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Churches of France

The churches belong to our collective memory. Each of us is attached to the church where he married, where he baptized his children, where he buried his parents. This is undoubtedly one of the most interesting heritages that can be visited. The memory of living together in a primitive community.

The term church is a generic term that refers to a Christian place of worship. So all the cathedrals, basilicas, abbeys, chapels... are also churches. In practice, therefore, a church is referred to as a "b" parish church, "the church of a village or neighbourhood of a city."

The Christians originally met in private mansions (Domus ecclesiae). From the fourth century on, the Christian religion became the official religion of the Roman Empire. Christians can therefore build public buildings to bring together the faithful (ecclesia or churches).

The construction of churches respond to different architectural styles:

  • Paleo-Christian churches ending with the Western Roman Empire in 476.
  • Preroman churches until the early Romanesque arts, around the year one thousand.
  • Romanesque churches from the year one thousand to 1150 (First Romanesque, Romanesque and Romano-Gothic).
  • Gothic churches from 1150, until the renaissance in 1500, with primitive gothic until 1230, the gothic radiating until 1400, finally the flamboyant and late gothic, which will coexist with the renaissance style until 1600.
  • Renaissance period, often mixed with flamboyant Gothic from 1500 to 1600.
  • Classical churches follow the classical period of the second renaissance and extends from 1620 to 1750. This period coincides with the Baroque period of the counter-reform. font-family: non-serif;">The neo-Gothic, neo-classical and neo-Roman churches will be built during the period 1750-1900.
  • Modern churches from 1900 to the present day. 

Relais-Historiques de France has identified more than 8800 churches classified as MH by regions, departments, but also according to the 6 sub-categories opposite.

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Sélection de 8 churches classified sur 8830 en France

Saint-Blaise Church of the Hospital-Saint-Blaise
Chemins de Compostelle - Au bord des voies
64130 L'Hôpital-Saint-Blaise

The Saint-Blaise church of L'Hôpital-Saint-Blaise, a Romanesque building dating back to the 11th and 12th centuries, is a jewel of the Pyrénées-Atlantiques, classified as a historical monument and a UNESCO World Heritage Site on the roads of Compostela.
Church of Saint Catherine of Sainte-Catherine-de-Fierbois
Architecture gothique flamboyant
37800 Sainte-Catherine-de-Fierbois

The Saint-Catherine Church of Sainte-Catherine-de-Fierbois, built in the 15th century in a flamboyant Gothic style, is a listed historical monument located in Indre-et-Loire, famous for its link with Jeanne d'Arc and its legendary sword.
Saint-Maixent de Veigné Church
Eglise romane et gothique
37250 Veigné

The church of Saint-Maixent de Veigné, a 12th century religious building located in the commune of Veigné in Indre-et-Loire, was marked by a major reconstruction in 1873, retaining only its original bell tower, classified as a historical monument since 1961.
Église Saint-Étienne d'Auvers
Clocher en bâtière
50500 Auvers

The church of Saint-Étienne d'Auvers, a Gothic building of the 13th and 14th centuries, stands in the Manche in Normandy. Ranked a historic monument, it combines medieval architecture and ancient murals.
Church of Saint Nicholas of Brem
Eglise romane
85470 Brem-sur-Mer

The Saint-Nicolas de Saint-Nicolas-de-Brem church, built in the 11th century in Brem-sur-Mer in Vendée, is a listed historical monument, famous for its medieval frescoes and mysterious carved portal.
Notre-Dame-de-Romigier de Manosque Church
Art roman provençal
04100 Manosque

The Church of Notre-Dame-de-Romigier, a 13th-XIVth-century Romanesque building in Manosque, was partially rebuilt in the 17th-XIXth centuries. Classified as a historical monument in 1980, it houses a Preroman black Virgin and a Paleo-Christian sarcophagus.
Saint-Thyrs Church of Labruguière
Eglise gothique
81290 Labruguière

The church of Saint-Thyrs de Labruguière, a 14th century Gothic building, stands in the Tarn in Occitanie, combining arches of warheads and octagonal bell tower emblematic of medieval regional architecture.
Our Lady of Etretat Church
Eglise romane et gothique
76790 Etretat

The Church of Notre-Dame d'Étretat, a Romanesque and Gothic building of the 11th–13th centuries, stands in Etretat, Normandy. Ranked a historic monument, it combines a Romanesque facade and a Gothic tower-lantern, witness to its link with the Abbey of Fécamp.