The Revolution gained steam, and so did its attempts to strip the Catholic Church of its authority over French life. Parisians massacred and jailed priests during the September Massacres of 1792, and clergy were put on trial during the Reign of Terror. In 1793, the new government announced that public worship was illegal. In response, people rushed into churches, stripping them of religious symbolism.
Notre Dame de Paris had long been a symbol of the monarchy, too—a place where state holidays, and kings, were celebrated. Henry VI of England was crowned king of France there in 1431. But revolutionary Parisians had had enough of its royal resonance.
The cathedral’s west facade featured 28 statues that portrayed the biblical Kings of Judah. In the fall of 1793, the new government ordered workers to remove them. They didn’t portray French kings, but no matter: The 500-year-old statues combined monarchy and religion, and they were brought to the cathedral’s square and decapitated. Twenty-one of the heads were only recovered in 1977 when workers found them behind a wall in an old Parisian mansion.
That wasn’t the end of the cathedral’s revolutionary role. In November 1793, the cathedral became the site of the Festival of Reason, a revolutionary and anti-religious festival that both mocked Catholicism and suggested that French people should worship Enlightenment principles instead.
After the cathedral was plundered, it became the stage for a packed public event in which a seductively dressed actress portraying the Goddess of Reason was worshiped atop a mountain. Enlightenment philosophers’ busts and statues of the Liberty replaced religious statues, and seductively dressed women danced and sang songs extolling the revolution. The centuries-old cathedral was renamed the Temple of Reason. Almost everything inside was looted aside from its bells.
Eventually, dechristianization extended all the way to instituting a new, atheist state “religion” devoted to revolution. That concept was controversial though, and eventually, Maximilien de Robespierre proposed The Cult of the Supreme Being, a civic religion that allowed for the existence of a god but was rooted in revolutionary concepts. In 1794, Paris hosted the Festival of the Supreme Being, a massive celebration that included music, parades and pageantry.
Despite revolutionaries’ determination to stamp out Catholicism for good, most French people stuck to their religious beliefs. “Parents refused to send their children to be instructed in the new civic religion; attendance for civil services and government festivals was chronically low,” writes historian Justin Dunn. “Catholicism proved to be the stabilizing element that many segments of society could cling to amidst the storm of upheaval and change that was the French Revolution.”