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St. Sava Church, Paris

Buildings and structures in the 18th arrondissement of ParisEastern Orthodox church buildings in ParisEurope Eastern Orthodox church stubsFrench church stubsSaint Sava
Serbian Orthodox church buildings in France
Church of Saint Sava, Paris
Church of Saint Sava, Paris

St. Sava's Church (Serbian: Црква Светог Саве) in Paris is a Serbian Orthodox church in France. The church had been used as Protestant church in the past. From 1962 it was rented for worship, and in 1984 it was purchased and converted to the Serbian Orthodox Church. The church is located at the address 23 rue du Simplon, in the 18th arrondissement.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article St. Sava Church, Paris (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

St. Sava Church, Paris
Rue du Simplon, Paris Quartier de Clignancourt (Paris)

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 48.893611111111 ° E 2.35 °
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Address

Église Saint-Sava

Rue du Simplon 23
75018 Paris, Quartier de Clignancourt (Paris)
Ile-de-France, France
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Church of Saint Sava, Paris
Church of Saint Sava, Paris
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Nearby Places

Notre-Dame de Clignancourt
Notre-Dame de Clignancourt

Notre-Dame de Clignancourt (Our Lady of Clignancourt) is a Roman Catholic church located in the 18th arrondissement of Paris. Completed in 1863, the church takes its name from Clignancourt, a small village in the commune of Montmartre that was annexed to Paris in 1860. It was one of three new parishes created to accommodate the growing population in the northern edge of the city.The cornerstone was laid by the French city planner Georges-Eugène Haussmann in 1859. It was designed in the Neo-Romanesque style by Paul-Eugène Lequeux and completed in 1863. Many valuable pieces of furniture and religious objects were donated by Empress Eugenie, the wife of Napoleon III, but were lost or damaged when the church was pillaged in the violence leading up to the Paris Commune in 1870.The church still contains paintings and frescos by prominent 19th-century artists, including Romain Cazes and Félix-Joseph Barrias, and a large marble sculpture depicting the Pietà. The stained glass windows in the lower part of the church are largely from the Art Deco period. The windows in the choir, depicting the Holy Trinity and the Litany of Loreto, were made by Jacques Le Chevallier in the 1970s.The organ in Notre-Dame de Clignancourt was built by Joseph Merklin. Several prominent musicians are associated with the church. Gabriel Fauré and Victor Sieg both served as organists there. Louis Vierne played the organ for the funeral of the French violinist Henri Adam held at the church in 1890, and the composer André Jolivet attended the church's choir school in his youth.