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Abbaye Notre-Dame d'Évron à Évron en Mayenne

Eglise gothique
Patrimoine religieux
Abbaye
Eglise fortifiée
Mayenne

Abbaye Notre-Dame d'Évron

    14 Place de la Basilique
    53600 Evron
Private property; property of an association
Abbaye Notre-Dame dÉvron
Abbaye Notre-Dame dÉvron
Abbaye Notre-Dame dÉvron
Abbaye Notre-Dame dÉvron
Abbaye Notre-Dame dÉvron
Abbaye Notre-Dame dÉvron
Abbaye Notre-Dame dÉvron
Abbaye Notre-Dame dÉvron
Abbaye Notre-Dame dÉvron
Abbaye Notre-Dame dÉvron
Abbaye Notre-Dame dÉvron
Abbaye Notre-Dame dÉvron
Abbaye Notre-Dame dÉvron
Abbaye Notre-Dame dÉvron
Abbaye Notre-Dame dÉvron
Abbaye Notre-Dame dÉvron
Abbaye Notre-Dame dÉvron
Abbaye Notre-Dame dÉvron
Abbaye Notre-Dame dÉvron
Abbaye Notre-Dame dÉvron
Abbaye Notre-Dame dÉvron
Abbaye Notre-Dame dÉvron
Abbaye Notre-Dame dÉvron
Abbaye Notre-Dame dÉvron
Abbaye Notre-Dame dÉvron
Abbaye Notre-Dame dÉvron
Abbaye Notre-Dame dÉvron
Abbaye Notre-Dame dÉvron
Abbaye Notre-Dame dÉvron
Abbaye Notre-Dame dÉvron
Abbaye Notre-Dame dÉvron
Abbaye Notre-Dame dÉvron
Abbaye Notre-Dame dÉvron
Abbaye Notre-Dame dÉvron
Abbaye Notre-Dame dÉvron
Abbaye Notre-Dame dÉvron
Abbaye Notre-Dame dÉvron
Abbaye Notre-Dame dÉvron
Abbaye Notre-Dame dÉvron
Abbaye Notre-Dame dÉvron
Abbaye Notre-Dame dÉvron
Abbaye Notre-Dame dÉvron
Abbaye Notre-Dame dÉvron
Abbaye Notre-Dame dÉvron
Abbaye Notre-Dame dÉvron
Abbaye Notre-Dame dÉvron
Abbaye Notre-Dame dÉvron
Abbaye Notre-Dame dÉvron
Abbaye Notre-Dame dÉvron
Abbaye Notre-Dame dÉvron
Abbaye Notre-Dame dÉvron
Crédit photo : MontdErve - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
600
700
800
900
1000
1100
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
642
Foundation by Saint Hadouin
985–989
Refoundation of the Abbey
1123
Monastic reform
1252
Consecration of the Gothic Choir
1482
Commende Scheme
1562
Pillows during the Wars of Religion
1726
Construction of the neoclassical convent
1840
Historical monument classification
1985
Rediscovered Romanesque crypt
2014
Installation of the Saint-Martin community
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Church (Basilica Notre-Dame de l'Epine) : classification by list of 1840 - Façades and roofs of the ancient abbatial house of the late 15th and 16th centuries; former abbey house of the 17th century; remains of the chapel Saint-Michel; Maurist building; French terrace and gardens (Cd. AK 103, 215, 216, 243) : inscription by order of 26 February 1987

Key figures

Saint Hadouin - Bishop of Le Mans (VIIth century) Founder and donor of the Abbey.
Robert (vicomte de Blois ?) - Presumptive restorer (X century) Controversial refoundation between 985 and 989.
François de Châteaubriant - First Merchant Abbé (1482–1519) Benefactor and recipient of papal relics.
Geoffroy de Loudon - Bishop of Le Mans (11th century) Consecration of the Gothic choir in 1252.
Guillaume de La Tremblaye - Monk architect (18th century) Conception of the neoclassical convent.
François Ier - King of France (1519) Recognition of the seigneurial rights of abbots.

Origin and history

The Abbey of Notre-Dame d'Evron, founded in the 7th century by Saint Hadouin, bishop of Le Mans, is based on a medieval legend: a pilgrim would have hung a relic of the milk of the Virgin on an aubépine, which would have turned miraculously to return it to him. This account, recorded in the ninth century, justifies the foundation of a Benedictine monastery, endowed by Hadouin in 642. Destroyed during the Breton and Norman invasions, the abbey was refounded between 985 and 989 under the impulse of a nobleman named Robert (perhaps the Viscount of Blois), although this attribution was controversial among historians. The reconstruction begins with a Romanesque crypt, followed by a nave and a bell tower in the 11th century.

In the 12th century, the abbey was enlarged in a Gothic style, with a choir and flamboyant transepts consecrated in 1252. The abbey, becoming a powerful local lord with rights of high justice, prospers thanks to pilgrimages and exploitation of his estate (moulins, halles, tithes). The wars of Religion (16th century) led to looting and fortifications: the porch tower was transformed into a dungeon, and ditches girded the monastery. François de Châteaubriant, the first abbot of commerce (1482), financed beautifications before the abbey passed under this regime, marking its spiritual decline.

In the 18th century, a new neoclassical convent was built to the west, incorporating the Romanesque bell tower. The Revolution turned the abbey into a parish church (1800) after the destruction of the nearby Saint Martin church. In the 19th century, the Sisters of Charity of Évron occupied the convent, while the basilica, classified as early as 1840, underwent restorations (dismounting of the arrow in 1901, archaeological excavations revealing the crypt in 1985). Since 2014, the Saint-Martin community has established its mother house, perpetuating the religious vocation of the site.

The architecture of the abbey thus blends elements Romanesque (nef, crypt), Gothic (chœur, transepts), and classical (covent of the eighteenth). The chapel of Saint-Crépin, built in the 12th century by a pilgrims of Compostela, houses 13th century murals and a treasure of relics, including that of the milk of the Virgin, preserved in a reliquary in vermeil (1516). The stained glass windows, from the 14th to the 20th century, and a classified organ (XVIIth–XIXth) complete this exceptional heritage.

The site, protected as historical monuments (classification of 1840 for the basilica, inscription of 1987 for the convent buildings and gardens), illustrates nearly 1,400 years of religious, seigneurial and architectural history in Mayenne. Recent excavations and restorations (like that of the South Transept in 2016) continue to reveal its past, while the Saint-Martin community now provides spiritual and cultural animation.

External links