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Abbey Saint-Martin and Saint-Vulgain à Sigy-en-Bray en Seine-Maritime

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Abbaye
Eglise romane et gothique
Seine-Maritime

Abbey Saint-Martin and Saint-Vulgain

    D41
    76780 Sigy-en-Bray
Ownership of the municipality
Abbaye Saint-Martin-et-Saint-Vulgain
Abbaye Saint-Martin-et-Saint-Vulgain
Abbaye Saint-Martin-et-Saint-Vulgain
Abbaye Saint-Martin-et-Saint-Vulgain
Abbaye Saint-Martin-et-Saint-Vulgain
Abbaye Saint-Martin-et-Saint-Vulgain
Abbaye Saint-Martin-et-Saint-Vulgain
Abbaye Saint-Martin-et-Saint-Vulgain
Abbaye Saint-Martin-et-Saint-Vulgain
Crédit photo : Giogo - 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
1500
1600
1900
2000
vers 1037-1045
Foundation of the Abbey
1043
Link to Saint-Ouen
1152
Destruction of the Romanesque Church
1282
Inhumation of Nicolas de Beauvais
fin XIIe - XIIIe siècle
Gothic reconstruction
1563
Calvinist pickling
1926
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The church: inscription by decree of 19 July 1926

Key figures

Hugues de Gournay - Founder of the Abbey Dota the Abbey of Relics and Lands.
Nicolas de Beauvais - Abbé de Saint-Ouen He was buried in the priory in 1282.
Simon du Bosc - Former Prior of Sigy He became Abbé de Jumièges in 1418.
Henri II - Duke of Normandy and King of England Protected the priory in the 12th century.

Origin and history

The abbey Saint-Martin-et-Saint-Vulgain was founded around 1037-1045 by Hugues de Gournay as Benedictine abbey. He laid down the relics of Saint Vulgain (died 590) and gave the abbey land and churches, including those of La Ferté, confirmed by his son. Hugues de La Ferté added patronage before withdrawing as a monk, placing Sigy under the dependency of the abbey Saint-Ouen de Rouen around 1043, thus reducing his status to that of priory.

In 1152, the original Romanesque church and the seigneurial castle were probably destroyed. A new church, of primitive Gothic style, was built between the end of the 12th and 13th centuries, serving both abbey and parish church. Henri II, Duke of Normandy, protected the priory from the abuses ofHugues de Gournay. In 1282 Nicolas de Beauvais, abbot of Saint-Ouen, was buried there after being removed. A stop in the departmental archives later confirmed the rights of prior Pierre the Prevost.

The priory remained active until 1563, when he was looted and burned by the Calvinists, without ever being rebuilt. In the 18th century, the death of the last prior, Nicostrat Bara (circa 1720), triggered a conflict of succession between Charles Marin Goujet (Religious of Bec) and Urbain Robinet (Vicarian of Rouen). The church, spared by the Revolution, today retains its apse and transept, characteristic of the first Gothic, as well as a bell tower added in the 15th century.

Among the notable figures, Nicolas de Beauvais († 1282), abbot of Saint-Ouen, was buried there, while Simon du Bosc († 1418), after being Prior of Sigy, became Abbé of Cerisy and Jumièges. The departmental archives of Seine-Maritime retain documents relating to the priory (ref. 14H829 at 14H852), and the church was listed as historical monuments in 1926.

External links