Abbot Suger of Saint-Denis, excerpts from De
Administratione and
Scriptum Consecrationis, trans. and ed. by
Erwin Panofsky (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1946).
[Taken from
http://www.columbia.edu/%7Eeer1/suger.html]
DE ADMINISTRATIONE ["On Administration [of
the church]"]
I.
In the twenty-third year of our administration, when
we sat on a certain day in the general chapter, conferring with our brethren
about matters both common and private, these very beloved brethren and sons
began strenuously to beseech me in charity that I might not allow the fruits of
our so great labors to be passed over in silence; and rather to save for the
memory of posterity, in pen and ink, those increments which the generous
munificence of Almighty God had bestowed upon this church, in the time of our
prelacy, in the acquisition of new assets as well as in the recovery of lost
ones, in the multiplication of improved possessions, in the construction of
buildings, and in the accumulation of gold, silver, most precious gems and very
good textiles. For this one thing they promised us two in return: by such a
record we would deserve the continual fervor of all succeeding brethren in
their prayers for the salvation of our soul; and we would rouse, through this
example, their zealous solicitude for the good care of the church of God. We
thus devoutly complied with their devoted and reasonable requests, not with any
desire for empty glory nor with any claim to the reward of human praise and
transitory compensation....
XXIV. OF THE CHURCH'S DECORATION
. . . The first work on this church which we began
under the inspiration of God [was this]: because of the age of the old walls
and their impending ruin in some places, we summoned the best painters I could
find from different regions, and reverently caused these [walls] to be repaired
and becomingly painted with gold and precious colors. I completed this all the
more gladly because I had wished to do it, if ever I should have an
opportunity, even while I was a pupil in school.
XXV. OF THE FIRST ADDITION TO THE CHURCH
However, even while this was being completed at great
expense, I found myself, under the inspiration of the Divine will and because
of that inadequacy which we often saw and felt on feast days, namely the Feast
of the blessed Denis, the Fair, and very many others (for the narrowness of the
place forced the women to run toward the altar upon the heads of the men as
upon a pavement with much anguish and noisy confusion), encouraged by the
counsel of wise men and by the prayers of many monks (lest it displease God and
the Holy Martyrs) to enlarge and amplify the noble church consecrated by the
Hand Divine; and I set out at once to begin this very thing. In our chapter as
well as in church I implored Divine mercy that He Who is the One, the beginning
and the ending, Alpha and Omega, might join a good end to a good beginning by a
safe middle; that He might not repel from the building of the temple a bloody
man who desired this very thing, with his whole heart, more than to obtain the
treasures of Constantinople. Thus we began work at the former entrance with the
doors. We tore down a certain addition asserted to have been made by
Charlemagne on a very honorable occasion . . . and we set our hand to this
part. As is evident we exerted ourselves incessantly with the enlargement of
the body of the church as well as with the trebling of the entrance and the
doors, and with the erection of high and noble towers....
XXVII. OF THE CAST AND GILDED DOORS
Bronze casters having been summoned and sculptors
chosen, we set up the Main doors on which are represented the Passion of the
Savior and His Resurrection, or rather Ascension, with great cost and much
expenditure for their gilding as was fitting for the noble porch. Also [we set
up] others, new ones on the right side and the old ones on the left beneath the
mosaic which, though contrary to modern custom, we ordered to be executed there
and to be affixed to the tympanum of the portal. We also committed ourselves
richly to elaborate the tower[s] and the upper crenelations of the front, both
for the beauty of the church and, should circumstances require it, for
practical purposes. Further we ordered the year of the consecration, lest it be
forgotten, to be inscribed in copper-gilt letters in the following manner:
"For the splendor of the church
that has fostered and exalted him.
Suger has labored for the splendor
of the church.
Giving thee a share of what is
thine, O Martyr Denis,
He prays to thee to pray that he may
obtain a share of Paradise.
The year was the One Thousand, One
Hundred, and Fortieth
Year of the Word when [this
structure] was consecrated."
The verses on the door, further, are these:
"Whoever thou art, if thou
seekest to extol the glory of these doors,
Marvel not at the gold and the
expense but at the craftsmanship of the work.
Bright is the noble work; but, being
nobly bright, the work
Should brighten the minds, so that
they may travel, through the true lights,
To the True Light where Christ is
the true door.
In what manner it be inherent in
this world the golden door defines:
The dull mind rises in truth through
that which is material
And, in seeing this light, is
resurrected from its former submersion."
