
"Where Bernard preached the Crusade, pilgrims sought the Magdalene, and Romanesque sculpture reached its summit"
Basilique de Vézelay
Vézelay, Bourgogne-Franche-Comté, France
On this Burgundian hilltop, Bernard of Clairvaux preached the Second Crusade before Louis VII and Eleanor of Aquitaine. Richard Lionheart and Philip Augustus met here to launch the Third. For centuries before, pilgrims climbed seeking the relics of Mary Magdalene—the apostle to the apostles, whose bones were claimed to rest in the crypt. UNESCO recognized the site in 1979; the tympanum depicting Christ's Mission to the Apostles remains among Romanesque sculpture's supreme achievements.
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Quick Facts
Location
Vézelay, Bourgogne-Franche-Comté, France
Coordinates
47.4660, 3.7484
Last Updated
Jan 18, 2026
Learn More
Vézelay represents the intersection of Magdalene veneration, crusade history, Romanesque achievement, and pilgrimage tradition—all concentrated on one Burgundian hilltop.
Origin Story
Shortly after its 9th-century founding, the abbey acquired what were claimed to be Mary Magdalene's relics—brought, tradition said, from Provence. In 1058, the Pope declared them authentic. Pilgrims came by thousands; at its height in the 12th century, Vézelay's population reached 8,000-10,000, extraordinary for medieval standards. The basilica we see was built 1120-1150 to accommodate the crowds.
Key Figures
Bernard of Clairvaux
Preached Second Crusade here (1146)
Louis VII and Eleanor of Aquitaine
Received Bernard's crusade preaching
Richard Lionheart and Philip Augustus
Met here to launch Third Crusade (1190)
Francis of Assisi
Founded first French Franciscan house here (1217)
Eugène Viollet-le-Duc
Restored collapsing basilica (1840-1859)
Spiritual Lineage
Benedictine/Cluniac foundation. Santiago pilgrimage route. UNESCO World Heritage since 1979. Restored by Viollet-le-Duc who later worked on Notre-Dame de Paris and Mont-Saint-Michel.
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