Initial construction XIIe siècle (≈ 1250)
Building of the Romanesque chapel and the priory.
1531
Renovation by Saint-Victor
Renovation by Saint-Victor 1531 (≈ 1531)
Work and construction of a house for the farmer.
XIXe siècle
Temporary parish use
Temporary parish use XIXe siècle (≈ 1865)
Becomes parish church until 1858.
15 octobre 1971
Historical monument classification
Historical monument classification 15 octobre 1971 (≈ 1971)
Official inscription of the chapel and the priory.
août 2019
Theft of the bell
Theft of the bell août 2019 (≈ 2019)
Disappeared from the bell tower.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Chapelle Notre-Dame (cad. E 53): inscription by order of 15 October 1971
Key figures
Abbaye Saint-Victor de Marseille - Tutelary religious institution
Owner and renovation in 1531.
Fermier du domaine - Local farmer
He lived in the house adjoining the 12th century.
Origin and history
The Notre-Dame de Brue-Auriac Chapel, located in the Var department in Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur, is a 12th century religious building. Isolated on a hill 2 km south of the village of Brue-Auriac, it is attached to a priory and adjacent to the communal cemetery. Its Romanesque architecture is distinguished by a facade adorned with a frieze, a door in the heart surmounted by a carved Christ, and a dissymmetric bell tower, today deprived of its bell after a flight in 2019.
The chapel initially depended on the abbey of Saint-Victor in Marseilles, which began its renovation in 1531 and joined a house for the farmer exploiting the estate. In the 19th century, after the merger of the villages of Brue and Auriac, it served as a parish church until the inauguration of Saint George's Church in 1858. Ranked a historic monument in 1971, it bears witness to local religious and architectural history, marked by its central role in the community before becoming a protected heritage.
The building features remarkable elements such as caps with geometric motifs and an oculus above the door. Its inscription in historical monuments in 1971 (decree of 15 October) concerns both the chapel and its priory, today owned by the commune. Although disused as the main place of worship, it remains a symbol of the medieval Provençal heritage, linked to the influence of the Marseille Abbey and the evolution of local religious practices.
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