And on the lintel:
"Receive, O stern Judge, the
prayers of Thy Suger:
Grant that I be mercifully numbered
among Thy own sheep."
OF THE ENLARGEMENT OF THE UPPER CHOIR
In the same year, cheered by so holy and so auspicious
a work, we hurried to begin the chamber of the divine atonement in the upper
choir where the continual and frequent Victim of our redemption should be
sacrificed in secret without disturbance by the crowds. And, as is found in
[our] treatise about the consecration of this upper structure, we were
mercifully deemed worthy--God helping and prospering us and our concerns--to
bring so holy, so glorious, and so famous a structure to a good end, together
with our brethren and fellow servants.... How much the Hand Divine Which
operates in such matters has protected this glorious work is also surely proven
by the fact that it allowed that whole magnificent building [to be completed]
in three years and three months, from the crypt below to the summits of the
vaults above, elaborated with the variety of so many arches and columns,
including even the consummation of the roof. Therefore the inscription of the
earlier consecration also defines, with only one word eliminated, the year of
completion of this one, thus:
"The year was
One Thousand, One Hundred, Forty and Fourth of the Word when [this structure]
was consecrated."
To these verses of the inscription we choose the
following ones to be added:
"Once the new rear part is
jointed to the part in front,
The church shines with
its middle part brightened.
For bright is that which is brightly
coupled with the bright,
And bright is the noble edifice
which is pervaded by the new light;
Which stands enlarged in our time,
I, who was Suger, being the leader
while it was being accomplished."
Eager to press on my success, since I wished nothing
more under heaven than to seek the honor of my mother church which with
maternal affection had suckled me as a child . . . we devoted ourselves to the
completion of the work and strove to raise and to enlarge the transept wings of
the church [so as to correspond] to the form of the earlier and latter work
that had to be joined by them]....
XXXI. OF THE GOLDEN ALTAR FRONTAL IN THE UPPER CHOIR
Into this panel, which stands in front of his most
sacred body, we have put, according to our estimate, about forty-two marks of
gold; [further] a multifarious wealth of precious gems, hyacinths, rubies,
sapphires, emeralds, and topazes, and also an array of different large pearls
[a wealth] as great as we had never anticipated to find. You could see how
kings, princes, and many outstanding men, following our example, took the rings
off the fingers of their hands and ordered, out of love for the Holy Martyrs, that
the gold, stones, and precious pearls of the rings be put into that panel.
Similarly archbishops and bishops deposited there the very rings of their
investiture as though in a place of safety, and offered them devoutly to God
and His Saints. And such a crowd of dealers in precious gems flocked in on us
from diverse dominions and regions that we did not wish to buy any more than
they hastened to sell, with everyone contributing donations....
Since it seemed proper to place the most sacred bodies
of our Patron Saints in the upper vaults as nobly as we could, and since one of
the side-tablets of their most sacred sarcophagus had been torn off on some
unknown occasion, we put back fifteen marks of gold and took pains to have
gilded its rear side and its superstructure throughout, both below and above,
with about forty ounces. Further we caused the actual receptacles of the holy
bodies to be enclosed with gilded panels of cast copper and with polished
stones, fixed close to the inner stone vaults, and also with continuous gates
to hold off disturbances by crowds; in such a manner, however, that reverend
persons, as was fitting, might be able to see them with great devotion and a
flood of tears....
XXXIII
. . . We hasten to adorn the Main Altar of the blessed
Denis where there was only one beautiful and precious frontal panel from
Charles the Bald, the third Emperor; for at this [altar] we had been offered to
the monastic life. We had it all encased, putting up golden panels on either
side and adding a fourth, even more precious one; so that the whole alter would
appear golden all the way round. On either side, we installed there the two
candlesticks of King Louis, son of Philip, of twenty marks of gold, lest they
might be stolen on some occasion; we added hyacinths, emeralds, and sundry
precious gems; and we gave orders carefully to look out for others to be added
further....
But the rest panel, of marvelous workmanship and
lavish sumptuousness (for the barbarian artists were even more lavish than
ours), we ennobled with chased relief work equally admirable for its form as
for its material, so that certain people might be able to say: The workmanship
surpassed the material....
