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Priory of Serrabona à Boule-d'Amont dans les Pyrénées-Orientales

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Prieuré
Eglise romane
Pyrénées-Orientales

Priory of Serrabona

    29 Dailla la Creu
    66130 Boule-d'Amont
Prieuré de Serrabona
Prieuré de Serrabona
Prieuré de Serrabona
Prieuré de Serrabona
Prieuré de Serrabona
Prieuré de Serrabona
Prieuré de Serrabona
Prieuré de Serrabona
Prieuré de Serrabona
Prieuré de Serrabona
Prieuré de Serrabona
Prieuré de Serrabona
Prieuré de Serrabona
Prieuré de Serrabona
Prieuré de Serrabona
Prieuré de Serrabona
Prieuré de Serrabona
Prieuré de Serrabona
Prieuré de Serrabona
Prieuré de Serrabona
Prieuré de Serrabona
Prieuré de Serrabona
Prieuré de Serrabona
Prieuré de Serrabona
Prieuré de Serrabona
Prieuré de Serrabona
Prieuré de Serrabona
Prieuré de Serrabona
Prieuré de Serrabona
Prieuré de Serrabona
Prieuré de Serrabona
Prieuré de Serrabona
Prieuré de Serrabona
Prieuré de Serrabona
Prieuré de Serrabona
Prieuré de Serrabona
Prieuré de Serrabona
Prieuré de Serrabona
Prieuré de Serrabona
Prieuré de Serrabona
Prieuré de Serrabona
Prieuré de Serrabona
Prieuré de Serrabona
Prieuré de Serrabona
Prieuré de Serrabona
Prieuré de Serrabona
Prieuré de Serrabona
Prieuré de Serrabona
Prieuré de Serrabona
Prieuré de Serrabona
Crédit photo : Poune - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1100
1200
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1069
First written entry
1082
Election of the first prior
25 octobre 1151
Consecration of the college
1593
Priory secularization
1819
Partial collapse
1875
Historical Monument
1906-2014
Restoration campaigns
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Church: ranking by list of 1875

Key figures

Pierre Bernard - Prior in the twelfth century Supervises the enlargement of the church before 1151.
Artal - Bishop of Elne Consecrate college in 1151.
Marcel Durliat - Art historian Prove the local origin of the gallery (1970s).
Henri Jonquères d’Oriola - Private Owner (beginning 20th) Finances the first restorations (from 1906).
Sylvain Stym-Popper - Architect-restaurant Reconstitutes the western façade (1969).
Prosper Mérimée - Inspector of Historic Monuments Visit the site in 1834, criticizes the capitals.

Origin and history

Priory Sainte-Marie de Serrabona, founded at the beginning of the 11th century by Augustinian canons under the impulse of the Viscount of Cerdagne, settles on a mountainous site near Boule-d The first written mention dates from 1069, evoking a parish church dedicated to the Virgin. In 1082, the religious elected their first prior, marking the autonomy of the priory in the face of the comtal and episcopal powers, in a context of Gregorian reform.

The church was enlarged in the 12th century: nave vaulted in cradle, transept, semicircular bedside, and single gallery cloister (adapted to the steep rock) were added. The new collegiate, consecrated in 1151 by the bishop of Elne, incorporates a young stand in pink marble, contemporary sculptural masterpiece of enlargement. Its decoration, combining plant motifs, fantastic animals and religious symbols (tetramorphic, Paschal Lamb), bears witness to the influence of the workshops in Roussillon linked to the Abbey of Saint-Michel de Cuxa.

The priory declined from the thirteenth century, undermined by the individualism of the canons and the secularization of ecclesiastical goods. In 1593, the pope attached him to the Cathedral of Solsona (Spain), ending his status as a collegiate. Abandoned, the building suffered degradation: partial collapse in 1819, reuse of the gallery as an attic, and theft of capitals (like those of the northern gate, replaced in 2000). Ranked a Historic Monument in 1875, it was restored in the 20th century, with the reconstruction of the western façade (1969) and the anastylosis of the podium balustrade (2014).

The site, acquired by the Pyrénées-Orientales department in 1956, is now protected in its natural environment. Its isolation (600 m above sea level, final walking access) and its hybrid architecture (local schist, Villefranche marble) make it a unique testimony of Catalan Romanesque art. The capitals of the cloister, saved in extremis in the 19th century, and the jube stand – the only structure of this type preserved in Roussillon – illustrate the influence of the workshops of Cuxa and Serrabone between 1130 and 1155.

Recent excavations and studies (including those of Marcel Durliat and Olivier Poisson) have confirmed the stylistic unit of the carved decoration, linked to the quarries of Bouleternère. The gallery, initially controversial for its apparent disproportion with the church, is now recognized as an original creation for the site. Its iconography, inspired by Italian ambons and Clunisian jubes, reflects a synthesis of the Tuscan, Spanish and Languedocian influences of the 12th century Roussillon.

External links