Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Abbey Saint-Nicolas d'Angers en Maine-et-Loire

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Abbaye
Maine-et-Loire

Abbey Saint-Nicolas d'Angers

    2 Rue Ambroise-Paré
    49000 Angers
Ownership of an association; property of the department; property of a public institution
Abbaye Saint-Nicolas dAngers
Abbaye Saint-Nicolas dAngers
Abbaye Saint-Nicolas dAngers
Abbaye Saint-Nicolas dAngers
Abbaye Saint-Nicolas dAngers
Abbaye Saint-Nicolas dAngers
Abbaye Saint-Nicolas dAngers
Crédit photo : Mith - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1000
1100
1200
1300
1400
1700
1800
1900
2000
1020
Consecration of the first church
1021-1022
Foundation of the monastery
1096
Consecration of the second church
XIIe-XIIIe siècles
Partial reconstruction
1720-1730
Mauritian reconstruction
1790 (environ)
Sale as a national good
1835
Foundation of the Sisters of the Good Shepherd
1955
First protections historic monument
2009
Partial restructuring
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Large south facade of the 18th century with the roof slope that surmounts it; large staircase: classification by decree of 6 September 1955. Former refectory currently chapel; First and second floor clearances; vaulted hall of the former Abbey; remains of the cloister: inscription by decree of 6 September 1955. Façades and roofs of the Bell Tower; facades and roofs of the former Conventual Store; staircase in the turret of the latter building: inscription by order of 13 May 1961. Logis Abbatial Saint-Nicolas (HN 5) : registration by order of 28 August 1995

Key figures

Foulques Nerra - Count of Anjou and founder Ordonna built around 1021.
Pape Urbain II - Consecrator of the church in 1096 Bless the second abbey church.
Geoffrey de La Guerche - Founder of Kirby Priory Land donor in England (1077).
Sainte Marie Euphrasie Pelletier - Founder of the Sisters of the Good Shepherd The congregation was established in 1835.
Henri V (roi d'Angleterre) - Appointee of Kirby Priory He was awarded to Axholme in 1414.

Origin and history

Saint-Nicolas d'Angers Abbey was founded around 1021 by Foulques Nerra, Count of Anjou, after a vow made during a pilgrimage to Jerusalem. The initial church, dedicated to Saint Nicholas, was consecrated in 1020, followed by the construction of the monastery between 1021 and 1022. A second church, built at the end of the 11th century, was blessed by Pope Urban II in 1096. Shale remains, visible on Ambrose-Paré Street, could belong to this medieval building.

In the 13th century, the abbey was partially rebuilt, while a major transformation took place in the 18th century under the impetus of the Maurists, with the reconstruction of the bell tower, the convent shop and the abbey house. Sold as a national good during the Revolution, the site successively became a barracks, a hospital, and then an asylum. Today, it houses the Mother House of the Sisters of the Good Shepherd, founded in 1835 by Saint Marie Euphrasie Pelletier, as well as a retirement home.

The abbey also exercised international influence, notably in England, where it founded the priories of Spalding (1074) and Kirby (1077). The latter, after legal conflicts in the 14th century, was finally attached to the Chartreuse of Axholme in 1414. Several elements of the abbey, including the southern facade of the 18th century, the large staircase, and the remains of the cloister, have been protected as historical monuments since 1955 and 1961.

The legal protections also cover the tower of the bells, the old Conventual Store (XII century) with its 15th century staircase, and the Abbatial Logis (registered in 1995). In 2009, some of the sites were restructured to accommodate foreign emissaries coming to study French. The ensemble thus illustrates a rich architectural and religious history, extending from the Middle Ages to the contemporary era.

External links