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Abbey Saint-Pierre de Brantôme en Dordogne

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Abbaye
Dordogne

Abbey Saint-Pierre de Brantôme

    16-22 Boulevard Charlemagne
    24310 Brantôme

Timeline

Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
800
900
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
769
Foundation by Charlemagne
848 et 857
Viking destruction
1404
Fortification by the English
1558–1614
Abbey of Pierre de Bourdeille
1768
Monastic decline
1840
First classification Historical monument
2025
Planned reopening
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Charlemagne - Founder and protector Founded the abbey in 769 and placed relics there.
Bernard, comte de Périgord - 10th Century Benefactor Restore the Abbey after the Viking destruction.
Pierre de Bourdeille (abbé de Brantôme) - Merchant Abbé (1558–1614) Protected the Abbey during the Wars of Religion.
Paul Abadie - 19th century architect Renewed and modified the cloister in 1858.
Eugène Viollet-le-Duc - Architectural influence Collaborated indirectly via Abadie on the site.

Origin and history

The abbey of Saint-Pierre de Brantôme, located in the eponymous commune of Dordogne (New Aquitaine), was founded in 769 by Charlemagne as a Benedictine monastery. According to tradition, the emperor placed there the relics of Saint Sicaire, a child martyr, illustrated by two seventeenth-century panels in the church choir. This first monastery, destroyed by the Vikings in 848 and 857, was rebuilt around the year 900 thanks to Bernard, Count of Périgord, marking the beginning of a period of prosperity.

In the 11th century, the abbey adopted a Romanesque campanile bell tower, unique in France by its construction on a rocky overhang of 12 meters. The troglodytic caves, dug in the limestone cliff, housed monastic spaces (heater, mill, dovecote) and a fountain dedicated to Saint Sicaire, still venerated. The Hundred Years War (14th-15th centuries) caused significant damage: the abbey was fortified by the English in 1404, then restored after 1465, with the reconstruction of the cloister (14th century) and the church.

The Renaissance marked a turning point with abbots who were commendataires, including Pierre de Bourdeille (1558–14), known as Brantôme, whose abbatiat protected the monastery during the Wars of Religion. The successive reforms (congregation of Chezal-Benoît in 1559 and then of Saint-Maur in 1636) revived monastic life, despite a gradual decline: in 1768 only eight monks lived there. The abbey was abolished at the Revolution, but its buildings — abbey church (XI–XIII centuries), cloister (XIVth), and convenual houses (XVIIIth) — remain today.

The architecture of Brantôme blends Romanesque (clocher, nave) and Gothic (15th century vaults), with Renaissance facilities such as the Guard Corps Pavilion (1495). The caves, including the Cave of Last Judgment adorned with bas-reliefs of the 15th and 17th centuries, bear witness to monastic spirituality. Classified as a historical monument in 1840, the abbey now houses the city hall, two museums, and a restaurant in the old mill. Closed in 2023 for security, its reopening is planned in 2025.

The protections for historical monuments cover the church (1840), the cloister (1957), the caves, and the gardens (registered in 2025). The changes of the 19th century, such as the removal of three galleries from the cloister by Paul Abadie (1858), or the staircase of Vauban (17th century), reflect its evolution. The site, surrounded by the Dronne, remains a unique example of troglodytic abbey, linked to Benedictine history and the road to Compostela.

External links