Often we contemplate, out of sheer affection for the
church our mother, these different ornaments both new and old.... Thus,
when--out of my delight in the beauty of the house of God--the loveliness of
the many colored gems has called me away from external cares, and worthy
meditation has induced me to reflect, transferring that which is material to
that which is immaterial, on the diversity of the sacred virtues: then it seems
to me that I see myself dwelling, as it were, in some strange region of the
Universe which neither exists entirely in the slime of the earth nor entirely
in the purity of Heaven; and that, by the grace of God, I can be transported
from this inferior to that higher world in an anagogical manner. I used to
converse with travelers from Jerusalem and, to my great delight, to learn from
those to whom the treasures of Constantinople and the ornaments of Hagia Sophia
had been accessible, whether the things here could claim some value in
comparison with those there. When they acknowledged that these here were the
more important ones, it occurred to us that those marvels of which we had heard
before might have been put away, as a matter of precaution, for fear of the
Franks, lest through the rash rapacity of a stupid few the partisans of the
Greeks and Latins called upon the scene, might suddenly be moved to sedition
and warlike hostilities; for wariness is preeminently characteristic of the
Greeks. Thus it could happen that the treasures which are visible there, left
[on view] under conditions unsafe on account of disorders. From very many
truthful men, even from the bishop Hugues of Laon, we had heard wonderful and
almost incredible reports about the superiority of Hagia Sophia's and other
churches' ornaments for the celebration of Mass. If this is so--or rather
because we believe it to be so, by their testimony--then such inestimable and
incomparable treasures should be exposed to the judgment of the many....
XXXIV
We also changed to its present form, sympathizing with
their discomfort, the choir of the brethren, which had been detrimental to
health for a long time on account of the coldness of the marble and the copper
and had caused great hardship to those who constantly attended service in
church; and because of the increase in our community (with the help of God), we
endeavored to enlarge it.
We also caused the ancient pulpit, which--admirable
for the most delicate and nowadays irreplaceable sculpture of its ivory
tablets--surpassed human evaluation also by the depiction of antique subjects,
to be repaired after we had reassembled those tablets which were moldering all
too long in, and even under, the repository of the money chests; on the right
side we restored to their places the animals of copper lest so much and
admirable material perish, and had [the whole] set up so that the reading of
Holy Gospels might be performed in a more elevated place. In the beginning of
our abbacy we had already put out of the way a certain obstruction which cut as
a dark wall through the central nave of the church, lest the beauty of the
church's magnitude be obscured by such barriers....
Moreover, we caused to be painted, by the exquisite
hands of many masters from different regions, a splendid variety of new
windows, both below and above; from that first one which begins [the series]
with the Tree of Jesse in the chevet of the church to that which is installed
above the principal door in the church's entrance....
Now, because [these windows] are very valuable on
account of their wonderful execution and the profuse expenditure of painted
glass and sapphire glass, we appointed an official master craftsman for their
protection and repair, and also a goldsmith skilled in gold and silver
ornament, who would receive their allowances and what was adjudged to them in
addition, viz., coins from the altar and flour from the common storehouse of
the brethren, and who could never neglect their duty to look after these [works
of art].
We further caused to be composed seven candlesticks of
enameled and excellently gilded [metal] work, because those which Emperor
Charles had offered to the blessed Denis appeared to be ruined by age.
XXXIV
. . . We also offered to the blessed Denis, together
with some flowers from the crown of the Empress, another most precious vessel
of prase, carved into the form of a boat, which King Louis, son of Philip, had
left in pawn for nearly ten years; we had purchased it with the King's
permission for sixty marks of silver when it had been offered to us for
inspection. It is an established fact that this vessel, admirable for the
quality of the precious stone as well as for the latter's unimpaired quantity,
is adorned with "verroterie cloisonnée" work by St. Eloy
which is held to be most precious in the judgment of all goldsmiths....
We also procured for the services at the aforesaid
altar a precious chalice out of one solid sardonyx, which [word] derives from
"sardius" and "onyx"; in which one [stone] the sard's red
hue, by varying its property, so strongly contrasts with the blackness of the
onyx that one property seems to be bent on trespassing upon the other....
SCRIPTUM CONSECRATIONIS ["Writing about the
Consecration [of the church]"]
II
. . . Through a fortunate circumstance attending this
singular smallness [of the existing church]--the number of the faithful growing
and frequently gathering to seek the intercession of the Saints--the aforesaid
basilica had come to suffer grave inconveniences. Often on feast days,
completely filled, it disgorged through all its doors the excess of the crowds
as they moved in opposite directions, and the outward pressure of the foremost
ones not only prevented those attempting to enter from entering but also
expelled those who had already entered. At times you could see, a marvel to
behold, that the crowded multitude offered so much resistance to those who
strove to flock in to worship and kiss the holy relics, the Nail and Crown of
the Lord, that no one among the countless thousands of people because of their
very density could move a foot; that no one, because of their very congestion,
could [do] anything but stand like a marble statue, stay benumbed or, as a last
resort, scream....
