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Royal Portal, south bay In response to the Albigensian movement of the 12th century, the south bay of the Royal portal presents the dogma of the Incarnation. It glorifies the Incarnate Wisdom, Christ, and honors his mother, Mary. For medieval theologians, nature affirms the existence ofGod: it is theophany. Christ, by becoming man, forms part ofthis tangible and intelligible world, and his incarnation isthe most perfect theophany. Since Bishop Fulbert (952-1028), the school of Chartres emphasizes man's participation in knowing and improving the cosmos. Both Gilbert de la Porree and Thierry of Chartres stressed that man is the masterof nature and must continue God's work on this earth.
at the top of the lower archivolt the hand of God is present, surrounded by six angels bearing censers
Grammar, a lady with a book and a whip, is the nurse and cradle of philosophy 4
Astronomy, a veiled lady, looking upward and pointed at the constellations 6
Boethius (480-524), translator of Aristotle’s Organon and Cicero’s Topics 7
Arithmetic, a veiled lady sitting, perhaps holding an abacus 8
Geometry, a veiled lady looking at the drawing board, her right hand might be holding a compass 9
Euclid (fl. 300 BC), Greek Mathematician, author of “Elements” of geometry 10
Rhetoric, a veiled lady makes a gesture to enhance the persuasion power of words 11
Logic, a sitting lady, holding a scepter and a dog 13
Aristotle (384-322BC), writing on a board, his pen soaking in the inkwell 14
Music, a lady working with a monochord, psaltery, fiddle and bells 15
Pythagora (570-495BC), claimed the planets move in response to musical harmony 16
Fish, with the four elements of the world: fire, water, earth, air 18