Church of Saint-Germain-des-Prés
Landmark
About Church of Saint-Germain-des-Prés
This Benedictine abbey church really is Paris's oldest, with foundations from 558 AD, though what you see today is mostly 11th-century Romanesque stonework mixed with 19th-century Gothic revival additions. The flying buttresses and pointed arches in the choir are authentic 12th century, while the colorful ceiling frescoes by Hippolyte Flandrin were painted in the 1840s. The acoustics are genuinely exceptional thanks to the stone vaulting and careful proportions.
The interior feels surprisingly intimate for such an ancient space. You enter through heavy wooden doors into a nave that's darker than most Paris churches, with thick Romanesque columns supporting rounded arches. The choir glows with jewel-toned stained glass, and Flandrin's biblical scenes wrap around the sanctuary in soft blues and golds. The marble columns flanking the altar are original 6th-century pieces salvaged from the earlier church.
Most tourists rush through in ten minutes, but the real reward is sitting quietly in the wooden pews for at least twenty minutes. Skip the small museum in the sacristy unless you're deeply interested in medieval manuscripts. The Sunday evening concerts are legitimately special, but arrive thirty minutes early since seating fills up fast. Morning light through the east windows illuminates the frescoes beautifully between 10-11 AM.
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