3rd Century: Crisis and the First Bishops · FROM 50 BC TO THE FALL OF ROME
Saint Denis is the first bishop of Paris (Lutetia) and one of the patron saints of France. His story is inseparable from a spectacular legend.
Around the year 250, Denis was sent to Gaul to convert the Parisii. His success worried the Roman authorities. He was arrested with two companions, Rusticus and Eleutherius, and sentenced to death. The execution took place on the hill later called Montmartre (from Latin Mons Martyrum, “Mount of Martyrs”).
According to the medieval legend, once beheaded, Denis did not collapse. He picked up his head in his hands and began to walk north, chanting psalms. He walked about six kilometres before stopping at the exact place where he wished to be buried.
At the site of his burial, a small chapel was first built by Saint Geneviève. Later, King Dagobert founded an abbey there that became the Basilica of Saint-Denis. It would receive the tombs of almost all the kings and queens of France, linking the saint’s destiny to that of the monarchy.
Depiction of Saint Denis carrying his head.