Notre-Dame de Germigny-l'Exempt


Notre-Dame de Germigny-l'Exempt is a Roman Catholic church in the town of Germigny-l'Exempt in Berry, France. It was built in the 12th century in the Romanesque architectural tradition.

History

The exceptionally tall bell tower-porch was built after the siege of 1108 by Louis VI the Fat as a symbol of the CapetianPax Dei″. The inconographic program of its inner portal of 1215 is inherited from the North porch of the West portal of the abbey church in Saint-Gilles du Gard and the North porch of the West portal of the Laon Cathedral. The tympanum showing a Sedes Sapientiae is meant to celebrate the triumph of the Church upon the heretics whose common point is to reject the real presence in the eucharist.
Notre-Dame de Germigny-l'Exempt is listed as a monument historique since 1912. According to the Law of 31 December 1913, the object of which is to protect the historical monuments classified by the State, the classified tower-porch of Notre-Dame belongs to the French Republic as its ″inalienable″ property.