Nantes No. 2

INFORMATION

FontID: 03628NAN
Church/Chapel: In the baptistery found in the site of the old cathedral [disappeared]
Church Location: [NB: address & coordinates given for the cathedral complex] 7 Imp. Saint-Laurent, 44000 Nantes, France
Country Name: France
Location: Loire-Atlantique, Grand-Ouest
Directions to Site: The cathedral complex is located just N of the Château des ducs de Bretagne
Century and Period: 4th - 5th century, Early Christian
Corblet reports a sunken basin found in the excavation of the old baptistery on the site of the primitive cathedral of Nantes [cf. Index entry for Nantes No. 1] and the description published by the abbé Cahour: a sunken octagonal basin with three brick steps of about 20-21cm each; the steps went around all of the interior of the octagon and there were traces that they they had been lined in the past; at the bottom of the steps there was a cavity, about 40 x 40 cm square and 9 cm in depth. This cavity was crossed by a drain about 8 cm deep and 10 cm wide; prospections carried out later discovered two lead pipes: the one on the north side had served to feed water into the basin, whereas the one on the south side had served to evacuate it through a hole in one of the paving slabs. The bottom of the basin was made of a concrete composed of grounded brick and served as the basis for the broken paving slabs which covered it. (a/p abbé Cahour's description in Corblet, 1881-1882, v. 2, p. 69)

COORDINATES

Church Latitude & Longitude Decimal: 47.218, -1.5508
Church Latitude & Longitude DMS: 47° 13′ 4.8″ N, 1° 33′ 2.88″ W
UTM: 30T 609726 5230409

MEDIUM AND MEASUREMENTS

Material: mixed (brick & stone)
Font Shape: octagonal (sunken)
Basin Interior Shape: octagonal
Basin Exterior Shape: octagonal
Drainage Notes: [cf. Notes on Font]
Notes on Measurements: [cf. Notes on Font where the measurements supplied by Cahour for the different parts of the basin are reported]

REFERENCES

Corblet, Jules, Histoire dogmatique, liturgique et archéologique du sacrement de baptême, Paris: V. Palme, 1881-1882