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Abbey of Val-Chrétien à Bruyères-sur-Fère dans l'Aisne

Aisne

Abbey of Val-Chrétien

    1 Val Chrétien
    02130 Bruyères-sur-Fère
Abbaye du Val-Chrétien
Abbaye du Val-Chrétien
Abbaye du Val-Chrétien
Abbaye du Val-Chrétien
Abbaye du Val-Chrétien
Abbaye du Val-Chrétien
Abbaye du Val-Chrétien
Abbaye du Val-Chrétien
Crédit photo : Pascal3012 - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1100
1200
1700
1800
1900
2000
1134
Foundation of the Abbey
1142
Gift of Thibaud IV of Champagne
1145
Transfer of nuns
1790
Revolutionary closure
5 juin 1928
First entry MH
30 août 2022
Supplementary registration
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Remains of the old church: inscription by decree of 5 June 1928; The following elements of the former pre-mounted abbey of Val Chrétien: west wings of the cloister, facades and roofs, old barns and doorway dated 1728, old medieval barn, walls on the rue de Val Chrétien, abbey house, facades and roofs and its central staircase, old gate (pedestrian and pedestrian door next to it), archaeological floors of the plot A 629, shown in cadastre section A parcel 629, as delimited on the plan annexed to the decree: inscription by order of 30 August 2022

Key figures

Raoul de Cramaille - Founder Gives his fief of Reincourt in 1134.
Gilla (ou Gilsa) - Co-founder Wife of Raoul de Cramaille.
Pierre (moine) - Postwar rebuilder Remains alone after the English fire.
Symphorien Bullioud - Abbé commendataire (1530–1533) First abbot, bishop of Soissons.
François Tallemant - Abbé commendataire (XVIIe s.) Chaplain of Louis XIV for 24 years.
Dominique de Bellon - Abbé commendataire (1753–182) Chanoine de Chartres before the Revolution.

Origin and history

Val-Chrétien Abbey, or Vallis Christiana, is a canon abbey of the order of Premontré founded in 1134 by Raoul de Cramaille and his wife Gilla. Located in Bruyères-sur-Fère (Aisne), on the banks of Ourcq, it is confirmed by Josselin de Vierzy, bishop of Soissons, and Pope Eugene III. The first religious came from Saint Martin Abbey in Laon. Thibaud IV of Champagne granted him land near Dormans in 1142, and a women's community settled there before being transferred in 1145 to found the Abbey of Sainte-Croix of Dormans.

During the Hundred Years' War, the abbey was burned by the English, and its monks were taken into captivity. Only one religious, Peter, remains there and begins its reconstruction after the war. He became abbot and bought the prisoners. The abbey flourished until the Revolution: in 1790, the Constituent Assembly abolished the monastic vows, and Val-Chrétien was sold as a national good in 1791. Turned into a farm, it preserves remarkable remains, such as the ruins of its 12th century church, inscribed in historical monuments in 1928, and its partially preserved cloister.

The abbey has an important land heritage, with properties in Arcy-Sainte-Restitute, Brassles, or Le Plessier-Huleu. Among his relics are the skull of Saint Ghislain and the humerus of Saint Gilles. Its architecture, including the church's carved capitals, recalls that of Oulchy-le-Château, with fantastic foliage patterns. After additional inscriptions in 2022 (wings of the cloister, abbatial home, 18th century portery), the site still bears witness to its religious and medieval past.

The abbey was led by regular abbots and then commondataires from 1516, including Symphorien Bullioud (Bishop of Soissons), François Tallemant (Chaplain of Louis XIV), or Dominique de Bellon (Chanoine de Chartres). These figures marked its history until its closure in 1790, when the monks took the oath of the civil constitution of the clergy. The descriptions of Father Sincher (1859) highlight the beauty of the ruins, despite their state of degradation after centuries of transformation.

Classified as a historical monument for its medieval remains, the abbey illustrates the heritage of the Premonstrated in Picardia. Its 18th-century portal, barns, and abbatial home complete a combination of religious architecture and agricultural reuse. Recent excavations and protections (2022) aim to preserve this heritage, while opening a window on monastic life and the revolutionary upheavals that sealed its destiny.

External links