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Abbey of Montbenoît dans le Doubs

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Abbaye
Doubs

Abbey of Montbenoît

    2 D437
    25650 Montbenoît
Ownership of the municipality
Abbaye de Montbenoît
Abbaye de Montbenoît
Abbaye de Montbenoît
Abbaye de Montbenoît
Abbaye de Montbenoît
Abbaye de Montbenoît
Abbaye de Montbenoît
Abbaye de Montbenoît
Abbaye de Montbenoît
Abbaye de Montbenoît
Abbaye de Montbenoît
Abbaye de Montbenoît
Abbaye de Montbenoît
Abbaye de Montbenoît
Abbaye de Montbenoît
Abbaye de Montbenoît
Abbaye de Montbenoît
Abbaye de Montbenoît
Abbaye de Montbenoît
Abbaye de Montbenoît
Abbaye de Montbenoît
Abbaye de Montbenoît
Abbaye de Montbenoît
Abbaye de Montbenoît
Abbaye de Montbenoît
Abbaye de Montbenoît
Abbaye de Montbenoît
Abbaye de Montbenoît
Abbaye de Montbenoît
Abbaye de Montbenoît
Abbaye de Montbenoît
Abbaye de Montbenoît
Abbaye de Montbenoît
Abbaye de Montbenoît
Abbaye de Montbenoît
Abbaye de Montbenoît
Abbaye de Montbenoît
Abbaye de Montbenoît
Abbaye de Montbenoît
Abbaye de Montbenoît
Abbaye de Montbenoît
Abbaye de Montbenoît
Abbaye de Montbenoît
Abbaye de Montbenoît
Abbaye de Montbenoît
Abbaye de Montbenoît
Abbaye de Montbenoît
Abbaye de Montbenoît
Abbaye de Montbenoît
Abbaye de Montbenoît
Abbaye de Montbenoît
Crédit photo : Ludovic Péron - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Antiquité
Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
0
100
1100
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
Vers l'an Mil
Foundation by hermit Benoît
1117–1134
Adoption Rule of St Augustine
1199
Charter confirming the Augustinian rule
1228
Burial of Henry Joux
1251
Sageese Charter
1458
Coutumier du Sageois
XVIIe siècle
Vandalism by the troops of Saxony-Weimar
1846
Cloister classification
1906
Reconstruction of the bell tower
1922
Church ranking (excluding bell tower)
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The cloister: ranking by list of 1846 and by official journal of 18 April 1914 - The abbey church (with the exception of the bell tower): ranking by decree of 7 November 1922 - The other buildings of the abbey: inscription by order of 8 October 1935 - The abbey church sits on the abbey: the bell tower-porch in its entirety (Box AA 72): inscription by decree of 3 December 2013

Key figures

Benoît - Founding hermit Set up a hermitage to the year Mil
Anseric - Archbishop of Besançon (1117–1134) Impulse adoption rule Augustinian
Narduin - First prior to wearing the butt Directs the construction nave/pre-chœur (1141–1162)
Henri de Joux - Protector Lord (end XII – beginning XIII) Donor and buried in the choir
Ferry Carondelet - Commodore Prior (early 16th) Reconstructed choir and chapels in 1522
Henri Bouchet - Adviser to Philippe III of Burgundy Seal the "coutumier du Sageois" (1458)
Bernard de Saxe-Weimar - General of the Swedish troops Responsible for 17th century destruction

Origin and history

The abbey of Montbenoît, located in the Doubs in Burgundy-Franche-Comté, is a former august abbey founded towards the year Mil by a hermit named Benoît. Originally Benedictine community, it adopted the rule of St Augustine in the 12th century under the influence of Archbishop Anseric of Besançon (1117-1134). Its architecture reflects centuries of evolution, with a 12th–15th century cloister, a flamboyant Gothic choir (XVIe), and Renaissance stalls. The monastery also dominated the seigneury of the Saugeese, whose customs it established as early as 1251 through a charter signed with Archbishop William II of the Tower.

In the Middle Ages, the abbey received major donations: forests, tithes, churches (like Nods or Pontarlier) and feudal rights offered by the sisters of Joux, his protectors. These lords, known as warriors, were buried there (e.g. Henry I in 1228, represented in armor on his tomb). The customary of the Saugeois (1458), sealed by Henri Bouchet for Philippe III of Burgundy, codifies 112 articles governing local life, from monastic rights to appointments of judges (messiers). The abbey then manages 20 dependent establishments (prieurés, churches) and collects royalties in salt, wine or chores.

The building was destroyed in the 17th century during the Richelieu Wars, when the troops of Bernard de Saxe-Weimar (called "Swedish") vandalized its interior. Despite fires and conflicts, it remains the only intact medieval religious ensemble in the Doubs. Its elements are protected in stages: cloister classified in 1846, church (excluding bell tower) in 1922, other buildings in 1935, and neo-Gothic bell tower (rebuilt in 1906) registered in 2013. His cloister and choir, symbols of his spiritual and political influence, testify to his central role in the feudal organization of Upper Doubs.

The foundation of the abbey is rooted in the eremitical tradition: Benedict, a solitary one attracting disciples, establishes a Benedictine community before his conversion to the Augustinian rule. The archives mention priors such as Narduin (mid-12th century), the first to wear the Abbatial buttock, or Ferry Carondelet, which in 1522 inspired the reconstruction of the choir and chapels. The charters of the 12th to 13th centuries detail the royalties of the inhabitants of the Saugeese (12 deniers per house, chores) and the rights of the abbey over marriages or inheritances. These texts reveal a rural society structured around the monastery, where seigneurial, ecclesiastical and customary powers intersect.

Joux's sires, a lineage "fearing" according to chronicles, play an ambiguous role as protectors and oppressors. Their decline in the 14th century (extinction in 1326) coincides with the affirmation of the abbey as an economic actor, thanks to dispersed properties: salines de Salins, mills, tolls (e.g. La Cluse), or vineyards. The donations of Pope Innocent II (1141) and Archbishops (such as Humbert de Scey) extend his heritage to Pontarlier or Saint-Gorgon. In the 18th century, architectural changes (wood vaults) preceded the restorations of the 20th century, marked by the reconstruction of the bell tower in Gothic Revival style (1906).

External links