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Basilica Notre-Dame de Verdelais en Gironde

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Basilique
Gironde

Basilica Notre-Dame de Verdelais

    6 Le Bourg
    33490 Verdelais
Basilique Notre-Dame de Verdelais
Basilique Notre-Dame de Verdelais
Basilique Notre-Dame de Verdelais
Basilique Notre-Dame de Verdelais
Basilique Notre-Dame de Verdelais
Basilique Notre-Dame de Verdelais
Basilique Notre-Dame de Verdelais
Basilique Notre-Dame de Verdelais
Basilique Notre-Dame de Verdelais
Basilique Notre-Dame de Verdelais
Basilique Notre-Dame de Verdelais
Basilique Notre-Dame de Verdelais
Basilique Notre-Dame de Verdelais
Basilique Notre-Dame de Verdelais
Basilique Notre-Dame de Verdelais
Basilique Notre-Dame de Verdelais
Basilique Notre-Dame de Verdelais
Basilique Notre-Dame de Verdelais
Basilique Notre-Dame de Verdelais
Crédit photo : Henry SALOMÉ - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1100
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1099
Foundation of the Oratory
1185
First miraculous healing
1390
Reunion of the statue
1609
Visit of Cardinal de Sourdis
1856
Coronation of the statue
1924
Minor Basilica Elevation
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The basilica in total (Box C 410): classification by decree of 14 December 2010

Key figures

Géraud de Graves - Lord of Saint-Macaire and cross Returned the statue of the Virgin in 1099.
Isabelle de Foix-Castelbon - Countess and benefactor Found the statue in 1390.
Cardinal François d'Escoubleau de Sourdis - Archbishop of Bordeaux Released the restoration in 1609.
Père Ricard - Last monk in Heaven Resta in Verdelais after 1778.
Théodore Duphot - 19th century architect Expanded the basilica and built the bell tower.
Cardinal Pierre Paulin Andrieu - Prelate presiding over the ceremony Raised the church to the rank of basilica in 1924.

Origin and history

The basilica Notre-Dame de Verdelais came into being in the 11th century, when a chapel was built to house a statue of the Virgin Mary brought back from the Holy Land by Géraud de Graves, a crusader. This place soon became a Marian pilgrimage after miraculous healings, including that of a blind man in 1185. The Grandmontan monks, then the Celestines, expanded the site, which was looted during the Hundred Years' War and the Wars of Religion. The statue, several times lost and found, strengthened local devotion.

In the 17th century, the Heavenly monks rebuilt the church, adding a transept and a monastery, making Verdelais a major sanctuary. Despite the dissolution of their order in 1778 and the unrest of the French Revolution, where the church was closed, the site survived. In the 19th century, the Marist Fathers took over the management, enlarged the basilica with an imposing bell tower, and installed a calvary and a cross path, reviving the pilgrimage.

The basilica, classified as a historic monument in 2000, combines Renaissance and Baroque styles, with a marble altarpiece and a stained glass window offered by Napoleon III. Its bell tower, surmounted by a golden statue of the Virgin, dominates the landscape. The pilgrimage, one of the oldest in France dedicated to Mary, attracted thousands of faithful until the 20th century, including the writer François Mauriac. Today, the site retains its spiritual and heritage role, marked by ex-votos and processions.

The story of Verdelais is also that of his miraculous statue, found in 1390 under the "step of the mule" of Countess Isabelle de Foix-Castelbon, then saved from the flames in 1558 and hidden in a tree until 1605. Couroned in 1856, it symbolizes the resilience of Marian worship. The basilica, raised to the rank of minor basilica in 1924, remains a living testimony of faith and religious architecture in New Aquitaine.

External links