France
France facts and history in brief
Mont Saint Michel
Excerpted from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Mont Saint Michel is a small rocky islet, roughly one
kilometer from the north coast of France at the mouth
of the Couesnon River, near Avranches in Normandy,
close to the border of Brittany.
It is home to the unusual Benedictine Abbey and
steepled church (built between the 11th and 16th
centuries) which occupy most of the one-kilometer-diameter
clump of rocks jutting out of the
waters of the English Channel.
Formation
Since the beginning of time the bay had been covered
by the sea, which retreated during multiple glaciations,
allowing erosion to shape the coastal
landscape over millions of years.
Several blocks of granite or granulite emerged in the bay,
having resisted the wear and tear of the ocean
better than the surrounding rocks.
These included the Mont-Dol, Tombelaine, Lillemer and
Mont Tombe, later called Mont Saint Michel.
Tidal island
The Mount is connected to the mainland via a thin
natural land bridge, which before modernization was
covered at high tide and revealed at low tide.
Thus, Mont Saint Michel gained a mystical quality,
being an island half the time, and being attached
to land the other: a tidal island.
However the insular character of the mount has been
compromised by several developments.
Over the centuries, the coastal flats have been
pulverised to create pasture.
The coast south of the mount has thus encroached on
the distance between the shore and the mount.
The Couesnon River has been canalised, reducing
the flow of water and thereby
encouraging a silting-up of the bay.
In 1879, the land bridge was fortified
into a true causeway.
This prevented the tide from scouring
the silt round the mount.
Now there are plans to remove the causeway
and replace it with a bridge and shuttle.
History
Le Mont-St-Michel was used in the 6th and 7th
centuries as an Armorican stronghold of
Romano-British culture and power, until it was
sacked by the Franks; thus ending the trans-channel
culture that had stood since the
departure of the Romans in 459 AD.
Before the construction of the first monastic
establishment in the 8th century, the
island was called Mont Tombe.
According to legend, the archangel Michael
appeared to St. Aubert, bishop of Avranches,
in 708 and instructed him to build
a church on the rocky islet.
Aubert repeatedly ignored the angel's instruction,
until Michael burned a hole in the
bishop's skull with his finger.
The dedication to St Michael
occurred on October 16, 708.
The mount gained strategic significance in 933
when the Normans annexed the Cotentin Peninsula,
thereby placing the mount on the
new frontier with Brittany.
It is depicted in the Bayeux Tapestry, which
commemorates the 1066 Norman conquest of England.
Ducal and royal patronage financed the
spectacular Norman architecture of
the abbey in subsequent centuries.
The wealth and influence of the abbey extended
to many daughter foundations, including St
Michael's Mount in Cornwall, England.
However, its popularity and prestige as a
centre of pilgrimage waned with the Reformation
and by the time of the French Revolution
there were scarcely any monks in residence.
The abbey was closed and converted into a prison,
initially to hold clerical opponents
of the republican régime.
High-profile political prisoners followed,
but by 1836 influential figures, including Victor
Hugo, had launched a campaign to restore what was
seen as a national architectural treasure.
The prison was finally closed in 1863, and the mount
was declared a historic monument in 1874.
The Mont Saint Michel and its bay were added
to the UNESCO list of World
Heritage Sites in 1979.
Design
An Italian architect, William de Volpiano, was
chosen as building contractor for the
mount in the 11th century.
He designed the roman church of the abbey, daringly
placing the transept crossing at the top of the mount.
Many underground crypts and chapels had to be built
to compensate for this weight.
These formed the basis for the supportive upward
structure that can be seen today.
Robert de Thorigny, a great supporter of Henry II
of England (who was also Duke of Normandy),
reinforced the structure of the buildings and built
the main façade of the church in the 12th century.
Following his annexation of Normandy in 1204, the
King of France, Philip Augustus offered abbot
Jourdain a grant for the construction of a new
gothic style architectural set which included
the addition of the refectory and cloister.
Tides
The tides in the area shift quickly, and has been
described by Victor Hugo as "à la vitesse d'un cheval
au galop" or as swiftly as a galloping horse.
