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ARTÍCULO
TITULO

The Abbey of Saint-Denis and the Coronation of the King of France

Elodie Leschot    

Resumen

Addressing the coronation issue in France always comes down to talking about Reims, its archbishop, its cathedral, and its Holy Ampulla. If these elements are indeed constitutive of the consecration ceremony, they only became so from the 13th century onwards. Before that, Reims had difficulty asserting its alleged prerogative to welcome the consecration?s ceremony. The practice of ?festival crowing?, practiced by monarchs to assert their authority, did not indeed help the metropolitan Reims to assert its monopoly. In this context, Saint-Denis sought recognition of his rights to host the royal ceremony. Saint-Denis has always been intimately connected to the monarchy and hosted Pepin the first consecration, Pepin the Short and his heirs, in 754. In the 12th century, Abbot Suger?s arrival at Abbey?s head marked a new impetus for the Abbey in this race for prestige. The Saint-Denis church?s reconstruction and its liturgical organization demonstrate the great project that the Abbey pursued through the hosting of the ceremony?s coronation of the Kings of France.

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