Cathédrale grecque Saint-Étienne

Saint Stephen's Greek Cathedral is the cathedral of the Greek Orthodox Church of Paris and the seat of the Greek Orthodox metropolis of France. It was built under the direction of the architect Emile Vaudremer. The interior walls of the church were decorated by Charles Lameire and the marble iconostasis by Ludwig Thiersch. Vaudremer commissioned Léon Avenet to create the stained glass windows. On 9 October 1962, the marriage of Édith Piaf and Théo Sarapo was celebrated in the cathedral and on 20 September 1977, the funeral of Maria Callas took place in the cathedral.

About this building

Key Features

  • Architecture
  • Monuments

Visitors information

  • Bus stop within 100m
  • Parking within 250m
  • Café within 500m

Other nearby buildings

Flickr/Guilhem Vellut

Église Saint-Pierre-de-Chaillot

Saint-Pierre-de-Chaillot was built in the 1930s, in two stages, and completed in 1938. It was designed by the architect Emile Bois, then chief architect of the city of Paris. This new church replaces a previous church. The former church opened onto Rue de Chaillot, with only a brick-fronted chapel opening onto Avenue Marceau. Nothing remains of this old church except a statue of the Virgin, the Virgin of Chaillot.

Wikimedia Commons/GO69

American Cathedral in Paris

Neo-Gothic building built from 1881 to 1884 in a style that reflects the codes of 13th century English architecture, by the architect George-Edmund Street. The bell tower was consecrated in 1923 as a tribute to the Americans who died in the First World War. In the building there are fifty-one flags of the United States of America hanging in the nave.

Wikimedia Commons/Celette

Armenian Cathedral of St. John the Baptist

The first place of worship of the Armenian community in Paris, the current church was built at the beginning of the 20th century. In 1902, Alexandre Mantachiants, a wealthy oil magnate, financed the construction of the building. He decided to entrust the construction of his cathedral to the architect Albert Guibert. He then asked him for a modern church with a resolutely Armenian architecture, inspired by the cathedral of Etchmiadzin. The church was finally completed in 1904, and consecrated on October 2, 1904.