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Abbey of Saint-Mihiel dans la Meuse

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Abbaye
Eglise gothique

Abbey of Saint-Mihiel

    Place des Moines
    55300 Saint-Mihiel
Ownership of the municipality
Abbaye de Saint-Mihiel
Abbaye de Saint-Mihiel
Abbaye de Saint-Mihiel
Abbaye de Saint-Mihiel
Abbaye de Saint-Mihiel
Abbaye de Saint-Mihiel
Abbaye de Saint-Mihiel
Abbaye de Saint-Mihiel
Abbaye de Saint-Mihiel
Abbaye de Saint-Mihiel
Abbaye de Saint-Mihiel
Abbaye de Saint-Mihiel
Abbaye de Saint-Mihiel
Abbaye de Saint-Mihiel
Abbaye de Saint-Mihiel
Abbaye de Saint-Mihiel
Abbaye de Saint-Mihiel
Abbaye de Saint-Mihiel
Abbaye de Saint-Mihiel
Abbaye de Saint-Mihiel
Abbaye de Saint-Mihiel
Abbaye de Saint-Mihiel
Abbaye de Saint-Mihiel
Abbaye de Saint-Mihiel
Abbaye de Saint-Mihiel
Abbaye de Saint-Mihiel
Abbaye de Saint-Mihiel
Abbaye de Saint-Mihiel
Abbaye de Saint-Mihiel
Abbaye de Saint-Mihiel
Abbaye de Saint-Mihiel
Abbaye de Saint-Mihiel
Abbaye de Saint-Mihiel
Abbaye de Saint-Mihiel
Abbaye de Saint-Mihiel
Abbaye de Saint-Mihiel
Abbaye de Saint-Mihiel
Abbaye de Saint-Mihiel
Abbaye de Saint-Mihiel
Abbaye de Saint-Mihiel
Abbaye de Saint-Mihiel
Abbaye de Saint-Mihiel
Abbaye de Saint-Mihiel
Abbaye de Saint-Mihiel
Abbaye de Saint-Mihiel
Abbaye de Saint-Mihiel
Abbaye de Saint-Mihiel
Abbaye de Saint-Mihiel
Abbaye de Saint-Mihiel
Abbaye de Saint-Mihiel
Crédit photo : François BERNARDIN - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
700
800
900
1700
1800
1900
2000
708 ou 709
Merovingian Foundation
vers 820
Travel near the Meuse
1791
Revolutionary Dissolution
XVIIIe siècle
Expansion of the Abbatial Palace
1915
Partial destruction
1998
Opening of the Museum of Sacred Art
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Library with its decor; staircase of honour with its wrought iron ramp in the south wing of the former Abbatial Palace (Box AB 470): inscription by order of 7 October 1975; Church in total; facades and roofs; two capitular rooms on the ground floor of the large house; Two galleries of the cloister (cad. B 462, 464, 465) : Order of 19 March 1982

Key figures

Wulfoalde - Founding Count Created the abbey in 708/709 with Adalsinde.
Smaragde de Saint-Mihiel - Carolingian abbey Close to Louis le Pieux, organized the transfer in 820.
Louis le Pieux - Carolingian Emperor Granted five diplomas to the Abbey (816–826).
Ligier Richier - Lorrain sculptor Author of *La Pâmoison de la Virgo* (before 1532).
Marc Boulanger - Owner Intervention during reconstructions (period not specified).
Thomas-Jean Tomas - Owner Associated with architectural work.

Origin and history

The abbey Saint-Michel de Saint-Mihiel, founded in 708 or 709 by Count Wulfoalde and his wife Adalsinde, was first established on the coast of Castellion before being moved to the edge of the Meuse around 820 under the impulse of Abbé Smaragde, close to Louis le Pieux. The latter, between 816 and 826, awarded five imperial diplomas to the abbey, making it a Carolingian intellectual center thanks to its library, rebuilt in the eighteenth century in a configuration still visible today.

Over the centuries, the abbey underwent several major reconstructions: a Romanesque bell tower and an ottonian tower (XI century), a Benedictine nave (XVIe), then modifications in the 17th and 18th centuries, including the enlargement of the abbey palace. The Revolution dissolved the abbey in 1791, transforming its buildings into a courthouse and prison. The library, preserved despite the wars (including a French shell in 1915), still preserves 8,700 books, of which 74 manuscripts and 86 incunables.

The site has been home since 1998 to the Museum of Sacred Art of the Meuse, born of a desire to protect goldsmithry and religious sculptures of the department. Among his treasures, La Pâmoison de la Vierge (before 1532) by Ligier Richier, a masterpiece in previously painted walnut, bears witness to the lorrain art of the Renaissance. The head of Christ, today at the Louvre, would come from this carved group.

The abbey also illustrates the turbulent history of Lorraine, between destructions (wars, revolution) and restorations (notably after 1918, during the Salient of Saint-Mihiel). Its protected elements include the church, the capitular halls, the cloister, and the library with its original decoration, classified Historic Monument.

The Benedictines, renowned scholars, formed an eclectic collection: 3,441 lay books of the eighteenth century (history, science, law) added religious manuscripts. The library, first stateized, was entrusted to the city in 1848 before becoming public. Despite the losses, it remains a unique testimony of monastic intellectual life.

The abbey was also linked to priories such as Laître-sous-Amance (XI century), united at Saint-Mihiel in 1592 before being sold as a national good. Its architecture mixes bellows, dogive vaults (nef), and domes (chœur), reflecting its successive reconstructions under the direction of masterpiece masters such as Marc Boulanger or Thomas-Jean Tomas.

External links