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The Rooster of Notre-Dame will regain its place at its peak this Saturday

It is an emblematic element of Notre-Dame.

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The Rooster of Notre-Dame will regain its place at its peak this Saturday

It is an emblematic element of Notre-Dame. His rooster is due to be returned to its place atop the spire on Saturday afternoon, marking another major milestone less than a year before the cathedral's planned reopening.

The previous rooster having been too damaged during the fire which ravaged the monument in 2019, a new one, designed by the chief architect of historical monuments Philippe Villeneuve, was built and will be blessed on the ground by the Archbishop of Paris , Monsignor Laurent Ulrich, before being craned to the top of the spire, 96 meters above the ground.

It will contain relics saved from the fire, precious to Catholics. In this case, it is a fragment of Christ's crown of thorns, the bones of Saint-Denys, first bishop of Paris in the 3rd century, and the bones of Sainte-Geneviève, patron saint of the city of Paris died around the year 500.

Another sealed tube will be placed in the rooster, containing the names of all the people who took part in the reconstruction, almost 2,000.

On December 8, President Emmanuel Macron visited the construction site, one year to the day before the planned reopening of the cathedral, to which he intends to invite Pope Francis. It was notably announced that the old rooster would take its place in “a museum of the work of Notre-Dame de Paris”, which should see the light of day “in the premises of the Hôtel-Dieu”, nearby on the Île de la Cité.

A spectacular fire ravaged the cathedral on April 15, 2019, whose spire, designed by the 19th century architect Eugène Viollet-le-Duc, collapsed, sparking global emotion.

The new spire, still corseted by a forest of scaffolding, has reappeared in the sky of Paris, topped since December 6 with its cross.

A few days earlier, the head of reconstruction, Philippe Jost, who succeeded General Jean-Louis Georgelin after his sudden death this summer, had indicated that once the spire had reached 96 meters, the stage of “the lead cover” so “that the scaffolding, which largely hides the arrow, can come down”.

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