99 - Paris 13th arrondissement St Albert le grand – Inspiration for Dr Frankenstein
Born in the 13th century, canonized in 1931, Albert the Great (sometimes known as Albertus Magnus) was a Dominican friar, Bavarian bishop, and was one of the mentors of St Thomas Aquinas (the guy who worked on a synthesis between Faith and Reason). Albert wrote books on theology but also on Aristotle. And he wrote a twenty-six volume encyclopedia which was intended to include all living creatures known in Europe at the time (animals were often studied as a part of theology, to see what of God’s message was in each). He seems to have been the first person to isolate the mineral Arsenic. He died and was buried in Cologne. In Mary Shelley’s celebrated novel, Dr Frankenstein studies the works of Albert the Great, and he has a typeface named after him (Albertus)
A modern church built in
1968, with drawn stations of the cross,
a rectangular shape and brightly coloured windows.