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Abbey of Notre-Dame and Saint-Paul de Bellevaux à Limanton dans la Nièvre

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Abbaye
Nièvre

Abbey of Notre-Dame and Saint-Paul de Bellevaux

    256 Belvaut
    58290 Limanton
Abbaye Notre-Dame et Saint-Paul de Bellevaux
Abbaye Notre-Dame et Saint-Paul de Bellevaux
Abbaye Notre-Dame et Saint-Paul de Bellevaux
Crédit photo : Vertpays - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
fin XIIe siècle (vers 1152–1188)
Uncertain Foundation
1193
First donation
XIIIe siècle
Construction of church
1565
Huguenot devastation
1615
Reconstruction of Conventuals
1790
Seized as a national good
14 novembre 1997
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Former abbey including: the convent buildings, the chapel, the porch (cad. A 220): by order of 14 November 1997

Key figures

Guillaume III de Nevers - Count of Nevers Founder presumed in 1152.
Rocelin de Marmagne et Damerone - Lords of Marmagne Alternative founders in 1188.
Hugues II de Blain - Lord of Château-Chinon Donor in 1193 after a crusade.
Michel-Celse-Roger de Bussy-Rabutin - Abbé (1693–1736) Contributes to its restoration.
Gilbert Desmazières - Last Prior (until 1790) Resist revolutionary seizure.
Edmond Martène - Benedictine monk Describes the Abbey in 1708.

Origin and history

The Notre Dame and Saint-Paul de Bellevaux Abbey, located in Limanton, Nièvre, is a pre-demonstrated foundation whose exact origin remains uncertain. It was reportedly established between 1152 and 1188, either by Guillaume III, Count of Nevers, or by Rocelin de Marmagne and his wife Damerone. Unique establishment of order in Nivernais, it thrives thanks to a vast temporal and becomes the necropolis of Bazois. Its church, erected in the 13th century, and its convent buildings, rebuilt in the 17th century, testify to its regional importance.

In the Middle Ages, the abbey enjoyed the support of the local nobility, as in 1240, when Count Guy IV of Forez and his wife Mahaut de Courtenay placed his property under their protection. The tithes offered in 1193 by Hugues II de Blain, lord of Château-Chinon, reinforce his influence. Despite partial destruction (fires, wars of religion), it survived until the Revolution, where it was seized as a national good in 1790. His last three religious, including Prior Gilbert Desmazières, left after tensions with the revolutionary authorities.

The architecture of Bellevaux combines an abbey church of the 13th century, now in ruins but preserving Gothic elements (trilobed gate, foothills), and 17th century convent buildings, organized around a cloister with doric arches. The Renaissance gate of the southern building, decorated with the coat of arms of the abbey, and the remains of the refectory, library and monacal cells illustrate its evolution. Classified as a Historical Monument in 1997, the abbey, now private property, does not visit.

The Bellevaux time spanned dozens of localities, from Limanton to Moulins-Engilbert, including tithes, lands and cures (such as Frasnay-le-Ravier). His archives, preserved at the Archives départementales de la Nièvre, reveal a rigorous management, with burrows dated from 1537 to 1615. The abolition of the abbey in 1768, decided for its small number (three religious), failed however without explanation. During the Revolution, its bells were melted, and its buildings turned into a farm.

The notable abbots included Michel-Celse-Roger de Bussy-Rabutin (1693–36), who contributed to his restoration, or Jean-Baptiste de Chaf fois, the last abbot before 1790. Among the religious, Pierre Minot (XVI century) or Gilbert Desmazières (priorate until 1790) embody his turbulent history. The arms of the abbey (d.

Today, Bellevaux Abbey, although protected, remains unknown to the public. Its site, centered on the Veynon valley, preserves traces of its monastic past, between medieval ruins and classical structures. Historical studies, such as those of Norbert Backmund or Edmond Martène, have shed light on its mysteries, but shadow zones persist, particularly on its foundation and its links with other Burgundy pre-demonstrated abbeys.

External links