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Church of Saint Martin de Meurs à Mœurs-Verdey dans la Marne

Marne

Church of Saint Martin de Meurs

    1 Place Saint-Martin
    51120 Mœurs-Verdey
Eglise Saint-Martin de Meurs
Eglise Saint-Martin de Meurs
Eglise Saint-Martin de Meurs
Eglise Saint-Martin de Meurs
Eglise Saint-Martin de Meurs
Eglise Saint-Martin de Meurs
Eglise Saint-Martin de Meurs
Eglise Saint-Martin de Meurs
Eglise Saint-Martin de Meurs
Eglise Saint-Martin de Meurs
Eglise Saint-Martin de Meurs
Eglise Saint-Martin de Meurs
Eglise Saint-Martin de Meurs
Crédit photo : Nathalie Danau - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
2000
XIIe siècle
Initial construction
1529
Gothic bell
début XVIe siècle
Fresque of the three dead
2e moitié XVIe siècle
Partial reconstruction
juin 2012
Discovery of the fresco
6 juin 2014
Registration MH
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The church (Box B 332): inscription by decree of 6 June 2014

Key figures

Saint Martin - Church patron Represented as a statue and stained glass.
Jacques des Bordes - Donor of the bell Local Lord quoted on the bell of 1529.

Origin and history

The Saint-Martin de Mœurs church, located in the commune of Mœurs-Verdey (Marne, Grand Est), is a 12th century Romanesque building, partially rebuilt after the Hundred Years War. Its present structure, marked by the 2nd half of the 16th century, combines a unique nave without side-sides and an elongated choir with triangular bedside, covered with a curved panelled frame. The materials used, millstones and sandstones, are typical of the Champagne region.

The discovery in June 2012 of a mural from the beginning of the 16th century, representing the "Dit of the three dead and the three alive" — a medieval moralizing scene illustrating the vanity of earthly pleasures — motivated his inscription in the Historical Monuments on June 6, 2014. This large painted decoration adorns the north wall of the nave, accompanied by other less developed scenes. The church also houses a bell of 1529, engraved with Gothic motifs, offered by a member of the Jacques des Bordes family, local lords.

Dedicated to Saint Martin, the church preserves symbolic elements such as a statue of the Roman legionary sharing his coat, and a medallion of the saint as Bishop of Tours, integrated into a 19th century stained glass window in the choir. Its architecture mixes vaults in the middle of the pit, wooden beams (entrances and punches), and a striped apse, reflecting stylistic transitions between the Middle Ages and Renaissance. Access is via the RN4, between Sézanne and Nancy, in a rural landscape in Marnais.

Owned by the commune, the building illustrates the Champagne religious heritage, marked by post-conflict reconstructions and medieval didactic decorations. Its simple plan — unique nave and elongated choir — and its local materials make it a witness to regional architectural practices between the 12th and 16th centuries. The database Mérimée the reference under code B 332, with a precise location at 1 Place Saint-Martin (GPS coordinates available).

External links