Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Abbaye de la Trappe à Soligny-la-Trappe dans l'Orne

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Abbaye
Orne

Abbaye de la Trappe

    248 La Trappe
    61380 Soligny-la-Trappe

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1100
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1120
White-Nef drowning
1140
Savignian Foundation
1147
Connection to Cîteaux
1214
Consecration of the abbey
1527
Commende Scheme
1660
Reform of Rancé
1790
Revolutionary closure
1814
Trappists return
1827
Final relocation
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Rotrou du Perche - Count and founder Have built the oratory in 1122.
Adam Gautier - Third Abbé Spiritual and material climax (11th century).
Armand Jean Le Bouthillier de Rancé - Trappist reformer Establishment of the Strict Observance in 1660.
Augustin de Lestrange - Novice Master Organised the exile of the monks in 1791.
Jean du Bellay - First Abbé Commandataire Cumule six abbeys under Francis I.
François-Nicolas de la Forest de Somont - Abbot of Tamie Adopts the reform after visiting the Trappe.

Origin and history

The Notre-Dame de la Trappe Abbey, originally called Grande-Trappe, was founded in 1140 by monks of the Savigny Congregation on the initiative of Count Rotrou du Perche in memory of his wife Mathilde, who died in the sinking of the Blanche-Nef (1120). Set up near an oratory built in 1122, the religious joined the Cistercian order in 1147. The name "Trappe" could come from local relief or from poaching practices in the forest, according to German etymology.

In the Middle Ages, the abbey prospered under the protection of the Anglo-Norman Dukes, reaching its spiritual and material climax under the abbatiate of Adam Gautier (early 13th century). The abbey church, consecrated to Our Lady, was completed in 1214. However, the Hundred Years' War (14th-15th centuries) ravaged the monastery: fires, looting and forced exiles (as in Bonsmoulins in 1360) reduced the community to about fifteen monks. Despite reconstructions, destruction was repeated in 1434 and 1469.

The Renaissance marked a decline with the imposition of the regime of commende in 1527, where outside abbots (often noble) run the abbey without a religious vocation. Jean du Bellay, the first abbey commandataire, cumulated six abbeys simultaneously. The Trappist reform was born in 1660 under the impetus of Armand Jean Le Bouthillier de Rancé, who restored a strict rule after finding seven monks in decadence. Its reform, known as "Strict Observance", attracts vocations and extends to Europe, despite the opposition of the official Cistercian order.

The French Revolution (1790) dispersed the monks: the abbey was sold as a national property, its buildings destroyed, and the exiled or guillotine religious. Augustin de Lestrange fled to Switzerland with 24 monks, founding refuges in La Valsainte and then in Russia (1797). After pereginations in Europe, the Trappists returned in 1814, restoring monastic life to Soligny in 1827. The abbey, still active, remains a symbol of Trappist reform, with global foundations.

Letymology of the name "Trappe" remains debated: if a Latin origin (Swiming macre) or Celtic (clan) is evoked, the Germanic hypothesis (Treppe, "stairs" or "traps") seems to be the most plausible, linked to local relief or cynegic practices. The monks built the site with ponds (Robin, Dais, Chaumont) and exploited the Perche state forest, while clearing land that was considered inhospitable before their arrival.

In the 21st century, the abbey continued its monastic tradition and launched in 2025 a craft beer, the Hercelin, brewed after an old recipe. The site, partially rebuilt after the revolutionary destructions, retains its atypical orientation (northeast) and its link with the forest, a legacy of its Cistercian history.

External links