Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Church of Our Lady of Larmor-Plage dans le Morbihan

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Eglise romane et gothique
Morbihan

Church of Our Lady of Larmor-Plage

    Place Notre-Dame
    56260 Larmor-Plage
Église Notre-Dame de Larmor-Plage
Église Notre-Dame de Larmor-Plage
Église Notre-Dame de Larmor-Plage
Église Notre-Dame de Larmor-Plage
Église Notre-Dame de Larmor-Plage
Église Notre-Dame de Larmor-Plage
Église Notre-Dame de Larmor-Plage
Église Notre-Dame de Larmor-Plage
Église Notre-Dame de Larmor-Plage
Église Notre-Dame de Larmor-Plage
Église Notre-Dame de Larmor-Plage
Église Notre-Dame de Larmor-Plage
Église Notre-Dame de Larmor-Plage
Église Notre-Dame de Larmor-Plage
Église Notre-Dame de Larmor-Plage
Église Notre-Dame de Larmor-Plage
Église Notre-Dame de Larmor-Plage
Église Notre-Dame de Larmor-Plage
Église Notre-Dame de Larmor-Plage
Église Notre-Dame de Larmor-Plage
Église Notre-Dame de Larmor-Plage
Église Notre-Dame de Larmor-Plage
Église Notre-Dame de Larmor-Plage
Église Notre-Dame de Larmor-Plage
Église Notre-Dame de Larmor-Plage
Église Notre-Dame de Larmor-Plage
Église Notre-Dame de Larmor-Plage
Église Notre-Dame de Larmor-Plage
Crédit photo : Auteur inconnu - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
600
700
1000
1100
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
VIe siècle
Legendary Foundation
Xe siècle
Post-viking reconstruction
1502
Fire and partial reconstruction
1491-1552
Construction of the north porch
1630
Completion of the Bell Tower
1666
Added granite arrow
13 janvier 1912
Creation of the parish
8 février 1990
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Notre Dame Church (Box AM 369): Order of 8 February 1990

Key figures

Gildas le Sage - Legendary Founder Founded the initial chapel in the sixth century.
Geoffroi Ier de Bretagne - Duke of Brittany (Xth century) Post-vik reconstruction coordinator.
Louis VIII de Rohan-Guéméné - Local Lord The tower was completed in 1630.
Cédric de Pierrepont - Marine Officer (Special Forces) Funeral celebrated in 2019 in the church.

Origin and history

The Church of Our Lady of Larmor-Plage, located in Morbihan in Brittany, is a Catholic building marked by a thousand-year history. According to tradition, a first chapel was founded in the sixth century by Gildas le Sage, destroyed by the Vikings and rebuilt in the tenth century under Geoffroi I of Brittany. It became a place of pilgrimage for the sailors and preserved four 14th-century Romanesque pillars, which witnessed its medieval structure. Its northern porch, flamboyant Gothic style (1491-1552), houses twelve statues of the Apostles and a representation of Christ, while its fortified tower, completed in 1630, served as a maritime landmark and watchtower.

The partial reconstruction in the 16th century followed a fire in 1502, incorporating Breton Gothic elements such as the arches with warheads of the porch or carved sandstones of the frame. The tower, with an arrow of granite in 1666, became a local symbol with the custom of saving ships: the bells responding to the cannon blows of ships leaving in the countryside. Ranked a historic monument in 1990, the church also houses ex-voto maritimes (such as the model of Saint John, a frigate of the 19th century) and classified statues, including those of Saint Roch, patron saint of the mariners, and Saint Efflam, linked to the legends of the passages of the Channel.

The building, originally a chapel dependent on the parish of Ploemeur, became a parish church in 1912 when Larmor-Plage was founded. Its interior features a nave with three vessels, a flat-bed choir, and baroque altarpieces from the 17th and 18th centuries, including one dedicated to the Virgin with Child. The chapel once competed with the pilgrimage of Saint Anne-d'Auray, attracting the faithful until the 17th century. Today, it remains a testimony of Breton maritime history, mixing religious, defensive and symbolic functions.

Among the remarkable furniture objects are a 16th century Virgin of Mercy (sculpted group of six figures), a Christ in polychrome wood, and a commemorative plaque of 1506 granite. The statues of the apostles (1518), classified in 1907, adorn the north porch, while retables such as the altar of the Jews (39 figures) illustrate Breton religious art. The church, a communal property, also preserves traditions such as the funeral of local figures, like those of Master Cédric de Pierrepont in 2019.

Architecturally, the church combines defensive elements (created tower, foothills) and religious (sculpted carpentry, stained glass windows). Its strategic location, 200 metres from the sea, made it a landmark for navigators entering the Lorient harbour, formed by the estuaries of Scorff, Blavet and Ter. The local motto, "Good wind to whom greets me", recalls this maritime signal function, while the ex-voto (like the Protector, 64 cannon ship) testify to the close links between the community and the sea.

External links