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Former religious hospital in Beaulieu à Issendolus dans le Lot

Lot

Former religious hospital in Beaulieu

    82 Rue du Lavoir
    46500 Issendolus
Ancien hôpital des Religieuses de Beaulieu
Ancien hôpital des Religieuses de Beaulieu
Crédit photo : MOSSOT - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1236
Hospital Foundation
1259
Link to the Order of Saint John
1298
Final status
1562
Piling by Huguenots
1611
Reform and unification
1792
Revolutionary destruction
1921
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Chapter hall of the convent of Saint-Jean-de-Jérusalem: classification by decree of 4 January 1921

Key figures

Guibert de Thémines - Founder Local Lord, co-founder with Aigline in 1236.
Aigline de Thémines - Co-founder and Prioress Wife of Guibert, Chief Executive Officer.
Guillaume de Villaret - Grand Master of the Order Author of the statutes of 1298.
Galiote de Gourdon de Genouillac - Reforming Priory (XVIIe) Built the church and unified the houses.
Sainte Fleur (Flore) - Religious (1309–1347) Spiritual figure of the community.
Antoinette de Vassal - Prioress during the Revolution Last leader before dispersal.

Origin and history

The religious hospital of Beaulieu was founded in 1236 by Guibert de Thémines and his wife Aigline, local lords, to welcome pilgrims and sick on the road between Figeac and Rocamadour. Attached in 1259 to the order of Saint John of Jerusalem, he became a priory of nuns under the direction of a prioress, with statutes fixed in 1298 by Guillaume de Villaret, Grand Master of the Order. The chapter hall, built in the 13th century and classified in 1921, bears witness to this period with its carved vaults and columns.

Over the centuries, the hospital underwent reforms and destruction. Piled by the Huguenots in 1562, it was restored in the 17th century by Galiote de Gourdon de Genouillac, who had the church rebuilt and the community reformed. During the Revolution, the buildings were sold as national goods, looted in 1792, and partially dismantled to serve as a stone quarry. Today, only remains remain, including the capitular hall and walls.

The institution played a major social and religious role, combining hospitality, care for the sick and education of girls. Under the Old Regime, it housed up to 39 nuns, led by a priest elected for life. Its history reflects tensions between religious reforms, armed conflicts (the Hundred Years' War, the Wars of Religion) and political transformations, until its disappearance at the Revolution.

Among the notable figures, Saint Fleur (1309–1337) entered the community before his premature death. Successive priories, such as Aigline de Thémines or Antoinette de Vassal, marked its evolution, between internal crises (schisms in the seventeenth century) and adaptations to the requirements of the Order. The bishops of Cahors, like Pons d'Antéjac, supported its foundation in 1236.

The current remains include a part of the north wall of the church, substructions of the cloister, and the capitular room, the only space preserved with its benches and carved bays. Some elements, such as a portal, were moved (e.g. Sainte-Anne de Rocamadour chapel). The site, a communal property, remains a testimony of medieval hospital architecture in Quercy.

External links