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Abbey of Clairvaux à Ville-sous-la-Ferté dans l'Aube

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Abbaye

Abbey of Clairvaux

    Allée Guy Girardot
    10310 Ville-sous-la-Ferté
State property; property of the department
Abbaye de Clairvaux
Abbaye de Clairvaux
Abbaye de Clairvaux
Abbaye de Clairvaux
Abbaye de Clairvaux
Abbaye de Clairvaux
Abbaye de Clairvaux
Abbaye de Clairvaux
Abbaye de Clairvaux
Abbaye de Clairvaux
Abbaye de Clairvaux
Abbaye de Clairvaux
Abbaye de Clairvaux
Abbaye de Clairvaux
Abbaye de Clairvaux
Abbaye de Clairvaux
Abbaye de Clairvaux
Abbaye de Clairvaux
Abbaye de Clairvaux
Abbaye de Clairvaux
Abbaye de Clairvaux
Abbaye de Clairvaux
Abbaye de Clairvaux
Abbaye de Clairvaux
Abbaye de Clairvaux
Abbaye de Clairvaux
Abbaye de Clairvaux
Abbaye de Clairvaux
Abbaye de Clairvaux
Abbaye de Clairvaux
Abbaye de Clairvaux
Abbaye de Clairvaux
Abbaye de Clairvaux
Abbaye de Clairvaux
Abbaye de Clairvaux
Abbaye de Clairvaux
Abbaye de Clairvaux
Abbaye de Clairvaux
Abbaye de Clairvaux
Abbaye de Clairvaux
Abbaye de Clairvaux
Abbaye de Clairvaux
Abbaye de Clairvaux
Abbaye de Clairvaux
Abbaye de Clairvaux
Abbaye de Clairvaux
Abbaye de Clairvaux
Crédit photo : Prosopee - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1100
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1115
Foundation of the Abbey
1135-1708
Period of monastic expansion
1708-1792
Classical reconstruction
1792
Sale as a national good
1808
Transformation into prison
2023
Closure of the prison
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Chapelle Sainte-Anne, as well as the adjoining gate; wing of the old refectory (transformed into a chapel in the 19th century) with the kitchen; wing of the wash; barn; storeroom; wall (box A 67-70, 72-76, 78): by order of 26 October 1981 - Former hotel-tavern, today called Hôtellerie des Dames, including its cellar located to the north under the neighbouring building (Box A 68): inscription by order of 26 January 1994 - Buildings designated below and shown in the plan annexed to the decree: facades and roofs of the former butcher shop (No. 3) , of the building opposite the barn (No. 29); former stable of the Abbé transformed into a children's building in the 19th century (No. 23): facades, roofs, vaults and pillars on the ground floor, 19th century chapel; the west entrance pavilion (No. 1) , the 18th century bridge of the south entrance (No. 12) , the two statues of children placed near the former chemical pavilion, the isolation area with its courtyards and walls (No. 33) , the land bounded by the enclosure of the large and small Clairvaux (Cd. A 67-76, 78; 18th century bridge not cadastred at the meeting of R.D. 101 from Meurville to Clairvaux and 12 from Vendeuvre-sur-Barse to Maranville): inscription by order of 24 November 1997 - Buildings numbered on the plan annexed to the decree: large cloister (n° 31) and small cloister (n° 32); buildings bordering the courtyard of honour: porterie (n° 18) , former abbot's house (n° 19) , former women's hotel and officers' quarters (n° 17) , northern and southern wings of the former stables (n° 24 and 25); Chemical flag (No. 15); cooler (No. 16); 18th century building near Sainte-Anne Chapel (No. 14); Building built to serve as a library (No. 20); Guest building (No. 21) and its wing back south (No. 22); south access bridge (No. 12); former audience (No. 4); fountain and pool (No. 5); wash east of the pool (No 6); former secular prison (No. 7); former lock shop (No. 8) A 68, 71, 72, 74): by order of 26 March 1999

Key figures

Bernard de Clairvaux - Founder and Abbé Created the Abbey in 1115, major figure.
Étienne Harding - Abbé de Cîteaux Send Bernard found Clairvaux.
Eugène III - Pope and former monk Passed through Clairvaux before his pontificate.
Claude Gueux - Famous prisoner Inspired Victor Hugo during his incarceration.

Origin and history

The Abbey of Clairvaux, founded on 25 June 1115 by Bernard de Clairvaux and twelve monks, implants in the valley of Absinthe, an isolated clearing near the Dawn. This site, offered by a relative of Bernard, allows Cistercians to live in autarcia while enjoying access to water and trade routes at the Champagne fairs. The first buildings, made of wood and then of stone, organized around a cloister, respect the Benedictine rule: chapel, dormitory, refectory and scriptorium.

From 1135 to 1708, the abbey, moved 400 metres further east to accommodate the influx of vocations, became a major spiritual and economic centre. Under Bernard's leadership, she founded 80 abbey-girls in Europe and managed a vast agricultural estate (vignes, forests, salt mines). The abbey church, dedicated in 1174, houses its tomb. Its sober architecture, with a large choir and nine chapels, embodies the Cistercian ideal of simplicity.

In the 18th century, despite its prosperity (20,000 hectares of land), the community rebuilt the abbey in a classic style, demolishing part of the medieval buildings. The French Revolution ended its religious activity: sold as national property in 1792, it was transformed into a prison in 1808. The central house of Clairvaux, closed in 2023, marked French prison history, welcoming up to 2,700 prisoners in the 19th century, including children and figures like Claude Gueux.

Since 2002, historic buildings, classified as Historic Monuments (like the 12th century dormitory of conversants), have been open to the public. The Ministry of Culture carries out major restorations, revealing the refectory of the monks, the great classical cloister and the children's prison. The site, which attracts 20,000 annual visitors, combines monastic heritage and prison memory, while hosting cultural events such as the Shadows and Lights festival.

The Abbey of Clairvaux thus illustrates two legacies: that of Saint Bernard, a reformer of monastic life, and that of an emblematic prison system, where religious architecture was adapted to confinement. Its dormitory of conversants, unique medieval vestige, and restored spaces offer a rare testimony of Cistercian art and its evolution throughout the centuries.

External links