Sacred Heritage | Church Collection

Sacred Heritage

Saint-Éloi Church
Dunkerque, France

Saint-Éloi Church

The salt air of the North Sea still seems to cling to the bricks of Saint-Éloi, a church that stands less like a monument and more like a rugged survivor of Dunkirk's storms.

St. Bavo's Cathedral
Ghent, Belgium

St. Bavo's Cathedral

Crossing the threshold of St. Bavo’s isn't a simple visit; it's a descent into the dark Romanesque foundations before climbing back into the light of the Van Eycks' genius.

St. St Nicholas
Gent, Belgium

St. Nicholas' Church

Standing between the market stalls and the river Lys, St. Nicholas' Church is a dark stone sentinel that reminds every visitor that in Ghent, business and belief have always walked hand in hand.

St. Stephen’s Cathedral
Vienna, Austria

St. Stephen’s Cathedral

Stephansdom is more than a monument; it's a living act of survival, standing stone-by-stone at the very intersection of Vienna's imperial past and its modern pulse.

St. Michael's Church
Vienna, Austria

St. Michael's Church

Standing at the intersection of Roman ruins and the Hofburg, Michaelerkirche is a silent witness to royal vows and the eerie endurance of Vienna's buried history.

Votive Church
Vienna, Austria

Votive Church

The Votive Church is a monument to a miracle that never happened—an assassination that failed—leaving behind a stone forest of Gothic spires that still defines the Viennese Ringstrasse.

Mariahilf Church
Vienna, Austria

Mariahilf Church

Nestled between modern storefronts, the Mariahilf Church is a silent whisper of Baroque grace, proving that even in the middle of a shopping spree, Vienna's imperial soul is never more than a few steps away

Karlskirche
Vienna, Austria

Karlskirche

Karlskirche isn't just a place to look up; it's a place that invites you to go up—bridging the gap between the heavy stone of the plague years and the light of the Baroque heavens.

Basel Minster
Basel, Switzerland

Basel Minster

The red stone of the Minster doesn't just hold up a roof; it holds the entire memory of Basel, from medieval quakes to Renaissance debates.

St. Vincent Cathedral
Saint Malo, France

St. Vincent Cathedral

Saint-Vincent isn't just a church; it's a granite anchor for a city that has spent centuries battling the tides of the Atlantic and the scars of war.

Church of Saint-Suliac
Saint Suliac, France

Church of Saint-Suliac

The Church of Saint-Suliac doesn't need gold or glitter; its power lies in 700 years of granite silence and the steady gaze of its tower toward the river.

Saint-Méen Church
Cancale, France

Saint-Méen Church

In Saint-Méen, the prayers smell like salt and the model ships in the aisles remind every visitor that in Cancale, the sea and the sanctuary are one and the same.

Basilica of Saint-Sauveur
Dinan, France

Basilica of Saint-Sauveur

Saint-Sauveur is where Dinan’s history gets physical—a place where the heartbeat of a legendary knight still seems to echo through a chaotic, beautiful forest of stone.

Church of Saint-Malo
Dinan, France

Church of Saint-Malo

In the northern corner of Dinan, the Church of Saint-Malo stands as a granite testament to Breton pride, where the light of the glass and the sound of the pipes have echoed for half a millennium.

Notre-Dame de Vitré
Vitré, France

Notre-Dame de Vitré

The granite of Vitré doesn't just build walls; it carves stories of religious wars and merchant riches into the very skyline of Brittany.

Saint-Samson Cathedral
Dol-de-Bretagne, France

Saint-Samson Cathedral

The granite of Saint-Samson is the anchor of Dol-de-Bretagne—a dark, indestructible piece of Norman history in the heart of the Breton countryside.

Mont-Saint-Michel Abbey
Mont St Michael, France

Mont-Saint-Michel Abbey

The granite of the Mount stands as a defiance of gravity. To see it isolated by the sea is to see the raw power of Normandy's history.

Abbaye aux Hommes
Caen, France

Abbaye aux Hommes

The Caen stone of the Abbaye aux Hommes hasn't just built a church; it built the foundations of English architecture and sheltered a city during its darkest hour.

Abbaye aux Dames
Caen, France

Abbaye aux Dames

The white stone of the Abbaye aux Dames holds the memory of a Queen who was as powerful as the King she married. It is the quieter, more graceful soul of Caen.

Saints Peter and Paul Church
Bouillon, Belgium

Saints Peter and Paul Church

The rugged stone of the Ardennes defines this church, making it as much a part of the landscape as the Semois river itself.

Orval Abbey
Villers-devant-Orval, Belgium

Orval Abbey

The golden stone of Orval anchors the history of the Gaume region, blending a legendary past with the active reality of Trappist life.

St. John the Baptist
Luxembourg City, Luxembourg

St. John the Baptist

The golden stone of Orval anchors the history of the Gaume region, blending a legendary past with the active reality of Trappist life.

Saint Michael’s Church
Luxembourg City, Luxembourg

Saint Michael’s Church

The onion dome of Saint Michael’s has watched over the Fish Market for centuries, reminding every visitor that Luxembourg's soul was born here, on this very rock.

Church of Saints Peter and Paul
Echternach, Luxembourg

Church of Saints Peter and Paul

The Roman stones beneath the floor of Saints Peter and Paul hold the earliest memories of Echternach, predating even the great monks of the Abbey.

Church of Saints Peter and Paul
Echternach, Luxembourg

Basilica of Saint Willibrord

The white marble of Willibrord's tomb stays cool even in the height of summer, a quiet anchor in the crypt that survived the fires of 1944.

Notre-Dame Cathedral
Luxembourg City, Luxembourg

Notre-Dame Cathedral

The bronze lions at the crypt entrance haven't moved in decades, standing as the silent gatekeepers of Luxembourg's sovereign history.

St. Remi Church
Koerich, Luxembourg

St. Remi Church

The Tyrolean frescoes inside St. Remi haven't lost their color since the 1700s, still providing a vibrant contrast to the gray stone of the castle ruins next door.

Saint Quirin Chapel
Luxembourg City, Luxembourg

Saint Quirin Chapel

The spring water at Saint Quirin still follows the same stone channel cut into the cliff over 600 years ago, a physical record of the site's medieval use.

Saint Ayoul Church
Provins, France

Saint Ayoul Church

The 12th-century sculptures on the west portal represent some of the earliest Gothic art in the Île-de-France region, predating the later expansions of the upper town.

Saint-Quiriace Collegiate
Provins, France

Saint-Quiriace Collegiate

The choir of Saint-Quiriace is larger than that of many completed cathedrals in northern France, a remnant of the ambitious 1160 master plan.

Basilica of Notre-Dame de l’Épine
Epine, France

Basilica of Notre-Dame de l’Épine

The late 15th-century rood screen separates the nave from the liturgical choir, maintaining the original medieval floor plan that has been removed from most other French churches.