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Collégiale Saint-Montain de La Fère dans l'Aisne

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Collégiale
Eglise gothique
Aisne

Collégiale Saint-Montain de La Fère

    18-22 Rue de l'Église
    02800 La Fère
Collégiale Saint-Montain de La Fère
Collégiale Saint-Montain de La Fère
Collégiale Saint-Montain de La Fère
Collégiale Saint-Montain de La Fère
Collégiale Saint-Montain de La Fère
Collégiale Saint-Montain de La Fère
Collégiale Saint-Montain de La Fère
Collégiale Saint-Montain de La Fère
Collégiale Saint-Montain de La Fère
Collégiale Saint-Montain de La Fère
Crédit photo : Clément Parise - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Antiquité
Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
400
500
1000
1100
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
Vers 437
Legend of Saint Montain
Fin Xe siècle
Initial construction
1261
Mark on foundations
1588
Erection of the bell tower
1793-1794
Revolutionary destruction
1921
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Saint-Montain Church: by order of 7 January 1921

Key figures

Saint Montain - Hermit and evangelizer (Vth century) Church patron, linked to the local legend.
Marie de Luxembourg - Princess and Lady of La Fère (Renaissance) Sponsor of church transformations.
Élinaud - Bishop of Laon (Xth century) Associated with initial construction.
Montain Soret - Revolutionary Demolizer (1793) Responsible for destroying the bell tower.
Émile Lecygne - Native painter of La Fère (XIXth century) Described the Romanesque portal in 1853.

Origin and history

The collegiate Saint-Montain de La Fère has its origins in the legend of Saint Montain, a blind hermit of the fifth century (ca. 437), who evangelized the region from a cave near the Merovingian Phara (old name of La Fère). His miracles, such as the healing of the sick at the pit Saint-Montain, drew pilgrims for fifteen years. The feast of May 17, dedicated to this saint who predicted the birth of Saint Remi (future Baptist of Clovis), lasted until the 20th century. The church was probably built at the location of its cave at the end of the 10th century, with architectural traces dating back to the 8th and 6th centuries.

The building, originally a Romanesque building, was profoundly renovated in the Renaissance by Marie de Luxembourg, princess and lady of La Fère. The 11th century portal, described in 1853 as a rare mixture of Romanesque and ogival styles (dents, chevrons, mutilated columns), bears witness to this architectural transition. The church, linked to the neighbouring castle by defensive systems (wood turret, murderers), also served as a watch: a permanent service was established there in 1618, obligatory for ecclesiasticals.

The bell tower, erected in 1588, suffered two fires due to lightning (1732 and 1787) before being shaved during the French Revolution, along with four other towers of the city, by Montain Soret — ironically homonymous of the saint. Admitted for 1,341 pounds in 1794, these destructions reduced the church to its roofs. Of the fourteen original chapels (dedicated to Saint Montain, Marie-Madeleine, Saint Nicholas, etc.), only four remain today. In 1980, excavations revealed funeral fragments, ex-votos and tiles of the missing chapels, confirming the past richness of the place.

Ranked a historic monument in 1921, the college retains traces of its turbulent history: foundations marked 1261, murderous in the bell tower, and a 16th century fire. His portal, threatened with demolition in 1853 for topographic reasons, was saved in extremis, stressing its importance as a pivotal date between Romanesque and Gothic, almost a century earlier at Notre-Dame de Paris.

External links