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Abbey Saint-Pierre de Senones dans les Vosges

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Abbaye
Eglise de style classique

Abbey Saint-Pierre de Senones

    Place Dom-Calmet
    88300 Senones

Timeline

Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
700
800
900
1000
1700
1800
1900
2000
661
Childeric II Immunity Charter
768
Appointment of Angelramnus by Charlemagne
960
Benedictine Renaissance
1793
Revolutionary secularization
1806
First cotton spinning of the Vosges
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Gondelbert - Bishop of Sens (VIIth century) Legendary founder of the Abbey around 640.
Childéric II - King of Austrasia Granted the immunity charter in 661.
Angelramnus - Abbé de Senones and Bishop of Metz Named by Charlemagne in 768.
Dom Calmet - Abbé Érudit (18th century) Reconstructs the abbey and assembles 15,000 works.
Jean Lamour - Serrier-artist Author of the wrought iron ramp (stairs).

Origin and history

The Saint-Pierre de Senones Abbey, located in the Rabodeau Valley, finds its origins in a legend linked to Gondelbert, bishop of Sens, circa 640. An immunity charter granted by Childeric II in 661 confirmed its early existence on the Strata Sarmatorum, an axis linking Metz to Schlestadt. This religious place, initially a modest Merovingian sanctuary, is part of a ban (administrative territory) reorganized under episcopal control. Charlemagne named Angelramnus, bishop of Metz, as abbot around 768, marking his status as a royal abbey dependent on the bishopric of Metz.

Between 770 and 800 Benedictine monks settled near a pre-existing sanctuary, but the abbey went through periods of decline due to corrupt morals and looting (especially in 894 and during Hungarian invasions, 912–924). A spiritual revival occurred after 960, inspired by Gorze's reform and carried by Abbé Allmann. The abbey is enriched, requiring the protection of a confessed (Langstein Knights, then Salm House), and a village develops at its feet. In the 12th century, Abbé Antoine de Pavie rebuilt the abbey, adding a circular rotunda.

The eighteenth century marked the climax of Senones: Dom Calmet, abbot scholar, supervised a total reconstruction (except the Romanesque bell tower) and assembled a library of 15,000 books. The abbey, an intellectual and architectural center, even welcomed Voltaire in 1754. After 1751 Senones became the capital of the principality of Salm-Salm. The French Revolution put an end to its religious role in 1793: the buildings, sold as national goods, housed in 1806 a cotton mill, an industrial activity which lasted until 1993.

Today, the abbey retains remarkable elements: the 12th century bell tower, the stairwell adorned by Jean Lamour (forged iron), and the classical facades of the abbey house. Classified as a historic monument (1983, 2005, 2012), it now houses a factory store, the tourist office, and public services. Its history reflects the religious, political and economic changes of Lorraine, from the Merovingians to the Industrial Revolution.

The abbey depended on the bishopric of Metz and managed a vast estate (valleys of the Rabodeau and Plaine, Badonvillois), receiving tithes and rents. It controlled several priories (Menil, Deneuvre, Xures) and cures (Rambervillers, Saint-Hilaire de Metz), testifying to its regional influence. Richer's Chronicle, Senones' monk in the 13th century, and Dom Calmet's work remain major sources for its history.

External links