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Ruins of the chapel of Lurzine à Prignac-et-Marcamps en Gironde

Gironde

Ruins of the chapel of Lurzine

    29 Chemin des Lurzines
    33710 Prignac-et-Marcamps
Ruines de la chapelle de Lurzine
Ruines de la chapelle de Lurzine
Ruines de la chapelle de Lurzine
Ruines de la chapelle de Lurzine
Crédit photo : William Ellison - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1200
1300
1800
1900
2000
XIIe siècle
Construction of the priory
1281
Repurchase of the priory
XIXe siècle
Transfer of the statue of St Luke
24 décembre 1925
Registration for historical monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Chapel of Lurzine (ruins): inscription by order of 24 December 1925

Key figures

Abbé de La Couronne - Priory acquirer Buy Lurzine in 1281.
Saint Luc - Boss of the chapel Statue transferred in the 19th century.

Origin and history

The ruins of the chapel of Lurzine are the remains of a Benedictine priory founded in the 12th century. Located in Prignac-et-Marcamps, on the way to the Lurzines, this monument was inscribed in historical monuments by order of 24 December 1925. Although local tradition evokes an ancient Roman temple dedicated to Lucine, no archaeological evidence confirms this hypothesis. Today, only elements of the west façade, the abside and the north face, partially hidden by vegetation, remain.

The chapel, dedicated to Saint Luke, originally belonged to the Priory of Lurzine, bought in 1281 by the Abbé de La Couronne and attached to Notre-Dame de Bellegarde. A wooden statue of St Luke, formerly present in the chapel, was transferred to St Peter's Church in Marcamps, then to St Michael's Church in Prignac in the 19th century. The building, of parallelogram plan with a semicircular apse, is 20 meters long for 5 meters wide, with walls of a thickness exceeding 1 meter.

The architecture of the chapel combines late Romanesque elements and nascent Gothic influences. The engaged columns of the l'Abside are decorated with zigzag and interlacing capitals, while the western facade features a door in full hanger decorated with spikes and columns. A staircase once led to a bell tower, now gone. The curved windows and foothills, one of which supported a secondary chapel, illustrate the stylistic transition of the 12th century.

Despite its state of ruin, the site preserves traces of slightly ogival vaults and arches, characteristic of the late twelfth century. The remains, although partially collapsed, offer a rare testimony of medieval religious art in Gironde. The chapel, closed to the visit, remains a place full of history, linked to monastic life and local traditions.

External links