It's Catholic.
Chartres Cathedral or the Cathedral of Our Lady of Chartres is located in Chartres town, about 50 miles from Paris in France. Chartres Cathedral is a UNESCO World Heritage site and considered an excellent example of Gothic architecture style in the world.
Lauren Artress was the one who used the design for the Labryinth of the Chartres Cathedral.
Chartres Cathedral was made by Bishop Fulbert and was later fixed by Geoffroy de Leves.
There is a St. Patrick's Cathedral in Dublin, which is a Protestant cathedral. There are two St. Patrick's Cathedrals in the Northern Ireland city of Armagh, one Catholic and one Protestant.
Saint Patrick's Cathedral is a Protestant cathedral. Protestants generally only recognise two sacraments, which are Baptism and Communion. They are available there. IJust in case you are thinking in terms of Catholic sacraments, there is actually no Catholic Cathedral in Dublin. The only other cathedral in Dublin is Christ Church Cathedral, which is also Protestant. There are of course lots of churches in Dublin where the seven Catholic sacraments are available.
4,000 statues are in this cathedraln of chartres! amazing right?
how is the chartres cathedarl used today
Ancient Megastructures - 2007 Chartres Cathedral 1-3 was released on: USA: 2007
Cathedral
Can you reformulate the question? What do you mean by "how do you make?
Yes, people are allowed inside the Chartres Cathedral. It is a functioning church and a popular tourist attraction in Chartres, France. Visitors can enter the cathedral, attend religious services, and explore the architectural marvel of the building.
Strange as it may seem for the capital city of a Catholic country, there is actually no Catholic cathedral in Dublin. Dublin has two cathedrals, both of which are Protestant. St. Patrick's Cathedral is the national cathedral and Christchurch Cathedral is the city cathedral. When Henry VIII brought his form of protestantism to Ireland the status of the cathedrals changed. Since then the city cathedral has not been taken back into Catholic ownership. What Dublin does have is St. Mary's pro-Cathedral, which is Catholic. It holds the title "pro-Cathedral", signifying it does not have full cathedral status for the city, as that still resides with Christchurch Cathedral.