Installed in the nave of Reims Cathedral — the coronation church of French kings for over 800 years — the original labyrinth was a masterwork destroyed in 1779 by Canon Jacquemart, who found the noise of parishioners walking it during services unbearable. The square design with rounded corners was unique among Gothic cathedral labyrinths. Inaugurated in 2009, a light projection now recreates the labyrinth on the nave floor. At 320.90° Giza bearing, Reims sits at the heart of Champagne's chalk aquifer system. The cathedral's role in coronation ritual — from Clovis in 496 to Charles X in 1825 — made its labyrinth a symbolic passage through which royal power was consecrated, blending Christian and pre-Christian initiatory traditions.
WikipediaLabyrinth Details
Pattern
Medieval Reims
Circuits
11 paths, 12 walls
Diameter
10.3m
Material
tile
Age
13th century (destroyed 1779)
Condition
destroyed
Country
France
Region
Marne, Grand Est
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