Since in the front part, toward the north, at the main
entrance with the main doors, the narrow hall was squeezed in on either side by
twin towers neither high nor very sturdy but threatening ruin, we began, with
the help of God, strenuously to work on this part, having laid very strong
material foundations for a straight nave and twin towers, and most strong
spiritual ones of which it is said: For other foundation can no man lay than
that is laid, which is Jesus Christ. Leaning upon God's inestimable counsel and
irrefragable aid, we proceeded with Ws so great and so sumptuous work to such
an extent that, while at first, expending little, we lacked much, afterwards,
expending much, we lacked nothing at all and even confessed in our abundance:
Our sufficiency is of God. Through a gift of God a new quarry, yielding very
strong stone, was discovered such as in quality and quantity had never been
found in these regions. There arrived a skillful crowd of masons, stonecutters,
sculptors and other workmen, so that--thus and otherwise--Divinity relieved us
of our fears and favored us with Its goodwill by comforting us and by providing
us with unexpected [resources]....
In carrying out such plans my first thought was for
the concordance and harmony of the ancient and the new work. By reflection, by
inquiry, and by investigation through different regions of remote districts, we
endeavored to learn where we might obtain marble columns or columns the
equivalent thereof. Since we found none, only one thing was left to us,
distressed in mind and spirit: we might obtain them from Rome (for in Rome we
had often seen wonderful ones in the Palace of Diocletian and other Baths) by
safe ships through the Mediterranean, thence through the English Sea and the
tortuous windings of the River Seine, at great expense to our friends and even
requiring payment of passage money to our enemies, the near-by Saracens. For
many years, for a long time, we were perplexed, thinking and making inquiries--when
suddenly the generous munificence of the Almighty, condescending to our labors,
revealed to the astonishment of all and through the merit of the Holy Martyrs,
what one would never have thought or imagined: very fine and excellent
[columns]. Therefore, the greater acts of grace, contrary to hope and human
expectation, Divine mercy had deigned to bestow by [providing] a suitable place
where it could not be more agreeable to us, the greater [acts of gratitude] we
thought it worth our effort to offer in return for the remedy of so great an
anguish. For near Pontoise, a town adjacent to the confines of our territory,
there [was found] a wonderful quarry [which] from ancient times had offered a
deep chasm (hollowed out, not by nature but by industry) to cutters of
millstones for their livelihood. Having produced nothing remarkable thus far,
it reserved, we thought, the beginning of so great a usefulness for so great
and divine a building--as a first offering, as it were, to God and the Holy
Martyrs. Whenever the columns were hauled from the bottom of the slope with
knotted ropes, both our own people and the pious neighbors, nobles and common
folk alike, would tie their arms, chests, and shoulders to the ropes and,
acting as draft animals, drew the columns up; and on the declivity in the
middle of the town the diverse craftsmen laid aside the tools of their trade
and came out to meet them, offering their own strength against the difficulty
of the road, doing homage as much as they could to God and the Holy Martyrs.
There occurred a wonderful miracle worthy of telling which we, having heard it
ourselves from those present, have decided to set down with pen and ink for the
praise of the Almighty and His Saints.
III
On a certain day when, with a downpour of rain, a dark
opacity had covered the turbid air, those accustomed to assist in the work
while the carts were coming down to the quarry went off because of the violence
of the rain. The ox-drivers complained and protested that they had nothing to
do and that the laborers were standing around and losing time. Clamoring, they
grew so insistent that some weak and disabled persons together with a few boys
seventeen in number and, if I am not mistaken, with a priest present--hastened
to the quarry, picked up one of the ropes, fastened it to a column and
abandoned another shaft which was lying on the ground; for there was nobody who
would undertake to haul this one. Thus, animated by pious zeal, the little
flock prayed: "O Saint Denis, if it pleaseth thee, help us by dealing for
thyself with this abandoned shaft, for thou canst not blame us if we are unable
to do it." Then, bearing on it heavily, they dragged out what a hundred
and forty or at least one hundred men had been accustomed to haul from the bottom
of the chasm with difficulty--not alone by themselves, for that would have been
impossible, but through the will of God and the assistance of the Saints whom
they invoked; and they conveyed it to the site of the church on a cart. Thus it
was made known throughout the neighborhood that this work pleased Almighty God
exceedingly, since for the praise and glory of His name He had chosen to give
His help to those who performed it by this and similar signs....