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Old Balizy Bridge, known as the Templar Bridge in Longjumeau dans l'Essonne

Patrimoine classé
Pont médiéval
Pont
Vieux pont
Essonne

Old Balizy Bridge, known as the Templar Bridge in Longjumeau

    9 Rue de la Terrasse
    91160 Longjumeau
Crédit photo : Véronique PAGNIER - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1300
1900
2000
1288
Foundation of the Commandery
octobre 1289
Royal Validation
1930
Rediscovered and protected
1967
Start of restorations
1974
Discovery of the potted cross
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Old bridge: inscription by order of 11 October 1930

Key figures

Jehan de la Tour - Land Buyer Founded the commission in 1288
Philippe IV le Bel - King of France Valida purchase by charter in 1289
Frère Regnault Gouré - Religious hospital Served the chapel in the 16th century
Monsieur Chaudin - Archaeologist Rediscovered the bridge in 1930

Origin and history

The old Balizy Bridge, known as the Templar Bridge, is a stone work from the 4th quarter of the 13th century, located in Longjumeau (Essonne). He crossed the Rouillon, a tributary of the Yvette, and was a key element of the Balizy Commanderie, founded in 1288 by the Templars. This three-arched bridge, now lost in an undergrowth, carries an engraved pottery cross, a symbol associated with the Templars and the Hospitallers. It was rediscovered in 1930 by the archaeologist Chaudin and enrolled in the Historical Monuments in the same year.

The command office of Balizy, created after the purchase of land by Jehan de la Tour (1,400 livres parisis) and validated by Philip IV le Bel in 1289, included a pavilion, a chapel and 110 acres of land. The Templars held seigneurial rights (justice, common oven, fishing in the Yvette) before the estate passed to the Hospitallers after the dissolution of their order. The bridge, the only vestige visible today, was restored from 1967 by the Renaissance Association and Culture of Longjumeau.

In 1974, a potted cross was discovered on a main arch stone, although its exact attribution (Templars or Hospitallers) remains uncertain. The revenues of the command office, increased from 30 pounds in 1529 to 4,000 pounds in 1757, testify to its economic importance before its division into 19 plots during the Revolution. The bridge, a private property, remains a symbol of the Templar heritage in Île-de-France.

External links