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Abbey of Bellevaux à Cirey en Haute-Saône

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Abbaye
Haute-Saône

Abbey of Bellevaux

    8 Rue du Château
    70190 Cirey
Owned by the Department
Abbaye de Bellevaux
Abbaye de Bellevaux
Abbaye de Bellevaux
Abbaye de Bellevaux
Abbaye de Bellevaux
Abbaye de Bellevaux
Abbaye de Bellevaux
Abbaye de Bellevaux
Abbaye de Bellevaux
Abbaye de Bellevaux
Abbaye de Bellevaux
Abbaye de Bellevaux
Abbaye de Bellevaux
Abbaye de Bellevaux
Abbaye de Bellevaux
Abbaye de Bellevaux
Abbaye de Bellevaux
Abbaye de Bellevaux
Abbaye de Bellevaux
Abbaye de Bellevaux
Abbaye de Bellevaux
Abbaye de Bellevaux
Abbaye de Bellevaux
Abbaye de Bellevaux
Abbaye de Bellevaux
Crédit photo : Postkarte um 1900 - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1100
1200
1700
1800
1900
2000
1119
Foundation of the Abbey
1143
Church Consecration
1191
Canonization of Pierre de Tarentaise
1786-1788
Reconstruction of the Conventual Building
1791
Sale as a national good
1946
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Former Abbey, currently castle: inscription by order of 27 December 1946

Key figures

Pons Ier de La Roche - Founder Co-founder of the Abbey in 1119.
Étienne de Traves - Founder Co-founder alongside Pons I.
Pierre II de Tarentaise - Saint and Archbishop Relics preserved in Bellevaux, canonized in 1191.
Louis-Albert de Lezay-Marnésia - Last Abbé Commandataire Modernizes the Abbey in the 18th century.
Eugène Huvelin - Trappist monk Buy the abbey in 1817.
Joseph Cuchot - Architect Directs the reconstruction of 1786–88.

Origin and history

Notre-Dame de Bellevaux Abbey, founded in 1119 by Pons I of La Roche and Étienne de Traves, is the first Cistercian abbey of Franche-Comté and a daughter of Morimond. His church, dedicated to Notre-Dame, was consecrated in 1143. The abbey became a major spiritual centre thanks to the relics of Peter II of Tarentaise, canonized in 1191, attracting pilgrims and burials of noble locals, including the Sires de La Roche and three archbishops of Besançon.

In the Middle Ages, Bellevaux played a key role in Cistercian swarming, founding abbeys such as Lucelle (1124), Monsteron (1130), Rosières (1132), and even Daphni in Greece (1211). Its decline began in the 14th century, with a decline in monastic numbers and financial difficulties. The beginning, established in 1551, aggravates its situation, despite an ephemeral recovery in the 18th century under Abbé Louis-Albert de Lezay-Marnésia, who modernized the buildings.

The French Revolution marked a turning point: the abbey was sold as a national good in 1791, then bought in 1817 by Trappist monks, who left it in 1830 in the face of local hostility. It became private property in 1837 and was partially destroyed and then classified as a Historic Monument in 1946. Today, its remains, including the 18th century convent building and its hydraulic network, bear witness to its prestigious past.

Bellevaux's architecture reflects its evolution: the poorly documented Romanesque church was demolished after the Revolution, while the cloister and the convent buildings, rebuilt in 1786–88, incorporated medieval elements. The site, classified for its picturesque character in 1951, also preserves traces of its hydraulic system, fed by a well known miraculous until the nineteenth century.

Economically, the abbey relied on four barns as early as 1139, then eight in 1178, such as those of Cirey or Valleroy, contributing to the clearing of the area. His income also came from the salines of Lons-le-Saunier and Salins-les-Bains, as well as from rents. Despite its decline, Bellevaux remains a symbol of Cistercian influence in Europe and of franc-comtoise monastic history.

External links