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Getting to the Cluny Museum from Sainte-Chapelle involved crossing the Seine via the Pont St-Michel and passing through the Place St-Michel. From here it was a short walk down the Boulevard St-Michel to the museum, at the corner of the Boulevard St-Germain.

Public Toilet, Ile de la Cité
Public Toilet, Ile de la Cité
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Seine and Left Bank
Seine and Left Bank
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Seine and Place St-Michel
Seine and Place St-Michel
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The Cluny Museum
The Cluny Museum
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The Cluny Museum, or Musée de Cluny (official name Musée National du Moyen Âge, or National Museum of the Middle Ages), houses Renaissance and pre-Renaissance artifacts from throughout Europe, with an emphasis on things French. The Cluny name comes from its former life as the town house of the abbots of Cluny. It was first built in the 14th Century atop and among the ruins of a Gallo-Roman bath complex from the 3rd Century A.D. The baths were apparently built by the Romans in an attempt to “Romanize” the Gauls. This didn’t work out that well – the fact that the baths were built outside the city’s fortifications left them vulnerable to attack, and they were pretty much trashed by the end of the century in which they were built. But some of the walls have survived and have been incorporated into the structure of the museum, and one structure, the frigidarium, is pretty much intact.

Nella in the Frigidarium
Nella in the Frigidarium
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In the Frigidarium
In the Frigidarium
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After the time of the abbots, the main building was rebuilt in Renaissance style and spent the centuries as a residence for an assortment of people (including the sister of Henry VIII of England, the astronomer Charles Messier, who used it as an observatory, and a physician who used its chapel as a dissecting room). It became a museum in 1843, starting with a collection of artifacts left by archeologist and art collector Alexandre du Sommerard, who had died a year earlier.

Museum Forecourt
Museum Forecourt
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Nella with Sundial
Nella with Sundial
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Bob in Forecourt

Bob in Forecourt
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Since that time, additional artifacts, including new discoveries, have been acquired and put on display. This includes the heads of 21 of the 28 king statues (discovered in 1977) that were removed from the Notre-Dame cathedral and decapitated during the French Revolution.

Kings of Judah (Modern Copies)

Kings of Judah (Modern Copies)
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Heads of Kings of Judah
Heads of Kings of Judah (13th C.)
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Decapitated Kings
Decapitated Kings
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Entry to the Cluny Museum was included in our Museum Passes. We entered the museum by passing through a bookstore and using a doorway to the left. The collection of artifacts we saw was well-preserved and amazing (you can see more at their website).

Statues and Altarpiece
Statues and Altarpiece
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Altarpiece of the Passion
Altarpiece of the Passion (16th C.)
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Tapestry - Deliverance of St. Peter
Tapestry - The Deliverance of St. Peter (ca. 1460)
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Carved Figure
Carved Figure
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Alabaster Panels
Alabaster Panels (England, 15th C.)
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Sainte-Chapelle Glass Panel
Sainte-Chapelle Glass Panel (13th C.)
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Saints in Glass
Saints in Glass (Rouen, ca. 1300)
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Nella Descending Staircase
Nella Descending Staircase
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Notre-Dame Portal Fragments
Notre-Dame Portal Fragments (ca. 1145)
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Ivory Diptych Leaf
Ivory Diptych Leaf (Constantinople, 506 A.D.)
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Ivory Ariadne
Ivory Ariadne (Constantinople, 6th C.)
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Saint-Sulpice Triptych
Saint-Sulpice Triptych (13th C.)
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Nella with Casket, Crucifix and Capitals
Nella with Casket, Crucifix and Capitals
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Bob with Capitals and Crucifix
Bob with Capitals and Crucifix
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St-Germain-des-Prés Capitals
St-Germain-des-Prés Capitals (11th C.)
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Casket Covered in Saints
Casket Covered in Saints
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Columns in Frigidarium
Columns in Frigidarium
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However, we were not able to find a collection of tapestries featuring a lady and a unicorn, billed as the museum’s number one attraction. We passed through all the rooms we could find and ended up back in the bookstore. But then we went into a room to the right, which we’d thought was a storeroom, as we’d seen stacked-up boxes in it, and it turned out to have a stairway to the upper floor of the museum. Here we found more artifacts.

Sword and Helmet
Sword and Helmet (Germany, 16th C.)
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Tapestry - The Grape Harvest
Tapestry - The Grape Harvest (Netherlands, 16th C.)
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Reliquary
Reliquary (15th C.)
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Man Praying, Guys with Sticks
Man Praying, Guys with Sticks
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Mass of St. Gregory
The Mass of St. Gregory (15th C.)
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Crozier Heads, Reliquaries, Hand Warmers
Crozier Heads, Reliquaries, Hand Warmers
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Reliquary
Reliquary (Portugal, 16th C.)
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Carving of Circumcision
Carving of Circumcision
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Altarpiece Detail
Altarpiece Detail
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Eventually we also found the tapestries (we had to go down an unpromising-looking hallway at one point – be sure to get a map if you visit this museum). The tapestries date from the 15th Century, when they were designed in Paris and woven in Flanders. They resided for a time in the Château de Boussac, located well to the south of Paris. They were acquired from the Château by the Cluny in 1882 and are displayed in a controlled setting due to their fragile condition. They have made appearances in popular culture, being the subject of a Tracy Chevalier novel and appearing in the background of the Gryffindor Common Room in the Harry Potter movies. The tapestries feature the lady and the unicorn and other participants in settings intended to represent each of the five senses. Here they are:

Sense of Taste
Sense of Taste
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Sense of Hearing
Sense of Hearing
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Sense of Smell
Sense of Smell
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Sense of Touch
Sense of Touch
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Sense of Touch
Sense of Touch
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To My Only Desire
To My Only Desire
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To My Only Desire
To My Only Desire
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After leaving the museum we found some lunch and went back to the hotel to rest a bit. Refreshed, we reemerged and struck out for our next destination, the Musée d’Orsay.

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