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Abbey Our Lady of Boscodon à Crots dans les Hautes-Alpes

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Abbaye
Eglise romane
Hautes-Alpes

Abbey Our Lady of Boscodon

    Boscodon
    05200 Crots
Abbaye Notre-Dame de Boscodon
Abbaye Notre-Dame de Boscodon
Abbaye Notre-Dame de Boscodon
Abbaye Notre-Dame de Boscodon
Abbaye Notre-Dame de Boscodon
Abbaye Notre-Dame de Boscodon
Abbaye Notre-Dame de Boscodon
Abbaye Notre-Dame de Boscodon
Abbaye Notre-Dame de Boscodon
Abbaye Notre-Dame de Boscodon
Abbaye Notre-Dame de Boscodon
Abbaye Notre-Dame de Boscodon
Abbaye Notre-Dame de Boscodon
Abbaye Notre-Dame de Boscodon
Abbaye Notre-Dame de Boscodon
Abbaye Notre-Dame de Boscodon
Abbaye Notre-Dame de Boscodon
Abbaye Notre-Dame de Boscodon
Abbaye Notre-Dame de Boscodon
Abbaye Notre-Dame de Boscodon
Abbaye Notre-Dame de Boscodon
Abbaye Notre-Dame de Boscodon
Abbaye Notre-Dame de Boscodon
Abbaye Notre-Dame de Boscodon
Abbaye Notre-Dame de Boscodon
Abbaye Notre-Dame de Boscodon
Abbaye Notre-Dame de Boscodon
Abbaye Notre-Dame de Boscodon
Abbaye Notre-Dame de Boscodon
Abbaye Notre-Dame de Boscodon
Abbaye Notre-Dame de Boscodon
Abbaye Notre-Dame de Boscodon
Abbaye Notre-Dame de Boscodon
Abbaye Notre-Dame de Boscodon
Abbaye Notre-Dame de Boscodon
Abbaye Notre-Dame de Boscodon
Abbaye Notre-Dame de Boscodon
Abbaye Notre-Dame de Boscodon
Abbaye Notre-Dame de Boscodon
Abbaye Notre-Dame de Boscodon
Abbaye Notre-Dame de Boscodon
Abbaye Notre-Dame de Boscodon
Abbaye Notre-Dame de Boscodon
Abbaye Notre-Dame de Boscodon
Abbaye Notre-Dame de Boscodon
Abbaye Notre-Dame de Boscodon
Abbaye Notre-Dame de Boscodon
Abbaye Notre-Dame de Boscodon
Abbaye Notre-Dame de Boscodon
Crédit photo : Original téléversé par Olivier2000 sur Wikipédia f - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1100
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1132
Initial data
1142
Foundation of the Abbey
1303
Monastic leader
XVe siècle
Transition to Benedictines
1692
Fire and partial destruction
1792
Sale as a national good
1972
Start of restorations
1989
Classification of the pane
1999
Classification of buildings
2012
Inauguration of cloister
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Former cellar (Box E 24): classification by order of 8 June 1989 Old buildings of the former abbey as well as the parcels that carry them (Box II). E 12-21, 189, 191, 196): by order of 9 March 1999

Key figures

Guillaume de Montmirail - Local Lord and Donor Founded the Abbey in 1132-1142.
Guillaume de Lyonne - Ermite and precursor Gather the first hermits there.
Sœur Jeanne-Marie - Dominican religious Engine of restoration (1972-2013).
Francesco Flavigny - Chief Architect Directs restorations since 1980.
Jean Mansir - Dominican and writer Member of the community, author on Boscodon.
Frère Isidore - Stone mason-cutter Key player in modern reconstruction.

Origin and history

The Abbey of Notre-Dame de Boscodon, located in Crots in the Hautes-Alpes, is founded in 1142 by Cenobit monks of the order of Chalais, thanks to the gifts of Guillaume de Montmirail. She succeeded a group of hermits gathered around Guillaume de Lyonne. In 1303 she became chief of order after Chalais' dependence on the Chartreuse, then passed under the Benedictine rule in the 15th century. The monks live there from logging, agriculture and sheep rearing. In the 18th century, some of the buildings were destroyed during the Commission des Reguliers, and the Abbey was attached to the Archdiocese of Embrun.

During the French Revolution, the abbey was confiscated as a national property and sold to Joseph Berthe, who turned it into a farm. A hamlet develops around the abbey, used as stables or housing. In the 20th century, the site was gradually abandoned. In 1972, restoration work began, carried out by the Association of Friends of Boscodon Abbey and the Dominican community, including Sister Jeanne-Marie, a central figure in her 40-year renaissance. Restorations, based on archaeological excavations and archives (such as a 1706 estimate for the wing of the Officers), ended in 2012 with the inauguration of the cloister.

The abbey, Cistercian Romanesque architecture, is distinguished by its geometric and symbolic simplicity (7 vaults, solar orientation). Classified as a historic monument in 1989 (cell) and 1999 (conventual buildings), it now hosts 90,000 visitors annually. The Saint-Dominique community, located there, organizes offices, concerts and workshops. The site, awarded for its welcome in 1989, combines religious heritage, tourism and spiritual life.

The restorations involved a variety of actors: volunteers, donors, communities (Région Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur, Département des Hautes-Alpes), and state services (DRAC, Chief Architect of Historic Monuments). Media, such as the Alex Hugo series (2021) or a German documentary on the Alps, highlighted its history. The Abbey remains a living testimony to medieval monasticism and its contemporary preservation.

External links