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Priory of Fontblanche à Genouilly dans le Cher

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Prieuré
Cher

Priory of Fontblanche

    Grandmont
    18310 Genouilly
Ownership of a private company
Prieuré de Fontblanche
Prieuré de Fontblanche
Prieuré de Fontblanche
Prieuré de Fontblanche
Prieuré de Fontblanche
Prieuré de Fontblanche
Prieuré de Fontblanche
Prieuré de Fontblanche
Prieuré de Fontblanche
Prieuré de Fontblanche
Prieuré de Fontblanche
Prieuré de Fontblanche
Prieuré de Fontblanche
Prieuré de Fontblanche
Prieuré de Fontblanche
Prieuré de Fontblanche
Crédit photo : Eniotna - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1100
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1140-1145
Foundation of the Priory
1317
Union with Châteauneuf
1650
West Building Fire
1772
Extinction of the Grandmont Order
1791
Sale as a national good
14 mai 1980
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Church; facades and roofs of old convent buildings; Chapter Hall (Box B1 6): Order of 14 May 1980

Key figures

Renaud IV de Graçay - Lord and Founder Initiator of the foundation around 1140-1145
Clément XIV - Pope Abolish the Order of Grandmont in 1772

Origin and history

The priory of Fontblanche, founded between 1140 and 1145 by Renaud IV de Graçay, is one of the oldest dependencies of the eremitical order of Grandmont, native to the Limousin. Located at the edge of the current departments of Cher and Loir-et-Cher, it illustrates the austerity of the Grandmontan rule by its stripped architecture: a unique nave chapel, a wooden cloister (disappeared), and buildings organized around a central courtyard. Its union with the priory of Châteauneuf in 1317 marked the beginning of a gradual decline, accentuated by depredations such as the fire of 1650.

Upon the abolition of the order of Grandmont in 1772, the priory was already converted into a farm, which partially preserved its structures. Sold as a national property in 1791, the property now retains three of the four original wings: the north chapel (broken cradle vault, ribbed apse), the east wing (capitular room, monk dorm) and the south wing (refectory). Ranked Historic Monument in 1980, the site benefited from major restorations revealing remarkable elements such as the "pass of the dead" to the old cemetery or the columned bays of the capitular hall.

The chapel, without any superfluous decoration according to the Grandmontan tradition, has an intact vault and a triplet illuminating the abside. The dormitory, one of the best preserved of the order with that of Comberoumal (Aveyron), opens onto typical narrow windows. The south wing, partially rebuilt in the 19th century, housed refectory and offices. The priory thus embodies the ideal of poverty and simplicity advocated by Grandmont, while at the same time showing subsequent adaptations to agricultural use.

The order of Grandmont, founded around 1076, imposed a strict collective life: silence, fasting, and manual labor. Fontblanche, like the other 34 "those", followed this model until its decline, linked to both internal reforms (union with Châteauneuf) and external crises (wars, revolution). The architectural traces — the door of the parlor, the steeple massif, or bays of the refectory — offer a rare glimpse of this extinct monastic life.

Today, private property, the priory combines medieval remains (classified) and later transformations. Its initial plan, centered on the courtyard-cloister, reflects the functional organization of the Grandmontan monasteries: separation of monks and conversants, direct access from the church to the cemetery, and community spaces (capitular room, refectory) designed for an ascetic collective life. Recent restorations have stabilized the structures while preserving their authenticity.

External links