Here are some videos of churches built in Western Europe during the 11th and early 12th centuries, some of them with stories of their history:
Conques Abbey
Also see the video of Saint Pierre de Moissac of the Cluniac monks here, which I cannot embed.
Vézelay, la Madeleine;
Chartres Cathedral - West Wall:
The 3 lower windows and the royal portals beneath them, shown in the next video of the west wall of Chartres Cathedral, date back to the mid- twelfth century. The rose window above them is more recent, as is most of the present building.
Bonjour Theresa,
That is certainly a very exhausting article about the building of the Chartres cathedral.
However, you do not give your personal opinion about the question "did Christianity start the "Dark Ages"?
Georg
Posted by: Georg Hausherr | May 20, 2007 at 03:45 AM
Bonjour, Georg. My opinion about the question "did Christianity start the Dark Ages" is given in Parts I through III of the series. Christianity did not start the Dark Ages. Moreover, in Part IV, I gave my opinion that Christianity was actually instrumental in bringing Western Europe out of the Dark Ages during the time of rebuilding. In this Part V, I did not summarize all of that at the ending because I wanted to write here about building and endurance, despite the fires, and not about the decline.
Posted by: Teresa Polk | May 20, 2007 at 07:24 AM