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Church of Sournia dans les Pyrénées-Orientales

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Art préroman
Patrimoine carolingien
Pyrénées-Orientales

Church of Sournia

    178 Le Village
    66730 Sournia

Timeline

Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1000
1100
1200
1900
2000
1011
Pontifical Mention
Xe siècle
Initial construction
Fin du XIe siècle
Second construction campaign
2 août 1965
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Serge IV - Pope (1009–1012) Mentionne church in a 1011 bubble.

Origin and history

The Sainte-Félicité de Sournia church, located in the Pyrénées-Orientales, is a preroman building built in the 10th century under the Carolingians. It illustrates the Carolingian architectural style of the Roussillon, with a rectangular nave of 7 meters long and an almost square apse of 3.50 meters side. Its thick walls, reinforced with six pillars, and its overpassed arches (door and nef/abside separation) are characteristic of this period. The offset axis of the abside symbolically evokes the inclination of Christ's head after his death.

The church is mentioned for the first time in 1011 in a bubble of Pope Serge IV, which connects it to the abbey Saint-Michel-de-Cuxa, located 20 km south. This document confirms its status as a monastic possession in the early 11th century. A second construction campaign, towards the end of the 11th century, added more elaborate inner longitudinal arches and false joints, probably linked to the vaulting of the nave. Original materials include rubble, mortar and a high proportion of pebbles in primitive walls.

Ranked a historic monument in 1965, the church is distinguished by its now extinct bell tower and partially collapsed vault. It shares with the chapel Saint-Michel de Sournia (1 km west) a common preroman heritage in this valley of the Pyrénées-Orientales. Its isolation, 1 km east of the village, and its proximity to RD 619 make it a rare testimony of the rural religious architecture of the High Middle Ages in Occitania.

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