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Monastir del Camp à Passa dans les Pyrénées-Orientales

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Monastère
Eglise romane
Pyrénées-Orientales

Monastir del Camp

    Hameau du Monastir del Cam
    66300 Passa
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Crédit photo : Danydeval - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
900
1000
1100
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
fin VIIIe–début IXe siècle (légende)
Legendary foundation by Charlemagne
1087–1090
Certificate of the Carolingian Chapel
1090–1116
Construction of the current Romanesque church
1116
Installation of the Canons of St Augustine
1307
Addition of the Gothic cloister
1592
Papal bubble secularization
1786
Permanent closure of the monastery
1875
Historical Monument
fin des années 2010
Open to the public and museum
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Priory: ranking by list of 1875

Key figures

Charlemagne - Emperor and legendary figure Supposed commander of the chapel (legend).
Artal II - Bishop of Elne (early 12th century) Founded the canon community in 1116.
François Jaubert de Passa - Post-revolutionary owner and man of letters Friend of Merimée, inspired *The Venus of Ille*.
Prosper Mérimée - Writer and Inspector of Historic Monuments Linked to the site via Jaubert de Passa.
Clément VIII - Pope (1592–1605) Secularized the monastery by bubble.
Guillaume de Sarragossa - Noble local (11th century) Father of Beatrice and Sibille (preserved epitaphs).

Origin and history

The Monastir del Camp, or "Monastery of the Champ", is a former priory located in Passa, near Thuir in the Pyrénées-Orientales. According to legend, it was founded in the late 8th century or early 9th century, at Charlemagne's request after his victory over the Saracens in 785. The emperor, grateful to the Virgin Mary for allowing his thirsty soldiers to find a miraculous source (the Riu del Miracle), ordered the construction of a chapel on this site. However, historical evidence placed its foundation much later, around the 11th century.

Historically, the priory was occupied by a community of Canons of St Augustine from 1116, settled by Artal II, bishop of Elne. It then became an active Benedictine monastery until 1786. The present church, built between 1090 and 1116, replaces a Carolingian chapel dedicated to Sainte-Marie, attested from 1087. In 1307, a Gothic cloister with trilobed arcades was added. The monastery was secularized in 1592 and sold as a national property to the Jaubert de Passa family after the Revolution. Transformed into a hospital, it later housed the national studs before being opened to the public as a cultural site.

The western portal, a masterpiece of Catalan Romanesque art (late XII century), is decorated with carved capitals evoking the Master of Cabestany. Among them, a scene often interpreted as the Annunciation or the Invention of the Cross by St. Helena, in connection with the Marian devotion of the priory. The cloister (1307) and the convent buildings (XIIth–XIIIth centuries) bear witness to its architectural evolution. Ranked a Historic Monument in 1875, the site combines Carolingian legend, medieval history and Romanesque heritage.

The monastery was also linked to local figures such as François Jaubert de Passa, a friend of Prosper Mérimée, who inspired the place for his works (La Venus d'Ille, Carmen). After centuries of monastic life, then agricultural and hospital, the Monastir del Camp is today a place of culture, housing a museum of Christ and events, perpetuating its central role in Catalan heritage.

External links