Irish Daily Mail

Frantic battle to save priceless works of art

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A DESPERATE battle was under way last night to save priceless artworks and religious relics from the flames devastatin­g Notre Dame.

They include the Crown of Thorns said to have been placed on the head of Jesus before he was crucified, a piece of the True Cross on which he is said to have died and a nail from the Crucifixio­n.

The relics were obtained from the Byzantine Empire in 1238 and brought to Paris by King Louis IX.

Notre Dame is also home to priceless paintings dating back to the 1600s, including a series known as the Petits Mays, gifted to the cathedral once a year from 1630 to 1707.

Among the most celebrated artworks are three stained-glass rose windows high up on the west, north and south faces of the cathedral.

Notre Dame’s Great Organ, which dates back to the 13th century and was restored in the early 1990s, is considered the most famous in the world, containing five keyboards Holy: Crown of Thorns worn by Jesus at the Crucifixio­n and nearly 8,000 Emmanuel, weighs more pipes. than 13 tonnes. It sits in the

Last night firemen at the southern tower and has been scene said all efforts were a part of the building since being directed at saving artwork 1681. in the cathedral and In 1944, Emmanuel was preventing the collapse of rung in celebratio­n and its northern tower. triumph by French troops

‘Everything is collapsing,’ and Allies to announce to a police officer near the the city that it was on its scene said as the cathedral way to liberation. continued to burn. The famous gargoyles and

The ten bells of Notre chimera that adorn Notre Dame are renowned across Dame were built in the 19th Europe and the first nine are century by architect Eugène named Marie, Gabriel, Viollet-le-Duc. Anne-Geneviève, Denis, The original purpose of the Marcel, Étienne, BenoitJose­ph, gargoyles was to assist with Maurice, and the building’s drainage, but Jean-Marie. they have become one of its

The final and largest, most-loved features. known as the bourdon bell In the 1790s, Notre Dame was desecrated during the French Revolution when much of its religious imagery was damaged or destroyed and its treasures plundered.

The 28 statues of biblical kings located at the west facade, mistaken for statues of French kings, were beheaded.

All of the other large statues on the facade, with the exception of that of the Virgin Mary on the portal of the cloister, were destroyed.

The cathedral was restored over 25 years after the publicatio­n of the book The Hunchback Of Notre Dame by Victor Hugo in 1831 brought it into the spotlight.

Last night, it was claimed that 16 statues that were part of the cathedral’s destroyed spire were safe and unscathed after being removed as part of a renovation a few days ago.

The green-grey statues, representi­ng the 12 apostles and four evangelist­s, were apparently lowered by cranes from the site and taken away.

The cathedral also has a spectacula­r series of carved wooden stalls and statues representi­ng the Passion of the Christ.

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