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Old chapel of Vignemont à Loches en Indre-et-Loire

Indre-et-Loire

Old chapel of Vignemont

    5 Chemin de la Chapelle Vignemont
    37600 Loches
Ancienne chapelle de Vignemont
Ancienne chapelle de Vignemont
Ancienne chapelle de Vignemont
Ancienne chapelle de Vignemont
Ancienne chapelle de Vignemont
Crédit photo : ManuD - 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
1173
First written entry
fin XIIe siècle
Construction of the chapel
vers 1582
Recasting of the frame
1756
Partial winding
1793
Sale as a national good
1989
Registration for historical monuments
2008–2011
Major restoration
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The former chapel (Box BD 122): inscription by decree of 13 June 1989

Key figures

Philippe Auguste - King of France Seat of Loches in 1203, possible interruption of work
François de Belleforest - Author of ancient engravings Testimony of fortifications in the 15th–12th centuries
Père Guillaume-Marie Hecquard - Owner since 2003 Initiator of recent restoration

Origin and history

The chapel of Vignemont, located south of the medieval city of Loches (Indre-et-Loire), is built at the end of the 12th century on a site occupied since Antiquity. First of all, a cimeterial chapel linked to the parish of Saint-Ours, it presents a simple plan: an unequal two-span nave and a semicircular apse vaulted in cul-de-four. Its walls, once covered with frescoes from the 12th–14th centuries (angels, horsemen, trees), bear witness to a rich decor for a parish branch or a tomb.

Victims of repeated accidents, including the partial collapse of its vaults (perhaps linked to fortifications added in the 15th–12th centuries) and a landslide in 1756, the chapel lost its religious use in 1769 for reasons of health. Sold as a national property in 1793, it was converted into a barn before being listed for historical monuments in 1989. Its structure, redone around 1582 and then after a fire in 1998, illustrates its numerous restorations.

Purchased in 2003 by Father Guillaume-Marie Hecquard's family, the chapel enjoys a major restoration (2008–2011), awarded with the Garnier-Lestamy Prize in 2005. The works allowed to reopen the walled bays of the nave and to preserve its Romanesque apse, while revealing traces of medieval paintings (false red joints, frescoes in superimposed registers). Its 20th century gazebo offers views of the Indre Valley.

The successive denominations of the chapel — Sainte-Marie (1173), Saint John (circa 1180), Notre-Dame and then Saint-Nicolas — could reflect partial reconstructions or changes of word. Its ambiguous status, at the same time Cimeterial chapel and parish annex, is explained by its isolated position, separated from Loches by a ditch dug in 1030. The 12th century sarcophagus discovered on site confirms its funeral use, perhaps inherited from an ancient or alto-medieval cemetery.

Architecturally, the chapel blends Romanesque elements (abside, fine sculpted decoration like the leaves of acanthe) and Gothic (vets of the nave, typical of the "Gothic of the West" around 1180–1190). The plated foothills and the strict east-west orientation underline its integration into the landscape of the Indre Hill. Despite the disappearance of its supposed bell tower, it retains walled bays and a broken arch separating nave and choir, characteristic of its construction period.

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