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Baptistery Saint John of Poitiers dans la Vienne

Patrimoine classé
Vestiges Gallo-romain
Villa Gallo-Romaine
Vienne

Baptistery Saint John of Poitiers

    Rue Jean-Jaurès
    86000 Poitiers
Baptistère Saint-Jean de Poitiers
Baptistère Saint-Jean de Poitiers
Baptistère Saint-Jean de Poitiers
Baptistère Saint-Jean de Poitiers
Baptistère Saint-Jean de Poitiers
Baptistère Saint-Jean de Poitiers
Baptistère Saint-Jean de Poitiers
Baptistère Saint-Jean de Poitiers
Baptistère Saint-Jean de Poitiers
Baptistère Saint-Jean de Poitiers
Baptistère Saint-Jean de Poitiers
Baptistère Saint-Jean de Poitiers
Baptistère Saint-Jean de Poitiers
Baptistère Saint-Jean de Poitiers
Baptistère Saint-Jean de Poitiers
Baptistère Saint-Jean de Poitiers
Baptistère Saint-Jean de Poitiers
Baptistère Saint-Jean de Poitiers
Baptistère Saint-Jean de Poitiers
Baptistère Saint-Jean de Poitiers
Baptistère Saint-Jean de Poitiers
Baptistère Saint-Jean de Poitiers
Baptistère Saint-Jean de Poitiers
Baptistère Saint-Jean de Poitiers
Baptistère Saint-Jean de Poitiers
Baptistère Saint-Jean de Poitiers
Baptistère Saint-Jean de Poitiers
Baptistère Saint-Jean de Poitiers
Baptistère Saint-Jean de Poitiers
Baptistère Saint-Jean de Poitiers
Baptistère Saint-Jean de Poitiers
Baptistère Saint-Jean de Poitiers
Baptistère Saint-Jean de Poitiers
Baptistère Saint-Jean de Poitiers
Baptistère Saint-Jean de Poitiers
Baptistère Saint-Jean de Poitiers
Baptistère Saint-Jean de Poitiers
Baptistère Saint-Jean de Poitiers
Baptistère Saint-Jean de Poitiers
Baptistère Saint-Jean de Poitiers
Baptistère Saint-Jean de Poitiers
Baptistère Saint-Jean de Poitiers
Baptistère Saint-Jean de Poitiers
Baptistère Saint-Jean de Poitiers
Baptistère Saint-Jean de Poitiers
Baptistère Saint-Jean de Poitiers
Baptistère Saint-Jean de Poitiers
Baptistère Saint-Jean de Poitiers
Crédit photo : Sumolari, B25es - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Antiquité
Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
500
600
700
800
900
1000
1100
1800
1900
2000
fin IVe - début Ve siècle
Initial construction
VIe siècle
Modification of the plan
VIIe siècle
Merovingian transformation
1018
Fire of Poitiers
1834
Rescue of the monument
1846
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The Baptistery: ranking by list of 1846

Key figures

Étienne Marie Siauve - Archaeologist Discover the octagonal pool in 1803.
Camille de La Croix - Jesuit and archaeologist Search and study of elevations (1890-1903).
Arcisse de Caumont - Founder of the Société française pour la conservation Influence the backup in 1834.
Brigitte Boissavit-Camus - History of Art Summary of the state of the monument (1995-2011).
Prosper Mérimée - Inspector General of Historic Monuments Supports preservation in 1834.

Origin and history

The Baptistery Saint John of Poitiers, located in the present-day New Aquitaine, is one of the oldest Christian monuments in France. Built in the late fourth or early fifth century on the foundations of a Gallo-Roman domus, it bears witness to the transition from antiquity to the Middle Ages. Originally, it included a rectangular room centered on an octagonal baptismal pool, powered by a hydraulic system inherited from the domus. This baptism by immersion, linked to the neighbouring early cathedral, reflected the paleo-Christian rituals before being transformed over the centuries.

In the sixth century, the plan of the Baptistery was changed: a wall divided the space into two equal rooms, and rectangular apsidioles were added. In the 7th century, under the Merovingians, the building was raised, the windows replaced by oculi, and carved decorations (frontons, pilasters) inspired by antiquity were affixed. These transformations mark the gradual abandonment of classical principles in favour of a merovingian aesthetic, characterized by polychrome masonry and free forms. The fire of 1018, which ravages Poitiers, partially spares the baptistery, but the western hall is rebuilt with slices cut.

In the Carolingian era, the Baptister lost his original function when baptism by immersion was abandoned. It became a parish church, first mentioned in 1096. In the 11th and 12th centuries, Romanesque and Gothic paintings adorn the walls, including a Christological cycle and scenes from the life of Saint John the Baptist. These frescoes, among the best preserved in the region, illustrate medieval iconographic evolution. The monument, disused in 1791, was not destroyed due to the intervention of the Western Antiquary Society in 1834.

Archaeological excavations, carried out in 1803 by Étienne Marie Siauve and then by Camille de La Croix (1890-1903), reveal traces of mosaics, merovingian sarcophagi and re-use of ancient materials. The debates about its origin (paleo-Christian Baptistery or transformed pagan temple) have animated scholars since the 18th century. Ranked a historic monument in 1846, the site now houses a lapidary museum featuring merovingian sarcophagi typical of "The Poitou School", as well as casts of decorative elements.

The architecture of the Baptistery combines ancient influences and Merovingian innovations: re-used marble columns, capitals carved in situ, and decorations in recessed marquetry. Romanesque paintings (XI century), like Christ in majesty surrounded by the Apostles, coexist with Gothic frescoes (XIII century) narrate the life of Saint John the Baptist. These artistic superpositions make it a unique testimony of medieval religious art. Managed by the Western Antiquary Society since 1836, the monument remains a place of research and heritage conservation.

The Saint John Baptistery embodies the stakes of preserving the heritage: saved in extremis in 1834, it becomes a symbol of the poitevin Christian memory since Antiquity. Its successive transformations — from baptismal hall to parish church, then to museum — reflect the liturgical and urban changes. The excavation campaigns (1995-2011) confirmed its central place in the primitive cathedral group, where catechumens and faithful travelled between Baptistery and Cathedral for initiation rites and the Eucharist.

External links