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Abbey of Mont Saint-Éloi à Mont-Saint-Éloi dans le Pas-de-Calais

Patrimoine classé
Vestiges de la Guerre 14-18
Abbaye
Eglise de style classique
Pas-de-Calais

Abbey of Mont Saint-Éloi

    17-25 Rue du Général Barbot 
    62144 Mont-Saint-Eloi
Abbaye du mont Saint-Éloi
Abbaye du mont Saint-Éloi
Abbaye du mont Saint-Éloi
Abbaye du mont Saint-Éloi
Abbaye du mont Saint-Éloi
Abbaye du mont Saint-Éloi
Abbaye du mont Saint-Éloi
Abbaye du mont Saint-Éloi
Abbaye du mont Saint-Éloi
Abbaye du mont Saint-Éloi
Abbaye du mont Saint-Éloi
Abbaye du mont Saint-Éloi
Abbaye du mont Saint-Éloi
Abbaye du mont Saint-Éloi
Abbaye du mont Saint-Éloi
Abbaye du mont Saint-Éloi
Abbaye du mont Saint-Éloi
Abbaye du mont Saint-Éloi
Abbaye du mont Saint-Éloi
Abbaye du mont Saint-Éloi
Abbaye du mont Saint-Éloi
Abbaye du mont Saint-Éloi
Abbaye du mont Saint-Éloi
Abbaye du mont Saint-Éloi
Abbaye du mont Saint-Éloi
Abbaye du mont Saint-Éloi
Abbaye du mont Saint-Éloi
Abbaye du mont Saint-Éloi
Abbaye du mont Saint-Éloi
Abbaye du mont Saint-Éloi
Abbaye du mont Saint-Éloi
Abbaye du mont Saint-Éloi
Abbaye du mont Saint-Éloi
Abbaye du mont Saint-Éloi
Abbaye du mont Saint-Éloi
Abbaye du mont Saint-Éloi
Abbaye du mont Saint-Éloi
Abbaye du mont Saint-Éloi
Abbaye du mont Saint-Éloi
Abbaye du mont Saint-Éloi
Abbaye du mont Saint-Éloi
Abbaye du mont Saint-Éloi
Abbaye du mont Saint-Éloi
Abbaye du mont Saint-Éloi
Abbaye du mont Saint-Éloi
Abbaye du mont Saint-Éloi
Abbaye du mont Saint-Éloi
Abbaye du mont Saint-Éloi
Abbaye du mont Saint-Éloi
Abbaye du mont Saint-Éloi
Crédit photo : Daniel Villafruela. - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
700
800
900
1000
1100
1200
1700
1800
1900
2000
VIIe siècle
Legendary Foundation
930
First church
XIe siècle
Gregorian reform
1733–1765
Classical reconstruction
1793
Sale as a national good
1915
Damage during the Great War
1921
Historical monument classification
2008
Transfer to Department
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The ruins of the ancient abbey church: classification by decree of 8 June 1921; The ground and basement of the former enclosure of the Abbey of Mont Saint Eloi, in total, with all its remains and the following elements in elevation: interior and exterior retaining and fence walls with their portals, vestiges of the main entrance gate, located in a perimeter constituted by the rue de la Warde, rue de la Mairie, the public square known as Place d'Hamilton, rue du Général Barbot, Chaussée Brunhaut (departmental road No. 341), the departmental road No. 49, the communal road No. 13 known as the Nation (or Chemin Blanc), on the following parcels listed in the cadastre section ZL: n° 25, 26, 27, 28, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, 43, 44, 45, 46, 47, 48, 49, 50, 51, 52, 53, 54, 55, 56, 245: inscription by order of 30 March 2015

Key figures

Saint Éloi - Bishop of Noyon and Tournai Fonda l ́oratory in the 7th century.
Saint Vindicien - Bishop of Cambrai and Arras Official founder, buried on site.
Liébert - Bishop of Cambrai and Arras Augustine rule (XIe) instaurator.
Le Grand Condé - French general He installed his headquarters there in 1654.
Dom Wartel - Chanoine and columnist Author of the 1786 chronicles.
Arnoul - Chanoine and poet Liturgical author (XIIe).

Origin and history

The abbey of Mont-Saint-Éloi was founded by Saint Vindicien, disciple of Saint Éloi, who established an oratory there in the 7th century. According to legend, Saint Eloi withdrew to pray, attracting hermits. A first church was built in 930 to house the relics of Saint Vindicien, after their miraculous rediscovery in 929 by a schoolboy healed of blindness. Bishop Fulbert then erected a basilica dedicated to the apostles Peter and Paul.

In the 11th century, under the leadership of Bishop Liébert, the abbey became a community of regular canons following the rule of St Augustine. It enjoyed a major intellectual and political influence in Artois, with 46 abbots succeeding until the 18th century. In 1140 Abbé Hugues strengthened the enclosures, and between 1208 and 1221 the church was rebuilt in Gothic style. The abbey even served as a military headquarters, especially for Le Grand Condé in 1654.

In the 18th century, Fr.Russel had the medieval church demolished to build a classical building (1733–65), from which today the two 44-metre towers (initially 53 m) remain. Sold as a national property in 1793, the abbey was partially destroyed, its stones serving as a quarry. The towers, targets during World War I (1915), were classified as historical monuments in 1921. Since 2008, they belong to the department of Pas-de-Calais, which has conducted restoration campaigns (2008–2015).

The abbey was a place of power and knowledge: in the 12th century Canon Arnoul composed liturgical writings there, and in 1786 Dom Wartel wrote his chronicles. Today, only the sandstone and chalk towers remain, witness to its Augustinian past, and the archaeological remains protected since 2015, including fence walls and abbatial enclosures.

Local legends combine history and miracle, such as that of the blind schoolboy healed by Saint Vindicien, or the Norman raids (880–881) that devastated the region. The abbey also illustrates religious conflicts, such as the Gregorian reform (XI century) or its revolutionary suppression, with the last abbey guillotine in 1791.

External links