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Notre-Dame Chapel of the Visitation in Termignon en Savoie

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Chapelle baroque et classique
Art baroque savoyard
Savoie

Notre-Dame Chapel of the Visitation in Termignon

    Rue des Écoles
    73500 Termignon
Chapelle Notre-Dame de la Visitation à Termignon
Chapelle Notre-Dame de la Visitation à Termignon
Chapelle Notre-Dame de la Visitation à Termignon
Chapelle Notre-Dame de la Visitation à Termignon
Chapelle Notre-Dame de la Visitation à Termignon
Chapelle Notre-Dame de la Visitation à Termignon
Chapelle Notre-Dame de la Visitation à Termignon
Chapelle Notre-Dame de la Visitation à Termignon
Chapelle Notre-Dame de la Visitation à Termignon
Chapelle Notre-Dame de la Visitation à Termignon
Chapelle Notre-Dame de la Visitation à Termignon
Chapelle Notre-Dame de la Visitation à Termignon
Chapelle Notre-Dame de la Visitation à Termignon
Crédit photo : MOSSOT - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1536
Initial construction
1652
Rededication
1710
Making the retable
1841
Major restoration
1987
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Chapelle de la Visitation (Box E 68): Order of 11 December 1987

Key figures

Sébastien Rosaz - Sculptor Author of the altarpiece in 1710.

Origin and history

The Notre-Dame de la Visitation chapel, also called Notre-Dame-du-Poivre, was built in 1536 at the entrance of the village of Termignon, on a major commercial axis linking Lyon to Milan, known as the "Spicy Road". This first name, Notre-Dame-du-Poivre, bears witness to its connection to the trade in spices, a flourishing economic activity at that time. The building, of modest but symbolic style, marked a spiritual stop for travellers and merchants crossing the Alps.

In 1652, the chapel was redecorated to Notre-Dame-de-la-Visitation, thus changing its name while retaining its role as a place of devotion. Inside, the faithful could admire a altarpiece carved by Sébastien Rosaz in 1710, as well as a collection of ex-votos, offerings of pilgrims in thanksgiving obtained. These elements illustrate the cultural and religious importance of the site to the local community.

A major restoration took place in 1841, during which two lateral naves were added and the choir raised. This date, engraved above the front door, marks a key step in the architectural evolution of the chapel. Ranked a historic monument in 1987, it remains today a precious testimony of Savoyard heritage, mixing commercial history, popular devotion and baroque art.

External links