5464 x 8192 px | 46,3 x 69,4 cm | 18,2 x 27,3 inches | 300dpi
Date de la prise de vue:
28 septembre 2021
Lieu:
Geneva, Switzerland
Informations supplémentaires:
In 1397, the Chapelle des Macchabées was added to the original building as the funeral chapel of Cardinal Jean de Brogny. Restored at the end of the 19th century. St. Pierre Cathedral in Geneva, Switzerland, was built as a Roman Catholic cathedral, but became a Reformed Protestant Church of Geneva church during the Reformation. It is known as the adopted home church of John Calvin, one of the leaders of the Protestant Reformation. Inside the church is a wooden chair used by Calvin. The present building was begun under Arducius de Faucigny, the prince-bishop of the Diocese of Geneva, around 1160, in Gothic style. The interior of the large, cruciform, late-gothic church was stripped of its rood screen, side chapels, and all decorative works of art, leaving a vast, white-washed interior that contrasts sharply with the interior of surviving medieval churches in countries that continued to be part of the Roman Catholic Church. A Neo-Classical the main facade was added in the 18th century. In the 1890s, Genevans redecorated a large, side chapel adjacent to the cathedral's man doors in polychrome, gothic revival style.