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Abbey of Saint-Laurent-l'Abbaye dans la Nièvre

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Abbaye
Eglise romane
Nièvre

Abbey of Saint-Laurent-l'Abbaye

    4 Route de Villiers
    58150 Saint-Laurent

Timeline

Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
500
600
1000
1100
1200
1300
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
Vers 530
Benedictine Foundation
1084
Augustinian transformation
1199
Devastating battle
Fin XIIe siècle
A peak
XIVe–XVIe siècles
War and destruction
1780–1790
Removal
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Wulfin - Founder (VIth century) Prince Merovingian, created the monastery.
Robert de Nevers - Bishop of Auxerre (1076–1084) Turned the monastery into an Augustine abbey.
Hervé de Donzy - Local Lord (XII century) Winner of Peter II in St. Lawrence.
Pierre II de Courtenay - Count of Nevers (XII century) Sacca the Abbey in 1199.
Jean de Noyers - Abbé de Saint-Père (XIVth century) Associated his monastery in St. Lawrence.
Balthazar Phélypeaux - Merchant Abbé (1682–191) Marked the modern decline.

Origin and history

Saint-Laurent-lès-Cosne Abbey, founded in the 6th century as a Benedictine monastery under the name of Saint-Wulfin, became an Augustine abbey in the 11th century. Located 10 km south of Cosne in Nièvre, it was a major stop on the road to Compostela. At its peak at the end of the 12th century, it competed with the priory of Charity, before being looted and destroyed during the wars (battle of 1199, Hundred Years War, Wars of Religion).

The monastery was originally established by Wulfin, prince of royal blood, about 530 on land given by Clovis after his victory in Voillé (507). First dedicated to St.Lawrence, he took the name of St.Wulfin monastery before being called Longoretense monasterium albatorum to distinguish it from another same-named monastery in Berry. Turned into an Augustinian abbey around 1084 by Robert de Nevers, it flourished thanks to the donations and revenues of many surrounding churches, such as Saint-Eusèbe d'Auxerre.

The abbey experienced repeated avatars: sacked in 1199 during a conflict between Hervé de Donzy and Pierre II de Courtenay, looted in 1405 by the Duke of Orleans troops, and burned in 1475. The Wars of Religion (16th century) destroyed much of the buildings. Despite reforms attempted in the 17th and 18th centuries, the abbey declined until it was abolished before the Revolution. In 1816, a fire ended to ravage the remains, and the bell tower collapsed in 1948.

The current remains, partially classified as historical monuments (1996, 2025), include elements of the church (nef, transept) and conventual buildings (capitular hall, refectory). The church, 40 m long, featured a dome on trunks and a Romanesque portal, whose capitals are now preserved at the Philadelphia Museum. The site, a property shared between the municipality and private individuals, remains closed for security reasons.

The abbey had many outbuildings, such as the priory Saint-Eusèbe d'Auxerre (XI–XVIIIth centuries), where the canons of St. Lawrence introduced the Augustinian rule. Other churches (Saint-Symphorien de Cours, Saint-Loup-et-Saint-Gildard de Nevers) were attached to the abbey, bearing witness to its spiritual and economic influence. The commundatary abbots (XVIIth–XVIIIth centuries) marked its end, with only two religious present between 1780 and 1790.

St. Lawrence-l-Abbaye illustrates the evolution of medieval monastic settlements, moving from a Benedictine monastery to a prosperous Augustine abbey, before declining under the effects of conflict and reform. Its history reflects the political and religious upheavals of Burgundy and Nivernais, from the Merovingian era to the Revolution.

External links