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Old chapel of Saint-Jacques à Saint-Just-Ibarre dans les Pyrénées-Atlantiques

Pyrénées-Atlantiques

Old chapel of Saint-Jacques

    477 Chemin de Donaikia
    64120 Saint-Just-Ibarre

Timeline

Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1800
1900
2000
XVIIIe siècle
Initial construction
XIXe–XXe siècles
Restorations
27 décembre 1993
Official protection
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The former chapel (Box D 22): inscription by order of 27 December 1993

Origin and history

The former chapel of Saint-Jacques, located in Saint-Just-Ibarre in the Pyrénées-Atlantiques, is a modest rural building built in the 18th century. From a rectangular to a single vessel, it is distinguished by its limestone walls (medium apparatus for lateral elevations, bellows for front and rear façades) and its long-paned roof covered with hollow tiles. Inside, accessible by a wooden door with double shutters, houses an apparent structure and a naïve painted altarpiece depicting Saint James as a pilgrim, framed with decorative motifs. This wall decor, typical of the eighteenth century, gives the chapel its main heritage interest.

The chapel was a stop on a secondary route of the pilgrimage of Santiago de Compostela, connecting Mauléon to Saint-Jean-Pied-de-Port via the Col d'Osquich. Close to the noble house Donaikia (or Senimenea), it illustrates the links between religious heritage and the local seigneurial network. Although its current use is agricultural (remote), restorations in the 19th and 20th centuries allowed its partial conservation. Classified as a Historical Monument by decree of 27 December 1993, it bears witness to the jacquarian devotion in Basque rural areas, despite its modest state of preservation (inaccurate localization, note 5/10).

Architecturally, the chapel embodies the simplicity of 18th century rural buildings in the Basque Country: local materials (calcareous, wood), lack of exterior ornamentation, and first functionality. The altarpiece, though naive, emphasizes the symbolic importance of St James for the communities crossed by the roads of Compostela. Subsequent renovations (XIX-20th centuries) were likely aimed at maintaining its cultural or commemorative role, prior to its conversion to agricultural dependency. Its registration as a Historical Monuments underscores its documentary value, despite its current decommissioning.

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