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Royal Abbey of Saint Michael in the Herm à Saint-Michel-en-l'Herm en Vendée

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Abbaye Royale
Abbaye
Vendée

Royal Abbey of Saint Michael in the Herm

    1 Place de l'Abbaye 
    85580 Saint-Michel-en-l'Herm
Private property
Abbaye Royale de Saint Michel en lHerm
Abbaye Royale de Saint Michel en lHerm
Abbaye Royale de Saint Michel en lHerm
Abbaye Royale de Saint Michel en lHerm
Abbaye Royale de Saint Michel en lHerm
Abbaye Royale de Saint Michel en lHerm
Crédit photo : Spouik - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
800
900
1000
1100
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
fin VIIe siècle
Foundation by Ansoald
877
Destruction by the Normans
955–1047
Medieval restoration
1217
Canal des Cinq-Abbés
1516
Royal Abbey by François I
1568
Huguenot siege and looting
1669
Arrival of Maurists
1790
Sale as a national good
1973
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The Chapter Hall; remnants of the heater; the remains of the southern crusillon of the church (Box B 1201): classification by decree of 2 July 1973 - The façades and roofs of the 17th century building called the castle and its wing (excluding the modern stone staircase of the main façade) (Box B 1201): inscription by decree of 2 July 1973 - The facades and roofs of all the buildings of the communes (Box B 2167)

Key figures

Ansoald - Bishop of Poitiers Founder of the Abbey (VIIth century)
Saint Philibert - Irish monk Inspiration of poitevin monasticism
Ebles - Bishop of Limoges Rebuilder after the Normans (Xth century)
Savary III de Mauléon - Lord of Poitou Protector and donor (11th century)
Jacques de Billy - Humanist abbey Leader during the Wars of Religion
Cardinal Mazarin - Abbé commendataire Almost responsible for its closure (1647–1661)
François Le Duc - Maurist architect Rebuilder of buildings (17th century)

Origin and history

The Royal Abbey of Saint-Michel-en-l'Herm, founded at the end of the seventh century by the bishop of Poitiers Ansoald, was an influential Benedictine monastery in the Poitevin Marais. His name, mixing the cult of St Michael and Greek root eremos ("desert"), reflects his dual vocation: evangelization and eremitic life in a hostile environment. The monks, inspired by Irish monasticism, settled on an island at the confluence of Lay and Sèvre Niortaise, gradually transforming unsanitary land into arable areas through hardening and drainage.

Destroyed by the Normans in 877, the abbey was restored in the 10th century under the impulse of Ebles, bishop of Limoges, and consecrated in 1047. In the Middle Ages, she became a major economic player through the trade of salt and the control of riverways, funding projects such as the Canal des Cinq-Abbés (1217), the result of a collaboration with four other abbeys. Protected by local lords such as Savary III of Mauléon, it was fortified and spared during the Hundred Years' War by paying ransoms.

The Wars of Religion marked a tragic turning point: in 1568 the Huguenots besieged and looted the abbey, burning its library and killing 400 people. After 16 years of abandonment, a partial reconstruction was undertaken under the abbots commundataires, including Mazarin (1647–61), who almost caused his disappearance by legiting his income to the Collège des Quatre-Nations. Saved in extremis, it was renovated by the Maurists in the 17th century, before being sold as a national property in 1790.

Ranked a historical monument in 1973, the abbey preserves medieval remains (capitular room, heating room) and 17th–15th century buildings (abbatial logis, refectory). Its history illustrates the links between religious power, territorial planning and conflict, from its foundation to privatization after the Revolution. Today, owned by the Le Roux family, it bears witness to eight centuries of architectural and social transformations in Vendée.

The abbey also played a key role in the drying up of the Poitevin Marais, combining monastic expertise and partnerships with local lords through trimming contracts. This work, which began in the 12th century, allowed agriculture and livestock to change the landscape. Its decline in the 18th century, linked to the scarcity of vocations and reforms, contrasts with its medieval golden age, where it competed with the abbeys of Luçon or Maillezais.

External links