The lower church acts as a pond base for the entire building block, above it are large windows with many intersecting points of curves. A delicate and delicate marble corridor adorned the steep roof and above the graceful architecture is a tower with small holes of high makeup 246t (nearly 74.98m ). In addition, there are two towers with two towers on both sides of the facade, before them are a porch, on the porch is a round rose-shaped window with intersecting points of curves.

Built in the late XV century and its purpose is to illustrate the book "Revelation". All this love exudes a gentle, serene beauty. The rigidly changed basic structure into more slender lines, more beautiful towers, almost all of the structures here change only with stained glass and intact windows.

Picture 2 of Holy See Chappelie (Sainte Chappele)
Sainte Germain des pes