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Perray-Neuf Abbey à Précigné dans la Sarthe

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Abbaye
Sarthe

Perray-Neuf Abbey

    Rue du Chanoine Calendini
    72300 Précigné
Private property
Abbaye du Perray-Neuf
Abbaye du Perray-Neuf
Abbaye du Perray-Neuf
Abbaye du Perray-Neuf
Abbaye du Perray-Neuf
Abbaye du Perray-Neuf
Abbaye du Perray-Neuf
Abbaye du Perray-Neuf
Abbaye du Perray-Neuf
Abbaye du Perray-Neuf
Crédit photo : Travail personnel - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1200
1300
1700
1800
1900
2000
1189
Foundation of the Abbey
1209
Final implementation
1789
Revolutionary decline
XVIIe–XVIIIe siècles
Reconstruction of buildings
1939
Death of Bishop Rousseau
1983
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The entrance porch; facades and roofs of the Abbatial house; the well; the entrance hall with the staircase; the following rooms with their decor: the large living and dining room on the ground floor, the seven bedrooms on the first floor; the bridge over the river Belle Hoirie (cad. A 234): by order of 27 June 1983; Façades and roofs of the communes, as well as the dovecote (cad

Key figures

Robert IV de Sablé - Founder and Lord of Sablé Master of the Temple, companion of Richard Lion Heart.
Guillaume des Roches - Sénéchal d'Anjou (1209) Confederate the seigneurial rights of Sablé.
René d’Anjou - Duke of Anjou and King of Sicily Beneficiary of a confession in 1450.
Norbert-Georges-Pierre Rousseau - Bishop of Puy-en-Velay Died in the Abbey in 1939.

Origin and history

The Perray-Neuf Abbey, also known as the Premontés Abbey, was founded in 1189 by Robert IV de Sablé, lord of Sablé and master of the Temple Order. The latter, a companion of Richard Cœur de Lion during the third crusade, definitively implanted the abbey on its current site in 1209. Under the jurisdiction of the parish priest of Courtillers, it became a major religious centre in Haut-Anjou, housing up to 40 monks until the 16th century. Religious even taught at the University of Angers, enjoying specific judicial privileges.

In the 17th and 18th centuries, the convent buildings were completely rebuilt, marking a period of restructuring (1675–1710). The abbey, reduced to seven monks at the Revolution, lost its church and part of its buildings. In the 19th century it was acquired by the Rousseau family, and the bishop of Puy-en-Velay Norbert-Georges-Pierre Rousseau died there in 1939. Today, only the abbey house (XIIIth century), the monumental porch, and remarkable interior decorations (lambris, fireplaces), contrast with the sobriety of the facade remain.

Classified as a Historical Monument in 1983, the abbey protects its porch, the abbey house (with vestibule and decorated rooms), the well, and the bridge over the Belle Hoirie. The commons and the dovecote are registered on the same date. A first protection was already from 1926. The ensemble is a testament to the influence of the Premonstrated in Anjou and the monastic architectural evolution, from the Middle Ages to the Old Regime.

External links