Crédit photo : Frédérique Défrade - Sous licence Creative Commons
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Timeline
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1100
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
…
1900
2000
1116
Agreement with the Archbishop of Lyon
Agreement with the Archbishop of Lyon 1116 (≈ 1116)
Connection of the Priory to the Chair-God
vers 1485
Tetramorphic Paintings
Tetramorphic Paintings vers 1485 (≈ 1485)
Command of Guillaume Mastin de la Merlée
1485-1509
Final Judgement and Resurrection
Final Judgement and Resurrection 1485-1509 (≈ 1497)
Paintings under Claude Raybe de Saint-Marcel
XVe siècle
Reconstruction nave and bell tower
Reconstruction nave and bell tower XVe siècle (≈ 1550)
Work related to the village compound
27 juillet 1938
Historical Monument
Historical Monument 27 juillet 1938 (≈ 1938)
Protection of the entire building
1960
Fire of the priory
Fire of the priory 1960 (≈ 1960)
Partial destruction of buildings
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Church: by decree of 27 July 1938
Key figures
Guillaume Mastin de la Merlée - Prior (15th century)
Ref. nave vault, Tetramorph control
Claude Raybe de Saint-Marcel d'Urfé - Prior (1485-1509)
Order Judgment and Resurrection
Claude Raybe de Galles - Prior and Canon
Probable donor Virgin to the Child
Jean-Baptiste Barrelon et Josephus Veyrat - Glass painters (1854)
Authors of the stained glass windows of the apse
Origin and history
The church Notre-Dame de L'Hôpital-sous-Rochefort, located in the Loire department in the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes region, is a 12th-century religious building. Originally, it belonged to a priory dependent on the Benedictine abbey of the Chaise-Dieu, as evidenced by an agreement signed in 1116 with the archbishop of Lyon. Today, the Romanesque period remains only the square of the cross of the transept, the rest having been redesigned in the 15th and 16th centuries.
The nave and bell tower were rebuilt in the 15th century, simultaneously at the edge of the village, under the impulse of prior Guillaume de la Merlée, who also had the vault of the nave rebuilt. The choir preserves wall paintings stratified between the 15th and 16th centuries, commissioned by successive priors. Among them are the symbols of the evangelists (Tetramorph) painted around 1485 by Guillaume Mastin de la Merlée, and a representation of the Last Judgment attributed to his successor, Claude Raybe de Saint-Marcel d'Urfé (prieur from 1485 to 1509). In the 18th century, Marian scenes in blue camaïeu were added.
The building, classified as a Historic Monument in 1938, is home to remarkable furniture, including a Renaissance wooden Virgin with Child (1.58 m), probably donated by Claude Raybe of Wales, Prior and Councillor of the Dukes of Bourbon. This statue, classified in 1892, is attributed to a workshop close to the Maître de Beaujeu or to Lyon artisans such as Jean de Chartres. The priory, now partially destroyed, was organized around a fortified courtyard integrated with the walls of the village, with buildings rebuilt by Guillaume de la Merlée.
The glass windows of the apse, made in 1854 by painters-glasses Jean-Baptiste Barrelon and Josephus Veyrat, complete this artistic ensemble. The church underwent several restoration campaigns, including in the 19th century (reopening of bays, rebuilding of the sacristy) and in the 20th century (roofs, bell tower arrow). The 2002 excavations revealed the stratification of the murals, confirming their evolution between the 15th and 16th centuries.
Architecturally, the church mixes granite bellows, cut stone and ancient uses. Its bell tower-wall with four arches, raised during the fortification of the village around 1440, dominates a vaulted nave of warheads and a choir with hemi-circular apse. The apsidioles, vaulted in cul-de-four, communicate with the choir by side chapels. The dome on trunks of the cross and the vaults in broken cradle of the crucifixes date from the Romanesque period.
The priory, sold as a national good during the Revolution, was burned in 1960. Its remains, now shared between private owners and the commune, recall its central role in the religious and social life of the village. Guillaume de la Merlée's large armored chimneys and the traces of fortification testify to its strategic importance in the 15th and 16th centuries.
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Collection
L'église abrite une statue en bois polychrome représentant la Vierge et l'Enfant. Cette sculpture semble dater du tout début du XVIème siècle. Elle est classée M.H en 1892. Elle mesure 1,56 m.
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