Acquisition of land 1167 (≈ 1167)
Land ceded by Maubeuge's canonesses.
1224
Foundation of the Commandery
Foundation of the Commandery 1224 (≈ 1224)
Welcome of pilgrims to Jerusalem.
1763
Reconstruction of the house
Reconstruction of the house 1763 (≈ 1763)
Date engraved with wooded coat of arms.
1791
Construction of the barn
Construction of the barn 1791 (≈ 1791)
Dated gable in brick and limestone.
1857-1918
Changes in barn
Changes in barn 1857-1918 (≈ 1888)
Initial HM and dates applied.
1999
Historical Monument
Historical Monument 1999 (≈ 1999)
Inscription of the chapel.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Chapel (Box U 51): entry by order of 31 December 1999
Key figures
Hospitaliers de Saint-Jean de Jérusalem - Religious and military order
Founders of the commission in 1224.
Chanoinesses de Maubeuge - Initial owners
Ceded the earth in 1167.
Propriétaire anonyme (1763) - Sponsor of work
Blazon on the house.
Origin and history
The Commanderie des Hospitaliers d'Écuélin, located in the village of Ecuélin (North), dates back to the thirteenth century. It was originally founded as a hospital house by the Order of Hospitallers of St John of Jerusalem, which welcomed pilgrims on their way to the Holy Land. The whole, surrounded by a wall of enclosure still partially visible, included a Romanesque chapel, now in ruins, and a farm organized around a closed courtyard. The buildings, mostly in marbrier limestone, include a house, stables, barn and agricultural outbuildings. The chapel, a rare example of Romanesque architecture in Avesnois, presents a quadrangular plan, a flat bedside and decorative elements such as besaces of carved stone angles.
The origin of the commandary dates back to 1167, when the order of the Hospitallers received land in Ecuelin, formerly owned by the Maubeuge canonesses. In 1224, the site officially became a commandory-hospital for pilgrims. In the 18th century, a farm was rebuilt on the site, with elements dated 1763 (logis) and 1791 (table). The barn, partially rebuilt in brick, bears the initials HM and dates 1857-1918. The chapel, classified as Historical Monument in 1999, is the only remaining medieval vestige of this ensemble, bearing witness to the influence of the Knights of the Temple in northern France.
The house, parallel to the access road, has a U-shaped slate roof, a rare model in the region. A covered tank, now ruined, is located near the chapel. The cadastres of 1812 and 1860 revealed the footprint of the missing buildings, once closing the courtyard to the east. The openings of the house have been modified, in particular by the addition of a door, while the side walls and the bedside of the chapel keep windows in the middle of a twin-brassment, characteristic of Romanesque architecture.
The set illustrates the evolution of a medieval hospital site in agricultural operations, with architectural traces of the twelfth, thirteenth and eighteenth centuries. The presence of wooded coats and engraved dates (1763, 1791) suggests reshuffles related to later owners. Today, the commandory offers a material testimony of the history of the military religious orders in the Hauts-de-France, between reception of pilgrims and seigneurial management.
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