Didn't Q say some were pagan worshippers?
Who was tweeting about bees not long ago?
If I were going to write a fairytale about a cathedral, I would write that a fire that was hot enough to melt its' metal spire, which is supposed to be a lightning rod (metaphorically speaking), was really a symbol/sign to the "family" that their spire = spear (rooster) had fallen.
Now who could that rooster represent that was atop that now fallen spire?
A rooster is a feathered cock that crows at sun-up.
Q taught us that Mockingbirds also crow at 4:00 in the morning.
And my goodness how funny is it that the cathedral has bee hives on its roof. What an odd place to keep bees.
And I always thought all roads lead to Rome but not these roads, they lead to ZERO POINT in Paris.
Excerpts from article below
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/13-facts-about-notre-dame-cathedral/ar-BBVXVhg
13 Facts About Notre-Dame Cathedral
"Constructed between the 12th and 14th centuries, Notre-Dame de Paris has centuries of French history built into its stone. The Gothic cathedral reflects the prominent role of Paris as an economic and spiritual center in the 12th century, and its scars from the French Revolution are reminders of its long connection with the monarchya connection that almost resulted in its demolition.."
1. "A Pagan City Lies Below The Cathedral. The Île-de-la-Cité on which Notre-Dame de Paris now stands was once a Gallo-Roman city known as Lutetia. The cathedral may have been built right over remnants of a temple: Around 1710, pieces of a sculpted altar dedicated to Jupiter and other deities were discovered during an excavation under the choir (although it remains unclear if this is evidence of an ancient temple, or if the pieces were recycled there from another location). Additional architectural ruins found in the 1960s and '70s, many dating back to this ancient era, lie in the archaeological crypt located beneath the square just in front of Notre-Dame."
2. "There's Some Recycled Architecture On Its Façade.
There are three portals on the western façade of Notre-Dame, each laden with sculpted saints and sacred scenes. One doesn't seem to fit, howeverthe Portal Sainte-Anne has a much earlier style than the rest. Its figures, such as the central Virgin and Child, look stiffer in their poses and less natural in ."
3. There's A "Forest" In Its Roof.
"The cathedral contains one of the oldest surviving wood-timber frames in Paris, involving around 52 acres of trees that were cut down in the 12th century. Each beam is made from an individual tree. For this reason, the lattice of historic woodwork is nicknamed "the Forest."
4."Its Flying Buttresses Were Gothic Trendsetters. The cathedral was one of the earliest structures built with exterior flying buttresses. They were constructed around its nave in the 12th century to lend support to the thin walls, after the need for more light in the incredibly tall church required larger windows, and thus greater supports."
5. Twenty-Eight Of Its Kings Lost Their Heads In The French Revolution.
"In 1793, in the midst of the French Revolution, 28 statues of biblical kings in the cathedral were pulled down with ropes and decapitated by a mob. (King Louis XVI was guillotined earlier that year, and any iconography tied to the monarchy was under attack.")
6. The Towers Are Not Twins.
"At first glance, Notre-Dames two towers appear like identical twins. Closer examination reveals that the north tower is in fact a bit bigger than the south."
7. Its Bells Were Once Melted Down For Artillery.
"All 20 of its bellsexcept the colossal 1681 bourdon called Emmanuelwere removed and melted down to make cannons.While the bells at Notre-Dame were replaced in the 19th century, the new instruments were not as finely made as the older versions, and made a more dissonant noise when clanging. Finally, in 2013, a new ensemble of bells restored the cathedral to its 17th-century sound, with the deeply resonant Emmanuel still joining in the toll on special occasions."
8. Napoléon And Victor Hugo Saved It.
"When Napoléon Bonaparte decided to have his 1804 coronation as emperor in Notre-Dame, the building was in bad shape. Centuries of decay as the city developed and changed around it, as well as the vandalism of the French Revolution, had left it on the verge of demolition. For years it had been used as little more than a warehouse. So when Napoléon declared its return to church use, and hosted his grand ceremony within his wallsan event in which he famously crowned himselfit brought Notre-Dame to new prominence.
Then author Victor Hugo used the building as a personification of France itself in his 1831 novel Notre-Dame de Paris.
But noble as it has remained while growing old, one cannot but regret, cannot but feel indignant at the innumerable degradations and mutilations inflicted on the venerable pile, both by the action of time and the hand of man, regardless alike of... Charlemagne, who laid the first stone, and Philip Augustus, who laid the last. On the face of this ancient queen of our cathedrals, beside each wrinkle one invariably finds a scar. 'Tempus edax, homo edacior,' which I would be inclined to translate: 'Time is blind, but man is senseless.'
The book was a success, and the momentum led to a major restoration overseen by architects Jean-Baptiste-Antoine Lassus and Eugène Viollet-le-Duc.
9. Its Monsters Are Modern, Not Medieval.
.."Few visitors would guess that the fantastic creatures now on the cathedral weren't there until the 19th century; they were added between 1843 and 1864 during the radical restoration overseen by Eugène-Emmanuel Viollet-le-Duc."
10. Its Spire Was A Saintly Lightning Rod. "If you look at a photo of the cathedral from before the fire, you'll spy a rooster on top of the spire (which sadly seems to have collapsed during the fire). This rooster was not a purely decorative bird. In 1935, three tiny relicsan alleged piece of the Crown of Thorns and some bits of Saint Denis and Saint Genevieve (the city's patron saints)were secured inside the metal birds body. The idea, the story goes, was to create a sort of spiritual lightning rod to protect the parishioners within."
11. The Organ Is Thought To Be The Largest In France.
"The Notre-Dame organ involves almost 8000 pipes (some dating back to the 18th century) played with five keyboards, making it the biggest pipe organ in France (although some claim that Saint-Eustache has a larger one). While there are some slashes on the wood of the organ loftdamage from the French Revolution, when its fleur-de-lis symbols were carved offit was restored in 2013 to mark the 850th anniversary of the cathedral."
12. All Roads Lead To Notre-Dame De Paris. "Point Zero marker outside Notre-Dame in Paris Mostly overlooked beneath the crowds of tourists milling around outside Notre-Dame is a diminutive circular marker with an eight-pointed bronze star embedded in the cobblestones. Its engraved with the words Point zéro des routes de France, and is the point from which distances are measured from Paris to other cities in France. It was placed there in 1924, although it had to be temporarily dislodged in the 1960s during the excavations for what was intended to be an underground parking garage. Those construction plans were thwarted when workers turned up architectural ruinsnow kept in the archaeological crypt."
13. Bees Live On Its Roof.
"On the Notre-Dame sacristy, adjacent to the cathedral, is a small hive of bees. It was installed in 2013, with Buckfast beesa strain developed by a monk named Brother Adam and known for its gentlenessliving in its hives. Their honey is made from the flowering plants in nearby gardens, including the Square Jean XXIII just behind the cathedral. According to The New York Times, the sweet stuff is given away to the poor."
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/13-facts-about-notre-dame-cathedral/ar-BBVXVhg
“the colossal 1681 bourdon called Emmanuel”
Happened to look up that word ‘bourdon’ a word usually related to organs, a very low stop; ‘bourdon’ comes from the French word for bumblebee. Just sayin’.