Sainte-Chapelle
Louis IX built this 13th-century chapel specifically to house Christ's Crown of Thorns, creating what amounts to a reliquary the size of a building.
About Sainte-Chapelle
Louis IX built this 13th-century chapel specifically to house Christ's Crown of Thorns, creating what amounts to a reliquary the size of a building. The upper chapel's 15-meter stained glass windows tell the entire Biblical story from Genesis to Christ's resurrection in 1,113 individual scenes - you can spend an hour just decoding the stories in the Rose Window alone. When afternoon sun hits the western windows, the entire space glows like the inside of a sapphire.
You'll enter through the lower chapel, which served the palace staff and feels surprisingly dark and cramped. The narrow spiral staircase deposits you into the upper chapel - the contrast is genuinely startling. The walls disappear into towers of colored glass, and your eyes need a moment to adjust to the kaleidoscope effect. Most people photograph frantically for five minutes then stand transfixed.
The audio guide is actually worth it here - without context, the windows look beautiful but meaningless. Avoid the gift shop entirely and don't bother with the lower chapel beyond a quick glance. The magic happens upstairs, and you'll know within thirty seconds whether the light is good enough that day to make the visit worthwhile.
Book Tickets
Live availability and skip-the-line options from our booking partners.
Booking powered by our partners. DAIZ may earn a commission.