However, this is an exaggeration, as the tide
actually comes in at 1 metre per second.
The tides can vary greatly, at roughly 14 meters
between high and low water marks.
Popularly nicknamed St. Michael in peril of the
sea by mediaeval pilgrims making their way across
the tidal flats, the mount can still pose dangers
for visitors who avoid the causeway and attempt
the hazardous walk across the sands
from the neighbouring coast.
The dangers from the tides and quicksands
continue to claim lives.
Administration
The islet belongs to the French commune Le
ont-Saint-Michel, of the Manche département,
in the Basse-Normandie région.
Population (1999): 50.
Miscellaneous
The mount is the object of traditional, but
nowadays good-humoured, rivalry
between Normans and Bretons.
Bretons claim that, since the Couesnon River
marks the traditional boundary between
Normandy and Brittany, it is only because the
river has altered its course over the centuries
that has placed the mount on the
Norman side of the frontier.
Normans display a certain proprietorial pride in
the mount - for example, the Manche département
in which the mount is situated uses its silhouette
in its logo - and affect mild irritation on
occasions when Brittany uses the
mount in tourist publicity.
The commune belongs to the Organization
of World Heritage Cities.
The 1990 Fritjof Capra film Mindwalk
was filmed on the mount.
British electronic music artist Aphex
Twin released a song entitled Mt. Saint
Michel Mix+St. Michaels Mount, which was
reportedly produced on his travels
in both of these locations.
Feudal Era Japanese samurai Samanosuke
Akechi visited Mont Saint Michel in the
video game Onimusha 3: Demon Siege.
External links
For a more information about
Mont_Saint_Michel see Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This page was retrieved and condensed from
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mont_Saint_Michel)
December 2005
All text is available under the terms of the
GNU Free Documentation License (see
Copyrights for details).
About Wikipedia
Disclaimers
This information was correct in December 2005. E. &
O.E.
In 2005 Hui Chin and I decided to check
out Mont Saint Michel, as some of the pictures we
have seen of the place look pretty impressive, to
say the least, mind boggling
maybe more to the point.
Well seeing it from the bus window for the
first time on approaching it,
looks just as impressive, phantasmagoric.
You can click on these photos for an enlargement.
2005
|
|
|
|
Mont Saint Michelle |
Mont Saint Michelle |
Mont Saint Michelle |
Mont Saint Michelle |
|
|
|
|
Mont Saint Michelle |
Mont Saint Michelle |
Mont Saint Michelle |
Mont Saint Michelle |
|
|
|
|
Mont Saint Michelle |
Mont Saint Michelle |
Mont Saint Michelle |
Mont Saint Michelle |
|
|
|
|
Mont Saint Michelle |
Mont Saint Michelle |
Mont Saint Michelle |
Mont Saint Michelle |
|
|
|
|
Mont Saint Michelle |
Mont Saint Michelle |
Mont Saint Michelle |
Mont Saint Michelle |
|
|
|
|
Mont Saint Michelle |
Mont Saint Michelle |
Mont Saint Michelle |
Mont Saint Michelle |
|
|
|
|
Mont Saint Michelle |
Mont Saint Michelle |
Mont Saint Michelle |
Mont Saint Michelle |
|
|
|
|
Mont Saint Michelle |
Mont Saint Michelle |
Mont Saint Michelle |
Mont Saint Michelle |
|
|
|
|
Mont Saint Michelle |
Mont Saint Michelle |
Mont Saint Michelle |
Mont Saint Michelle |
|
|
|
|
Mont Saint Michelle |
Mont Saint Michelle |
Mont Saint Michelle |
Mont Saint Michelle |
Site
Index
Back to Top
Photos Index
Thanks for coming, I hope you
have enjoyed it, will recommend
it to your friends, and will come
back later to see my site developing
and expanding.
I'm trying to make my pages
enjoyable and trouble free for everyone,
please let me know of any mistakes
or trouble with links, so I can
fix any problem as soon as possible.
These pages are best viewed with monitor
resolution set at 640x480 and kept simple
on purpose so everyone can enjoy them
across all media and platforms.
Thank you.
You can e-mail me at
Webmaster
|