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General: SAINT MARTIN OF TOURS MADELEINE CHURCH NOVEMBER 11TH PARIS AXE HISTORIQUE
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HD photographs of Saint Martin of Tours statue on Eglise de la Madeleine in Paris - Page 1013
While we were at the Eglise de la Madeleine in the 8th Arrondissement of Paris, we took these high definition photos showing a statue depicting Saint Martin of Tours, which was sculpted by Francois Alfred Grevenich.
Paris Statues
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Positioned on the facades of the Madeleine Church you will see statues of saints, and in this first HD photo you can see the stone statue depicting Saint Martin of Tours, who became a Bishop of Tours, and one of the most recognised Christian Saints, he is considered as a spiritual bridge across Europe due to the fact that he was born in Hungary, grew up in Italy and spent adult life in France.
Here is a close up showing the top part of the Saint Martin statue, which was sculpted by Francois Alfred Grevenich who according to some sources was born in Paris in 1802, whereas others state 1808, yet passing away in 1847, he had a very short career, but Francois Alfred Grevenich did gain two medals for his works presented at Salons in 1831 and 1837.
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Saint Martin of Tours was originally a soldier and legend has it that when Saint Martin was travelling he came across a poor beggar and being very cold he took his military sword and tore his cloak in half, giving half to the poor man, so hence he became the Patron Saint of the Poor as well as Soldiers.
Part of his reliquary was the cloak of Saint Martin that a priest known as a Cappellanu took great care of, and a priest in the army was referred to as a Capellani, which in French translates to Chaelains, and is where the English word Chaplain is derived from, and Saint Martin is recognised in numerous European countries, especially in Roman Catholic religion, with his feast day being 11th November.
However, here you can see the location of the Saint Martin of Tours statue located within a niche on the portico facade of the Eglise de la Madeleine, which can be seen through the famous Corinthian columns of the church from the square called the Place de la Madeleine.
https://www.eutouring.com/images_paris_statues_1013.html
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France’s Macron and Pope Francis hold unusually long meeting
Updated 26 June 2018
REUTERS
June 26, 201812:24
1277
- Macron and Pope Francis spoke for nearly an hour in the Vatican’s Apostolic Palace
- The two discussed “protection of the environment, migration, and commitment to conflict prevention and resolution"
VATICAN CITY: French President Emmanuel Macron, accused at home of straining France’s secular foundations by seeking to mend ties with the Catholic Church, had an unusually long and cordial meeting with Pope Francis on Tuesday. They spoke for nearly an hour in the official papal library in the Vatican’s Apostolic Palace, about twice as long as Francis usually spends with heads of state or government. A Vatican statement said the two discussed “protection of the environment, migration, and multilateral commitment to conflict prevention and resolution, especially in relation to disarmament.” They also spoke about prospects for resolving conflicts in the Middle East and Africa and the future of Europe, it said. At the end of the private part of the audience, Macron gave Francis a rare copy of Goerges Bernanos 1936 book “Diary of a Country Priest.” “I’ve read this book many times and it has done me good. It is a book that I have always loved very much,” the pope told Macron, 40, who was accompanied in the public parts of the meeting by his wife Brigitte, 65. Francis gave Macron a medallion depicting Martin of Tours, a 4th century saint who is depicted cutting his cloak in half to give it to a beggar in winter. “This means the vocation of those who govern is to help the poor. We are all poor,” Francis told Macron as he was giving him the medallion. As Macron left the library, he and Francis exchanged a two-cheek kiss, another very usually gesture between a pope and a visiting head of state. The Vatican was expected to issue a statement later on the themes discussed during the private talks. Two months ago, Macron called for stronger ties between the state and the Catholic Church, a move critics said blurred a line that has kept French government free of religious intervention for generations. The issue is particularly sensitive in historically Catholic France, where matters of faith and state were separated by law in 1905 and which is now home to Europe’s largest Muslim and Jewish communities. France’s guiding principles also hold that religious observance is a private matter, for all faiths. Macron was raised in a non-religious family and was baptized a Roman Catholic at his own request when he was 12. On Tuesday afternoon Macron was due to be installed as the “First and Only Honorary Canon” of the Rome Basilica of St. John’s in Lateran, which is the pope’s cathedral in his capacity as bishop of Rome. Under a tradition that began in the 15th century when France was a monarchy, French leaders are automatically given the title.
https://www.arabnews.com/node/1328511/world
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