Sacred Destinations

An illustrated guide to sacred sites, pilgrimages, sacred art & architecture, historic religious places & more.
Bookmark This Page

Cathedral of Our Lady, Tournai  A UNESCO World Heritage Site

Tournai Cathedral
South transept and towers of Tournai Cathedral.


Lofty view over cathedral, square and belfry from a ferris wheel.
Photo Creative Commons License Mel & John Kots.



View of south towers from the Grand Place.

West Front
West front.

South
South transept.

Nave
Nave looking southeast.

West rose window
West rose window.



The Cathedral of Our Lady (Cathédrale Notre-Dame) in Tournai, Belgium is one of the most striking examples of Romanesque architecture in Europe and a UNESCO World Heritage site. UNESCO granted the cathedral of Tournai the honor because it is "distinguished by a Romanesque nave of extraordinary dimensions, a wealth of sculpture on its capitals and a transept topped by five towers, all precursors of the Gothic style."

History

Today's magnificent five-towered cathedral is one of many places of worship that have stood on this spot. There was a church here as early as 761 AD, and it's thought there was a pagan temple before that. The 8th-century church was replaced by another in 850, which Viking raiders burned to the ground in 881.

After fire again destroyed the replacement church in 1060, it was rebuilt by 1089 and became a place of refuge for a plague-stricken population. From 1141 to 1171, a Romanesque cathedral was built because Tournai had became the seat of a bishop. Though later additions were made, it is this Romanesque cathedral that still stands today.

On September 14, 1090, after the dreaded disease had abated, the bishop led a great procession through the cathedral to honor Our Lady, who was credited with miraculous cures of sick pilgrims who had poured into the cathedral to pray before her statue. Since then, the Procession of Tournai has taken place every year, except in 1559 when Calvinists violently interrupted the tradition.

In the 13th-century, a Tournai bishop oversaw a stylistic face-lift to the cathedral to keep up with the Gothic architecture popping up all over Europe. He ordered stained-glass windows and had the Romanesque choir replaced by a Gothic one. Before the money ran out, he had created a soaring, graceful choir, modeled on the cathedrals of Amiens, Cologne and Soissons.

The long, low Romanesque nave never did got its Gothic face-lift, but amazingly, the result is not disharmony but a rather compatible marriage of the two styles.

What to See

Paintings by Rubens and Jordaens adorn the interior, along with 700-year-old murals, a Renaissance pulpit, and a "rose window" of stained glass.

But even these wonders pale before the display in the Trésor (Treasury), which houses a vast collection of priceless religious relics and antiquities.

The centerpiece of the Treasury is La Chasse de Notre-Dame (The Shrine of Our Lady), a reliquary with a beautiful gold-sculpted covering created by Nicholas of Verdun in 1205; this object takes the place of honor in the Procession of Tournai. The original relics are no longer inside; they were probably destroyed during the Iconoclasm of 1566.

Other treasures include 15th-century tapestries (one 72 feet long!), a jewel-encrusted 10th-century Byzantine cross, and a 14th-century ivory statue of the Virgin.

Quick Facts

Location: Place de l'Evêché (just off the Grand-Place), Tournai, Belgium. Tournai is 72km (45 miles) SW of Brussels; 43km (27 miles) NW of Mons.
Coordinates: 50.606652° N, 3.388617° E
Phone: 069/22-31-91
Hours: Cathedral: Apr-Oct and Nov-Mar daily 9am-noon and 2-6pm; Treasury: Apr-Oct Mon-Sat 10:15-11:45am and 2-5:45pm, Sun 2-4:45pm; Nov-Mar Mon-Sat 10:15-11:45am and 2-3:45pm, Sun 2-3:45pm
Cost: Free admission to Cathedral; Treasury 1€

Location Map

Below is a location map and aerial view of Tournai Cathedral. Using the buttons on the left, zoom in for a closer look or zoom out to get your bearings. Click and drag the map to move around. For a larger view, see our Belgium Map or get our free Google Earth download.

Sources

  1. Personal visit (July 25, 2008).
  2. Frommer's Belgium.

More Information




Sacred Destinations Home    Contact Us    About Us    About Images    Photo Prints    Advertise    Travel Blog    Spiritual Tours    Travel Blog    Timeshares    Privacy Policy
Except where indicated otherwise, all content and images © 2005-08 Sacred Destinations. All rights reserved.
Free content for your Google homepage or website! Get our photo gadget.
Sacred Destinations is an online travel guide to sacred sites, pilgrimages, holy places, religious history, sacred places, historical religious sites, archaeological sites,
religious festivals, sacred sites, spiritual retreats, religious travel and spiritual journeys. We are a Yahoo Pick!
Popular categories: Ancient Mysteries, Biblical Sites, Cathedrals, Catholic Shrines, Dead on Display, Footsteps of Jesus, Luther Sites