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'oh look' ... ;)

I knew there was an interesting 'connection' as to why *this* building

from Wiki on the Sacre-Cour church:

"Apart from its physical attributes, Montmartre or the "Hill of the Martyrs" was also chosen for its association with the early Christian church. According to tradition, it was the place where the patron saint of Paris, Saint Denis of Paris, was beheaded by the Romans. His tomb became the site of the Basilica of Saint Denis, the traditional resting place for the kings of France until the French Revolution.

Only people mentioned by @wht in this post can reply

"Come now, and let us reason together, saith the Lord" Is1:18;

In response wht 2.0 to his Publication

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👉 ... ***In addition, Montmartre was the birthplace of the Society of Jesus, one of the largest and most influential religious orders in the history of the Catholic Church. In 1534, Ignatius of Loyola and a few of his followers made their vows in Saint-Pierre de Montmartre, one of the oldest churches in Paris. The church survived the Revolution although the Montmartre Abbey to which it belonged was destroyed.

Gosh .. did it survive because the Jesuits did (via the Jacobin secret society under their 'finger-on-the-lips shhhhh' control) largely foment and orchestrate the "revolution"

[surely not .. that would be a conspiracy theory]

ps ... leave it to the Jesuits to command the 'high ground' .. always the best place from which to tactically control the battle field