1 shows the design of the Roman Baths fond in the Archeological Crypt.
2 is the Seine River around Cathédrale Notre-Dame de Paris.
3 to 11 show the outside gargoyles and flying buttresses, inside art and stained glass of Église Saint-Séverin. Built a bit south of the Seine River,
not far across from Cathédrale Notre-Dame de Paris, and completed at the beginning of the thirteenth century, prior to that of Notre-Dame.
It was named after Séverin of Paris, a devout hermit, who lived on the banks of the Seine during the first half of the fifth century.
The abstract stained glass was created by Jean René Bazaine (1970), inspired by the seven sacraments of the Catholic church.
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