San Francisco Chronicle

At Tour de France, a proudstand­ing beacon for firedamage­d Notre Dame

- By John Leicester John Leicester is an Associated Press writer.

REIMS, France — On quiet days at the Tour de France, when even the commentato­rs on French TV talk about the boredom of flat, long, meandering stages in which not much happens until the sprint finish, there’s almost always other stars that come to the fore: France and its magnificen­t monuments.

The Gothic cathedral in the Champagne city of Reims formed a breathtaki­ng backdrop for the start of Tuesday’s Stage 4.

The towering 13th century edifice where France’s kings were crowned stands as a symbol of hope for the future of another great French cathedral, Notre Dame in Paris.

Like Notre Dame, ravaged by fire in April, the towering cathedral in Reims also endured disaster, when it was heavily shelled in World War I. The ensuing inferno shattered and blackened its massive stone pillars and exquisite sculptures and heavily damaged luminous stainedgla­ss windows that, now restored, bathe its cool and cavernous interior in a rainbow of color. Flames also melted the lead roof, which dripped through the gargoyles.

“The most appalling drama for this cathedral was the bombing of 1914,” said Veronique PalotMaill­art, a cathedral guide and historian. “The stainedgla­ss windows were impacted. The stone was scorched. The frame burned for days. It was an absolute drama.”

After the war, there was talk of turning the mutilated cathedral — hit by more than 300 shells from German forces that occupied forts on the outskirts of Reims — into a memorial of German aggression. Instead, the decision was taken to rebuild, taking decades.

Restoratio­n work on the North Tower, which endured the worst fire damage, was completed in 2011. Renovation­s were still going as recently as three years ago, with the equivalent of $3.7 million spent on the huge roseshaped window on the cathedral’s face.

And more than a century after the war ended, the work isn’t over.

“We’re still restoring parts of the cathedral that were weakened, destroyed in 1914. So our greatest hope is that won’t be the case in Paris, that we’ll rapidly rediscover a cathedral that’s been fully restored,” said Bernard Poret, head of the Society of Friends of Reims Cathedral that raises funds.

The cathedral was the standout among numerous monuments and sites of interest that the Tour zipped past, keeping TV commentato­rs supplied with talking points as riders took it easy before cranking up the speed for the sprint finish, won by Italy’s Elia Viviani.

 ?? Jeff Pachoud / AFP / Getty Images ?? The pack starts Tuesday’s Stage 4 in front of the Cathedral of Reims, which was heavily damaged during World War I.
Jeff Pachoud / AFP / Getty Images The pack starts Tuesday’s Stage 4 in front of the Cathedral of Reims, which was heavily damaged during World War I.

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