Cathédrale de Lausanne v2.0 app for iPhone and iPad


4.2 ( 1072 ratings )
Travel Education
Developer: MobileThinking SARL
Free
Current version: 1.2.3, last update: 6 years ago
First release : 26 Oct 2016
App size: 21.49 Mb

Dear Visitor, do feel welcome in this magnificent edifice, and we hope you enjoy your visit! The construction of the cathedral began in 1145 and went on for one hundred years. The project was initiated by Bishop Vico de Pisano. The cathedral, which was consecrated in 1275, is dedicated to the Virgin Mary, and named after her, « Notre Dame of Lausanne ». Through out the Middle Ages, it was a pilgrimage site on the route to Santiago de Compostela. The cathedral was dispossessed of its treasure and its relics in 1536, at the time of the Reformation, and since then, it has remained Protestant.

The Eglise Réformée Vaudoise, the EERV, that is the Protestant Church of the Canton of Vaud has created an application to help visitors find their way through the cathedral. Its purpose is to allow them maximum autonomy, and to render their experience meaningful, as this historical edifice is also a place of high level of spirituality.

The application is designed so that visitors are free to pursue their own areas of interests. The content is simply read out, as in most audio guides.

Visitors read on the screen details that are not otherwise accessible. There are visual aids to locate commentaries. Here are some examples:

- The watchman on his rounds
- Close-ups of the Rose medallions
- Technical aspects of the Grand Organ.

There are many video sequences that illustrate the chosen themes

Three different applications access the entire content.

- One for French (Cathédrale)
- One for English (Cathedral)
- And one for German (Kathedral).

The aim of the commentaries is to help visitors understand the mean of what they see, rather than learn about historical details or about different restoration works, these being of more interest to the specialists. For example, the many statues in the Painted Portal were meant to convey a message to medieval man, a message based on a rich symbolic language; the application aims at reviving this emotion for the modern visitor.

To date, five themes have been covered:

1. The watchman and the bell tower (the history of the watchman at Lausanne Cathedral, his role, and the history of the different bells;
2. The Rose Window (how to understand the message of this composition which focuses on Man, eternity, and his time allotted by God);
3. The sculptured animals (the symbolism of the very many animals found in the cathedral.
4. The organ (seeing, understanding and hearing it).
5. The Painted Portal (experiencing its emotional impact as did medieval pilgrims).

New themes will be made available in the near future.