Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Abbey of Cercanceaux à Souppes-sur-Loing en Seine-et-Marne

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Abbaye

Abbey of Cercanceaux

    Le Bourg
    77460 Souppes-sur-Loing
Abbaye de Cercanceaux
Abbaye de Cercanceaux
Abbaye de Cercanceaux
Crédit photo : Thor19 - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1181
Foundation of the Abbey
1185
Embassy in Rome
1201
Fourth Crusade
1323
Wizard Scandal
1429
Orléans Headquarters
1514
Beginning of Commende
1567
Protestant Pillage
1792
Revolutionary closure
1926
Heritage protection
1995
Start of restorations
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Abbaye de Cercanceau: registration by order of 14 April 1926

Key figures

Henri Ier Clément - Marshal de France and founder Offer land for the abbey.
Philippe Auguste - King of France, protector Financially supported the abbey.
Eudes - First Abbé de Cercanceaux Organizer and ambassador to Rome.
Antoine Héroët - Merchant Abbé and Humanist Poet near Marguerite de Navarre.
Jean-Jacques Olier - Abbé and founder of Saint-Sulpice Resigned in 1649.
Jeanne d’Arc - Historical figure linked Abbé wounded by his side.
Henry Théodore Dupont - Revolutionary buyer Transform the abbey into stationery.

Origin and history

The abbey of Cercanceaux, founded in 1181 by the monks of the abbey of the Cour-Dieu, settled on land offered by Henri I Clément, Marshal of France. Built in white limestone, it quickly received the support of Philippe Auguste, becoming a "royal" abbey. The Cistercian monks cleared the Loing Valley, and the abbey prospered until the Renaissance, despite crises such as the Hundred Years War.

In the Middle Ages, the abbey grew under the impulse of influential abbots, like Eudes, sent to the embassy in Rome by Philippe Auguste in 1185. In 1201 the abbot even participated in the fourth crusade. However, scandals, such as the witchcraft affair in 1323 involving an abbot and a black cat, as well as looting during the Hundred Years' War, weakened the abbey. At the end of the 15th century, an abbot fought alongside Jeanne d'Arc during the siege of Orleans in 1429.

From 1514, the institution of the commende marked the decline of the abbey: the abbots, appointed by the king and not elected by the monks, managed incomes without respecting the monastic rule. Despite reparations under humanist Antoine Heroët (1538-1567), the wars of Religion ravaged the place. In 1567, the Protestant Chevalier du Boulay looted the abbey, which also served as a negotiating place in 1576 during the Wars of Religion. In the 17th century, the poverty of the abbey discourages even Jean-Jacques Olier, founder of Saint-Sulpice, who resigned in 1649.

The French Revolution rang the abbey: closed in 1792, its buildings were sold as national goods and transformed into stationery by Henry Théodore Dupont. Industrial activity continued until the 20th century, while the remains were partially protected in 1926. From 1995, a restoration allowed the abbey to be converted into a place of reception and tourism, retaining only the abbey chapel as a witness to its religious past.

External links