South Korea, France Sign Deal to Cooperate on Preserving Jongmyo Shrine and Saint-Denis Basilica

by Yoon Juhye Posted : April 6, 2026, 09:45Updated : April 6, 2026, 09:45
Signing ceremony for an MOU between the Korea Heritage Service’s Royal Palaces and Tombs Center and France’s Centre des Monuments Nationaux. (Korea Heritage Service photo)
Signing ceremony for an MOU between the Korea Heritage Service’s Royal Palaces and Tombs Center and France’s Centre des Monuments Nationaux. (Korea Heritage Service photo)

South Korea and France have agreed to cooperate on the preservation and management of Jongmyo Shrine and the Basilica of Saint-Denis. 

The Korea Heritage Service said it held a high-level heritage meeting with France’s Ministry of Culture on April 2 at the Fairmont Ambassador Seoul in Yeongdeungpo-gu, Seoul, and that its Royal Palaces and Tombs Center and the ministry-affiliated Centre des Monuments Nationaux signed a memorandum of understanding. 

In December 2022, the Korea Heritage Service — then known as the Cultural Heritage Administration — and the Centre des Monuments Nationaux signed a letter of intent to promote exchanges in cultural heritage. The new MOU, pursued as part of outcomes from a South Korea-France summit, builds on that document and calls for cooperation on systematic preservation and management of the two sites, reflecting shared historical and cultural characteristics. 
 
The Basilica of Saint-Denis, a Gothic church in Saint-Denis north of Paris, was built around the fifth century as a monastic church. From the seventh century, it served as a royal burial site, housing the remains of 43 kings, 32 queens, and 60 princes and princesses across multiple dynasties. 

At the high-level meeting held alongside the signing, Korea Heritage Service Administrator Heo Min and French Culture Minister Catherine Pégard agreed to expand exchanges in the heritage field, including site visits linking representative cultural assets, expert exchanges and mutual promotional efforts. They also discussed events planned for June to mark the 140th anniversary of diplomatic ties. 

The Korea Heritage Service said it will continue working with France and other countries to broaden cooperation in the heritage sector and expand opportunities to promote Korea’s national heritage and its capacity to preserve and use it worldwide. 



* This article has been translated by AI.