Works Suger wrote several works, which are regarded for their accuracy and detail. Of these, two record his activities as abbot of St-Denis. The
Libellus Alter de Consecratione Ecclesiae Sancti Dionysii (Other Little Book on the Consecration of Saint-Denis) is a short
treatise on the building and consecration of the abbey church. The
Liber De Rebus in Administratione sua Gestis (Book on Events under his Administration) is an unfinished account of his administration of the abbey, which he started on request of his monks in 1145. In these texts, he treats of the improvements he had made to St Denis, describes the treasure of the church, and gives an account of the rebuilding. Unlike other medieval texts recording the deeds of religious figures, Suger’s are written by him. Of his histories,
Vie de Louis le Gros (Life of Louis the Fat) is his most substantial and widely circulated. It is a
panegyric chronological narrative of King Louis VI, primarily concerned with warfare but also his dependence on the Saint-Denis abbey.
Historia gloriosi regis Ludovici (The Illustrious King Louis) is the other demonstrably unfinished work of Suger, accounting for the first year of Louis VII’s reign. Written in Suger’s final years, it (like his other history) covers in great detail events where Suger was present or involved. Suger’s secretary William produced two works on Suger: the first, a letter shortly after his death announcing the death; the other a short biography (
Sugerii Vita; The Life of Suger) authored between 1152 and 1154. A collection of Suger’s letters exist in Saint Denis, mostly from near the end of his life, though its provenance is unknown. Suger's works served to imbue the monks of St Denis with a taste for history and called forth a long series of quasi-official chronicles.
Gothic tradition Suger is considered the forerunner of
(French) Gothic architecture, where in its history he falls in the
Early Gothic (
Gothique primitif) period concentrated in the
Île-de-France region of France. This genre is seen as the progression of
Romanesque architecture, though few of the key elements that define the Gothic tradition were particularly new as they were inspired by these very Romanesque elements, especially those of Normandy and Burgundy. The key element that sets aside Gothic architecture from its predecessor is "the novelty of the spiritual message that was to be conveyed" using its "novel and anti-Romanesque" elements. Scholars tend to attribute Suger's influences on his ideas of symbolism and manner of symbolic thought to interpretations of
Pseudo-Dionysius the Areopagite and the derivates of
John Scotus Eriugena, as well as those from the school of Chartres. Where 19th century art historian
Erwin Panofsky claims that the theology of Pseudo-Dionysius influenced the architectural style of the abbey of St. Denis, later scholars argue against such a simplistic link between philosophy and architectural form. Though Suger did not leave any explicitly theological writings, his work on Saint Denis was inspired by his own set of religious ideas influenced by a range of new or renewed theological themes in the wider context of 12th-century France. The influence of the cosmology of the Chartres school, which resulted from interpretations of
Plato and the
Bible, created a speculative system which emphasised mathematics, particularly geometry, and the aesthetic outcomes that arise from the convergence of the two. Art historians paint Gothic architecture as Suger's own creation, though some question this. The assumption by 19th century French authors that Suger was the "designer" of St Denis (and hence the "inventor" of Gothic architecture) has been discounted by recent scholars. Instead he is generally seen as having been a bold and imaginative patron who encouraged the work of an innovative (but now unknown) master mason. It is difficult to contextualise St-Denis to other buildings of the time and place, because many churches in Capetian France between 1080 and 1160 were destroyed and/or rebuilt later, combined with the fact that no other building of this period enjoyed the level of precision and detail of Suger's accounts of St-Denis. Thus, the Gothic style can be seen as a multiplicity of trends in the architecture of this period, some occasionally intersecting with others: Jean Bony describes it as "a happy accident of history; it would have been infinitely more normal if the Gothic had never appeared." == Citations ==