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Boulbonne Abbey à Cintegabelle en Haute-Garonne

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Abbaye
Haute-Garonne

Boulbonne Abbey

    3 Boulbonne
    31550 Cintegabelle
Abbaye de Boulbonne
Abbaye de Boulbonne
Abbaye de Boulbonne
Abbaye de Boulbonne
Abbaye de Boulbonne
Abbaye de Boulbonne
Abbaye de Boulbonne
Abbaye de Boulbonne
Abbaye de Boulbonne
Abbaye de Boulbonne
Abbaye de Boulbonne
Abbaye de Boulbonne
Abbaye de Boulbonne
Abbaye de Boulbonne
Abbaye de Boulbonne
Abbaye de Boulbonne
Abbaye de Boulbonne
Abbaye de Boulbonne
Abbaye de Boulbonne
Abbaye de Boulbonne
Abbaye de Boulbonne
Abbaye de Boulbonne
Abbaye de Boulbonne
Abbaye de Boulbonne
Abbaye de Boulbonne
Abbaye de Boulbonne
Abbaye de Boulbonne
Abbaye de Boulbonne
Abbaye de Boulbonne
Abbaye de Boulbonne
Abbaye de Boulbonne
Abbaye de Boulbonne
Abbaye de Boulbonne
Abbaye de Boulbonne
Abbaye de Boulbonne
Abbaye de Boulbonne
Abbaye de Boulbonne
Abbaye de Boulbonne
Abbaye de Boulbonne
Abbaye de Boulbonne
Abbaye de Boulbonne
Abbaye de Boulbonne
Abbaye de Boulbonne
Abbaye de Boulbonne
Abbaye de Boulbonne
Abbaye de Boulbonne
Abbaye de Boulbonne
Abbaye de Boulbonne
Abbaye de Boulbonne
Abbaye de Boulbonne
Crédit photo : MathieuMD - 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
1129
Initial Foundation
1150
Affiliation to Citeaux
1272
Royal Meeting
1567
Destruction by Huguenots
1632 (ou 1652)
Reconstruction in Cintegabelle
1753
Transfer of the remains of Counts
1791
Sale as a national good
1981
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Entrance gate; facades and roofs of the remaining parts of the convent buildings and communes; galleries of the cloister; large staircase with balusters; capitular room, sacristy and refectory with its decoration on the ground floor; Halls of cells, novice chapter and room of the prior on the first floor (Box I 387, 389, 390, 391): classification by order of 5 October 1981

Key figures

Philippe III le Hardi - King of France Present at the 1272 meeting
Jacques Ier d'Aragon - King of Aragon Attending the Diplomatic Meeting
Jacques Fournier (Benoît XII) - Pope (1334-1342) Former monk of Boulbonne
Simon de Montfort - Military Chief Stay in 1213 before Muret
Jean-Baptiste de Champflour - Bishop of Mirepoix Consecrated the church in 1742

Origin and history

The abbey of Boulbonne, founded in 1129 near Mazères (Ariège) by Cistercian monks, first settled on the banks of the Raunier. Affiliated to the order of Cîteaux in 1150, it is protected by the Counts of Foix, who are buried there. In 1272, it hosted a diplomatic meeting between Philip III the Hardi and James I of Aragon to settle the conflict with the Count of Foix. Destroyed in 1567 by the Huguenots, the monks took refuge in Toulouse.

In 1632 (or 1652), the abbey was rebuilt in Cintegabelle, on the site of a priory of the tenth century. The works, completed around 1738, make it one of the most beautiful Cistercian abbeys of the time. In 1753 the remains of the Counts of Foix were transferred solemnly. At the Revolution, the abbey, sold as a national property in 1791, lost some of its furniture and its church, destroyed. Since 1842, the remaining buildings belong to the Moulas family.

Today, facades remain, the brick gate, the capitular hall, the refectory, the vestiges of the cloister, as well as pigeons and stables. The abbey, classified as a historical monument in 1981, illustrates the Cistercian architecture of the eighteenth century. It is open to the public during Heritage Days, preserving the memory of the Counts of Foix and its historical role in Lauragais.

External links