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MONT ST MICHEL , a rocky islet of western See also: France, off the See also: coast of the department of See also: Manche, some 6 m
.
N. of Pontorson
.
Pop
.
(1906), 238
.
It forms a towering mass of granite about 3000 ft. in circumference and 165 ft. in height, rising near the mouth of the Couesnon nearly a mile from the See also: shore, to which it is See also: united by a See also: causeway
.
The fortress-abbey to which Mont St Michel owes its fame stands upon the more precipitous See also: side of the islet towards the See also: north and west, the sloping portion towards the See also: east and See also: south being occupied by houses
.
A strong machicolated and turreted See also: wall surrounds the See also: rock, See also: running along its See also: base on the south, ascending See also: half-way up the cliff on the north, on which side it stands close to the abbey wall, and again descending on the west
.
The See also: northern and See also: oldest portion of the ramparts See also: dates from the 13th century; the single gateway by which they are pierced is on the south and is a See also: good example of the military architecture of the 15th century
.
The single street of the See also: island curves from the gateway up to the abbey, ending in flights of steps leading to the See also: donjon or See also: chatelet
.
It is bordered by old houses, among which is one built by Bertrand du Guesclin in 1366, and contains a parish See also: church of the 15th century
.
The abbey itself consists of an assemblage of buildings in three storeys upon massive
See also: foundations around the church, the most important portion, the Merveille, extending to the north
.
The floor of the church, built partly on the rock, partly upon foundations, and, at the east end, over a crypt, is on a level with the uppermost storey of the monastic buildings
.
To the north of and below the apse lies theSee also: group of buildings known as the Belle-See also: Chaise
.
It comprises the chatelet (15th century), a square entrance structure strengthened by flanking turrets and See also: machicolation, the adjoining guard-See also: room (13th century) with the salle
See also: des officiers above it, and behind all the Tour Perrine
.
The Merveille (1203—1264) consists of two continuous buildings of three storeys, that on the east containing, one above the other, the See also: hospitium (aumonerie), refectory and dormitory, that on the west the cellar, knights' See also: hall (salle des chevaliers) and cloister
.
Of the apartments, all of the finest
See also: Gothic architecture, the chief are the refectory, divid'ed down the centre by columns and lighted by large embrasured windows, and the knights' hall, a superb chamber, the vaulting of which is supported on three rows of cylindrical pillars
.
The cloister, one of the purest and most graceful See also: works of the 13th century, is surrounded by See also: double lines of slender columns carrying pointed arcades, between which delicate floral designs are carved
.
The exterior wall of the Merveille is of remarkable boldness; reaching a height of ro8 ft., it is supported by twenty buttresses and pierced with a variety of openings
.
The church, which rises high above the buildings clustering round it, consists of transepts and four bays of the See also: nave of Romanesque architecture and of a See also: fine choir (1450—1521) in the Flamboyant Gothic See also: style with a See also: triforium surmounted by lofty windows
.
This choir replaced one which collapsed in 1431
.
In 1776 three of the seven bays of the nave were pulled down, and soon after the incongruous western front was added
.
The finest See also: part of the exterior is the choir, which is ornamented with a profusion of carved pinnacles and balustrading
.
The central tower terminates in a Gothic See also: spire surmounted by a gilded See also: bronze statue of St Michael
.
Mont St Michel was a sacred place from the earliest times
.
In the 8th century an oratory was established there by St Aubert,See also: bishop of See also: Avranches, in obedience to the commands of an apparition of St Michael
.
The place soon became a noted resort of pilgrims, not only from all parts of France, but also from See also: Great Britain, See also: Ireland and See also: Italy
.
In 966 See also: Richard I., duke of See also: Normandy, founded in place of the oratory a See also: Benedictine monastery, which in the succeeding century received a considerable share of the spoils of the See also: conquest of See also: England
.
In 1203 the monastery was burnt by the troops of See also: Philip
See also: Augustus, who afterwards furnished large sums for its restoration (La Merveille)
.
St See also: Louis made a pilgrimage to Mont St Michel, and afterwards supplied funds which were spent on the fortifications
.
A garrison and military governor subordinate to the
See also: abbot were also installed
.
During the last
See also: thirty years of the See also: Hundred Years' War the abbey offered a persistent resistance to the See also: English
.
In 1469 Louis XI. instituted the See also: Order of St Michel, which held its meetings in the salle des chevaliers
.
During the See also: Wars of See also: Religion, the See also: Huguenots repeatedly made unsuccessful attempts to seize the fortress, which opened its See also: gates to See also: Henry IV. in 1595 after his abjuration
.
In 1622 the Benedictine monks of Mont St Michel were replaced by monks of the
See also: Congregation of St Maur
.
In the 18th and ,9th centuries the abbey was used as a prison for See also: political offenders, serving this purpose until 1863, when an extensive restoration, begun in 1838, was resumed
.
The See also: building is the See also: property of the Commission of See also: Historical Monuments, which has carried on the See also: work of restoration with great architectural and antiquarian ability
.
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