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・ Basilica of Saint John the Evangelist
・ Basilica of Saint Joseph Oriol
・ Basilica of Saint Lawrence
・ Basilica of Saint Lawrence outside the Walls
・ Basilica of Saint Martin of Tours
・ Basilica of Saint Mary (Minneapolis)
・ Basilica of Saint Mary of the Chorus
・ Basilica of Saint Mary of the Immaculate Conception (Norfolk, Virginia)
・ Basilica of Saint Michael
・ Basilica of Saint Paul Outside the Walls
・ Basilica of Saint Servatius
・ Basilica of Saint Stanislaus Kostka
・ Basilica of Saint-Ferjeux
・ Basilica of Saint-Martin d'Ainay
・ Basilica of Saint-Pierre-aux-Nonnains
Basilica of Saint-Quentin
・ Basilica of Saint-Romain
・ Basilica of Sainte-Anne-de-Beaupré
・ Basilica of Saints Cyril and Methodius (Danville, Pennsylvania)
・ Basilica of Saints Justus and Pastor
・ Basilica of Saints Nazarius and Celsus
・ Basilica of Saints Peter and Paul (Lewiston, Maine)
・ Basilica of San Albino
・ Basilica of San Clemente al Laterano
・ Basilica of San Domenico
・ Basilica of San Domenico, Siena
・ Basilica of San Francesco
・ Basilica of San Francesco (Siena)
・ Basilica of San Francesco, Bologna
・ Basilica of San Frediano


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Basilica of Saint-Quentin : ウィキペディア英語版
Basilica of Saint-Quentin

The Basilica of Saint-Quentin (French: Basilique de Saint-Quentin), formerly the Collegiate Church of Saint-Quentin (French: Collégiale Saint-Quentin) is a Catholic church in the town of Saint-Quentin, Aisne, France.
There have been religious buildings on the site since the 4th century AD, which were repeatedly destroyed and rebuilt during the Early Middle Ages.
The present basilica was constructed in stages between the 12th and 15th centuries.
It was severely damaged in World War I (1914–18), and was only reopened in 1956 after extensive reconstruction.
==Origins==

The town of Saint-Quentin has been identified with the Roman city of Augusta Veromandurorum, a commercial center at an important crossroads.
It takes its present name from the Christian missionary Saint Caius Quintinus, who was beheaded there in 287 AD.
Legend says the body was found many years later in the nearby marches of the River Somme by a Roman widow named Eusebia.
She reburied the remains at the top of the hill at the center of the present town and built a small shrine to the martyr.
Excavations round the crypt of the present church have indeed found traces of a building from this date.
Some sources say the town became the seat of a bishopric around 365, but after barbarians destroyed it in 531 the bishop moved to Noyon.
The chapel is listed as a pilgrimage destination by Gregory of Tours (–594) .
Saint Eligius (–660), Bishop of Noyon and counselor to Dagobert I, Merovingian king of France, rediscovered the tomb in the 7th century "under the pavement of the basilica".
There are records of Saint Eligius having enlarged the building. Remains of a floor from this period have been found near the crypt.
A large fragment of mosaic has been preserved.
The first community of monks was established in or around Saint-Quentin by the mid-7th century, probably by Irish monks with the backing of the bishops of Noyon.
The bishops claimed ecclesiastic jurisdiction of most of Vermandois, including Saint-Quentin.
The church was rebuilt with the assistance of Charlemagne (–814), and consecrated by Pope Stephen IV.
There may have been two churches in the early Middle Ages, one dedicated to Saint Quentin and the other to the Virgin Mary.
Archaeologists have found the remains of walls from the Carolingian period, when the location was a flourishing monastery and pilgrimage site.
Limited archaeological investigations indicate that the crypt in the section of the nave between the two transepts may have replaced a Carolingian crypt with a circular corridor.
The church was burned down by the Normans in 816, rebuilt in 824 and burned down again in 883.
The site was fortified after 883.
In 900 the bodies of Saint-Quentin and two other saints were placed in stone sarcophagi in a newly constructed crypt.
In the 10th century the Herbertian counts of Vermandois, principally Adalbert I (Albert the Pious –987), replaced the monks with a congregation of secular canons. The counts claimed the title of abbot, and were overlords of the church.
A dean administered the collegiate church.
The dean was appointed by the count and reported only to the count, not to the bishop of Noyon and then to the archbishop of Reims.
There are records of rebuilding in the mid-10th century.
The church was damaged during local warfare in 1102-03.
At one time Count Raoul of Vermandois (-52) was thought to have rebuilt the church, but this now seems unlikely.
The canons of the collegiate chapter lived in separate houses within the church precincts, and most were not ordained priests.
Often they were property owners and businessmen from noble families and main role was to administer the chapter's property.
By 1200 the chapter was large and prosperous, with 72 canons.
The semi-independent counts of Vermandois were originally closely associated with Flanders, but gradually came under French control, a process that was completed when Eleanor of Vermadois died in 1214. That year Cardinal Robert of Courçon instituted a reform whereby ordained parish priests in nine parish churches would administer the sacraments, independent of the chapter, although they would pay the chapter a portion of their fees for baptisms, marriages and funerals.
The construction of the huge new collegiate church may have been motivated in part by a desire of the collegiate chapter to reassert its authority after loss of jurisdiction to the town authorities and the parish priests.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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