Condom Cathedral (
Cathédrale Saint-Pierre de Condom) is a former
Catholic cathedral, and a national monument of
France, located in
Condom,
Gers. It was formerly the seat of the
Bishops of Condom; the diocese was added to the
Archdiocese of Auch in 1822.
Building description
The cathedral dominates the town, which sits on a hill above the
Baïse River. It was designed at the end of the 15th century, and built 1506-31, one of the last major buildings in the
Gers region to be constructed in the
Gothic style of south-west
France. The church has
buttresses all around and there is a 40 metre square tower over the west front. The west front door has the
Four Evangelists' symbols in the
tympanum, and the south nave door in the
Flamboyant Gothic style still has 24 small statues in the niches of the
archivolt.
Inside, the wide, aisleless nave is lit by the clerestory windows with grisaille glass. At night, the lights on the Flamboyant tracery of the clerestory windows are a lovely sight. There is a neo-Gothic rood screen (or jubé) from 1844 around the chancel which forms a pseudo-ambulatory. The stained glass in the choir is from the 19th century. This cathedral was famous for its sumptuous 16th century liturgy, and for its organ of 1605 at the west end. This is commemorated in the choir vault bosses with figures of angel musicians. The original pulpit with its delicately-carved stone baldaquin is still in place. The 16th century cloister is now a public passageway adjoining a car park, the exterior of which is attractively illuminated at night.
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