- Jean de Chelles
Jean or Jehan de Chelles [It is not clear which of the communes named
Chelles was his birthplace.] (working 1258 — 1265) was a master mason and sculptor who was one of the architects at the Cathedral ofNôtre Dame de Paris . On the exterior wall of the south transept a stone plaque is signed "Johanne Magistro" and dated February 1257, documenting the initiation of alterations to the transept and its portal. At 1265 he was replaced in the works by MasterPierre de Montreuil .Jean de Chelles is credited with the south end of the transept of Nôtre Dame de Paris, the portal of the cloister and its rose window, and the portail Saint Etienne.
He is supposed to have worked with Pierre de Montreuil on the
Sainte Chapelle [Robert Branner, "Saint Louis and the Court Style in Gothic Architecture" (London: Zwemmer), 1965:56-84.] and on the Cathedral of Saint Julien,Le Mans . A Jean de Chelles was working on thePalais du Louvre in 1265, under the direction of Raymond du Temple. [Russell Sturgis, "A Dictionary of Architecture and Building, Biographical, Historical, and Descriptive", (Macmillan) 1901, "s.v." "Chelles, Jean de".]The Pierre de Chelles, "Maître de l'Œuvre de la cathédrale de Paris", who, with others, inspected the vaults and other work at
Chartres cathedral in an official capacity, 9 September 1316, may have been a son or nephew, succeeding him at Nôtre Dame de Paris. [Sturgus 1901, "s.v." "Chelles, Pierre de".]Notes
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