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Notre-Dame’s bells have been blessed as the cathedral reopens – a tradition that dates back to the middle ages


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Author: Madeleine Burgess, PhD Candidate in History, Bangor University

Original article: https://theconversation.com/notre-dames-bells-have-been-blessed-as-the-cathedral-reopens-a-tradition-that-dates-back-to-the-middle-ages-244961


Ahead of the reopening of Notre-Dame cathedral in Paris, eight of the cathedral’s church bells were renovated and blessed before their re-installation in the north tower.

Philippe Jost, who has overseen the cathedral’s restoration following the devastating fire in 2019, described the re-installation of the bells as a “beautiful, important and symbolic step”. He called them the “voice of the cathedral”.

The sound of church bells has filled European landscapes for more than 800 years. And over that time, many cathedral fires have required a reinstallation of the bells.

In 1320, for example, the belltower of Bangor Cathedral in north Wales burnt down. As a result, its bishop requested a pardon from the yearly church tax.

Around the same time, the Bangor Pontifical, a religious document of instructions and observances for the bishop, was created. It contains the only known medieval instructions for bell blessings in the UK.


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Bell blessings, also known as the “baptism of bells”, vary slightly between religious denominations and countries. But typically, they involve anointing the outside and inside of the bells with oil, then lighting incense underneath them.

During bell blessings, the bells themselves can be named – usually after a saint – and sometimes given a corresponding inscription. The names chosen typically depended on who paid for the bell: if it was the local community, the bell was usually named after the saint the church was dedicated to, or a saint associated with the area.

This was the case at Saint Bartholomew’s Priory in West Smithfield, London. The treble, the smallest bell, was inscribed circa 1510 with Sancte Bartholemeo Ora Pro Nobis, meaning “Saint Bartholomew pray for us”.

A person or guild paying for a bell may pick a saint that reflects their career, life or private devotional practices. For example, a bell-ringer may dedicate a bell to Saint Dunstan, who is the patron saint of bell-ringers due to his early experimentation in forging bells at the turn of the 10th century.

The Emmanuel bell in the south tower of Notre-Dame cathedral.
agsaz/Shutterstock

Peals of protection

During the Middle Ages, it was believed that divine intervention could be requested by ringing a church bell, which would then benefit all who heard it. By naming a bell, people were requesting that specific saint’s intervention. In death, church bells would ring to protect the deceased’s soul from demons while their soul travelled to Purgatory.

During storms, bells associated with Saint Agatha were believed to protect the soundscape (the area in which the bells can be heard) from the evil spirits believed to cause bad weather and unrest.

Italian chronicler and archbishop of Genoa, Jacobus de Voragine, described this in 1230 in his book of saint biographies, The Golden Legend:

The evil spirits that be in the region of the air, doubt much when they hear the trumpets of God which be the bells rung, and when they see the banners borne on high. And this is the cause why the bells be rung when it thundereth, and when great tempests and outrages of weather happen, to the end that the fiends and the evil spirits should be abashed and flee, and cease of the moving of tempests.

Notre-Dame’s bells ring out for the first time since the 2019 fire.

Thanks to their promise of divine intervention, supernatural protection from evil spirits and vital use for communication, church bells became central to life in the Middle Ages.

In 1552, the bishop of Worcester, Hugh Latimer, claimed that “if all the bells in England should be rung together at a certain hour, I think there would be almost no place, but some bells might be heard there”.

While not every inch of the countryside would have been covered with the sound of bells, a 2015 case study of a medieval village in Oxfordshire did find that the village boundary coincided almost exactly with the sound boundary of the church bells. This emphasises both the significance that medieval people placed on the aural protection of church bells, and the importance of the bells for communication.

It is no surprise that the Notre-Dame’s bells have been missed. With their powers of protection and communication, this step is a richly symbolic moment in the cathedral’s restoration.

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