Where is eglise de la madeleine




















However, after the death of the architect in , his successor decided to bring the whole building down, designing a completely different temple.

When the Revolution broke out, the construction was paralysed whilst they decided what to do with the church. The second attempt was also demolished and Napoleon I assigned a new architect to build an edifice based on the design of an ancient temple in honour of the French Navy. The building has 52 Corinthian columns standing 65 ft 20 m tall, giving the building a majestic aspect.

The first design, commissioned in with construction begun in , was by Pierre Contant d'Ivry, and was based on Mansart's Late Baroque church of Les Invalides, with a dome surmounting a Latin cross. In d'Ivry died and he was replaced by Guillaume-Martin Couture, who decided to start anew.

He razed the incomplete construction and based his new design on the Roman Pantheon. At the start of the Revolution, however, only the foundations had been finished and work was discontinued, while debate simmered as to what purpose the building might serve in Revolutionary France : a library, a ballroom, and a marketplace were all suggested.

The existing foundations were again razed and work began anew. Free for young people and children Free entry. Opening times Open every day from 9. Voir la carte. Subway - Madeleine. RER - Auber. Bus - 42, 43, 52, 84, A symbol of Paris whose history and inner richness remain unknown, but deserves to be discovered. Begun under Louis XV, in , the church of the Madeleine had to replace an old church, located at the 8 boulevard Malesherbes current, and which could not accommodate the growing population of the district.

In , on the death of the architect in charge of the yard, his pupil imagined a new project and undertook important modifications, until the French Revolution stopped the works. The previous construction was razed to build the new monument. But the work, again, progressed slowly, and the temple project dedicated to the armies was abandoned in favor of the Arc de Triomphe. The monument was returned to Catholic worship in , and the work was completed only in



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