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The University of Notre Dame is located in South Bend, Indiana. Oh and by the way, Notre is spelled: N-O-T-R-E not noder. If you're referring to the famous cathedral (Notre Dame de Paris), it's located in Paris, France. Bear in mind that the name Notre Dame applies to a number of places - several churches, several towns and townships, etc.
The motto of Notre Dame-Cathedral Latin School is 'Live the Truth, Lead the Way, Be a Lion!'.
Only the top 25 teams are ranked. And Notre Dame has fallen WAY out of the rankings.
In homage to the Virgin Mary. Notre Dame de Paris literally means Our Lady of Paris. Many catholic churches are named that way around the world.
RER line B3 runs from CDG to Saint-Michel-Notre-Dame.
Literally 'Our Lady', a reference to the Virgin Mary.
This would depend if you want to go all the way back to 1869. If you do, Yale has the most with 18 followed by Princeton with 17 and then Notre Dame with 13. If you want to go back only to 1936, when the Media Polls came out, then Notre Dame is the leader with 9.
Yes, it's Catholic. Notre Dame, meaning "Our Lady" refers to the Virgin Mary, which is a prominent figure in the Catholic Church. Protestants in general, do not revere Mary, the mother of Jesus the same way and therefore, do not name churches and/or universities after her.
If you're playing on the Notre Dame football team, then you were either recruited to play a certain position, or you're a walk-on who is expected to do exactly what you're told. Either way, you play the position they want you to play, or you don't play at all. It's not a democracy.
Notre-Dame to the Louvre is a pleasant stroll. You could walk to the Eiffel Tower from there, but it's about 2 miles. Plenty to see on the way, though. The whole walk would make a good day's sightseeing.
Yes. In the high middle ages, the great age of cathedral building (roughly the 12th-13th centuries), all of the cathedrals were built by public subscription. This is one reason they took so long, decades, and occasionally centuries, to build. Cathedrals were seen very much as an expression of civic pride. Different craft guilds would compete with one another by donating funds for windows, sculptures, vestments and altar cloths, church plate and vessels, etc, and sometimes individuals would even donate their labor. By the way, a side note on the name, 'Notre Dame': "Notre Dame" means "Our Lady", ie, the Virgin Mary. The high middle ages were a time of especial veneration of the Virgin, often bordering on obsession. Venerating the Virgin was the only really acceptable way of respecting women, regarded in this period as weak vessels and the root of all human misery. Actually, ALL cathedrals in the Ille de France were named Notre Dame. (Ex: Notre Dame de Chartres, Notre Dame d'Amiens, etc) Notre Dame de Paris has merely become the most famous bearing the name.
Notre Dame has won 12, that is if you go all the way back to 1901. Furthermore, some universities have received mention as a national champion by at least one source which some universities would claim as a national title but do not count it among the consensus championships. For instance, by some counts, Notre Dame has 11 consensus titles (1924, '29, '30, '43, '46, '47, '49, '66, '73, '77, '88), but another 8 seasons where one reliable source declared Notre Dame the national champion (1919, '20, '27, '38, '53, '64, '67, '70).