Les aménagements liturgiques des cathédrales ...
Document type :
Article dans une revue scientifique: Article original
DOI :
Permalink :
Title :
Les aménagements liturgiques des cathédrales de Genève, du Ve au IXe siècle : étude chronologique comparative
Author(s) :
Bonnet, Charles [Auteur]
Gaillard, Michele [Auteur]
Institut de Recherches Historiques du Septentrion (IRHiS) - UMR 8529
Gaillard, Michele [Auteur]
Institut de Recherches Historiques du Septentrion (IRHiS) - UMR 8529
Journal title :
Antiquité tardive
Volume number :
27
Pages :
p. 303-320
Publisher :
Brepols Publishers
Publication date :
2019
Article status :
Publié
HAL domain(s) :
Sciences de l'Homme et Société/Histoire
English abstract : [en]
The aim of this paper is to study the liturgical arrangements realized in the transition space between the choir and the nave of the church, in order to obtain a better understanding of the link between the cathedral and ...
Show more >The aim of this paper is to study the liturgical arrangements realized in the transition space between the choir and the nave of the church, in order to obtain a better understanding of the link between the cathedral and the other monuments of the cult, in particular the baptisteries. The presented data are related to the one published on other sites: the cathedrals of Aosta, Tournai, Cologne, and Trier, and other buildings in western Europe. In the southern cathedral of Geneva, we observe, with a certain precocity, the emergence of a solea and an ambo, as in Aosta (half a century earlier), in Grado and Boppard during the same period, and in Tournai a little later. During the 6th century, this type of architectural element spreads throughout western Europe, and is in competition (or in complementarity) with more opened arrangements connecting the cathedral to the baptistery, as it is the case in the northern cathedral of Aosta, recently modified. During the 7th-8th centuries, the situation became more complex in Geneva, when, on the east of the baptistery, a third church was constructed, whose liturgical arrangements were those of a martyrial church. In the Carolingian period, this building was considerably enlarged on the western side (at exactly the same place where the baptistery was disappearing) and provided with arrangements similar to those of the cathedral of Cologne at the same time. This shows that it was now used as a cathedral, at the detriment of the two ancient churches that disappeared soon after. These constructions can be seen in relation with the application of the Carolingian liturgical reform, which was inspired by the image of Rome, as it can be seen in the Ordo Romanus IV, written in the Frankish kingdom.Show less >
Show more >The aim of this paper is to study the liturgical arrangements realized in the transition space between the choir and the nave of the church, in order to obtain a better understanding of the link between the cathedral and the other monuments of the cult, in particular the baptisteries. The presented data are related to the one published on other sites: the cathedrals of Aosta, Tournai, Cologne, and Trier, and other buildings in western Europe. In the southern cathedral of Geneva, we observe, with a certain precocity, the emergence of a solea and an ambo, as in Aosta (half a century earlier), in Grado and Boppard during the same period, and in Tournai a little later. During the 6th century, this type of architectural element spreads throughout western Europe, and is in competition (or in complementarity) with more opened arrangements connecting the cathedral to the baptistery, as it is the case in the northern cathedral of Aosta, recently modified. During the 7th-8th centuries, the situation became more complex in Geneva, when, on the east of the baptistery, a third church was constructed, whose liturgical arrangements were those of a martyrial church. In the Carolingian period, this building was considerably enlarged on the western side (at exactly the same place where the baptistery was disappearing) and provided with arrangements similar to those of the cathedral of Cologne at the same time. This shows that it was now used as a cathedral, at the detriment of the two ancient churches that disappeared soon after. These constructions can be seen in relation with the application of the Carolingian liturgical reform, which was inspired by the image of Rome, as it can be seen in the Ordo Romanus IV, written in the Frankish kingdom.Show less >
Language :
Français
Audience :
Internationale
Popular science :
Non
Administrative institution(s) :
Université de Lille
CNRS
CNRS
Submission date :
2024-02-14T09:17:24Z
2024-02-14T09:21:28Z
2024-02-21T15:35:12Z
2024-02-14T09:21:28Z
2024-02-21T15:35:12Z