Construction of calvary XVIIe siècle (≈ 1750)
Period of construction of the monument in Plumelec.
29 mars 1935
Registration for Historic Monuments
Registration for Historic Monuments 29 mars 1935 (≈ 1935)
Official protection by ministerial decree.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Calvaire de Callac (cad. XB 169): registration by order of 29 March 1935
Origin and history
Callac Calvary is a religious monument located in the town of Callac, on the town of Plumelec, in the department of Morbihan in Brittany. Dated from the seventeenth century, it embodies the Breton Christian architecture of this period, marked by a strong presence of calvaries in public spaces. Its location, southeast of the village church, makes it a central point of local life, close to the Merhan Cross, another religious symbol of the village.
The Calvary is characterized by a short barrel surmounted by an altar-base, carrying a Christ on the cross on its main face, accompanied by the Virgin and Saint John on ailerons. A Pietà adorns the back of the structure. This type of monument served as both a place of devotion, a visual landmark for processions, and an identity marker for the rural Breton communities of the seventeenth century. Calvary then played a major social and spiritual role, gathering around religious feasts and parish events.
Listed in the Historical Monuments by order of 29 March 1935, Callac Calvary enjoys heritage protection that underscores its historical and artistic importance. The mention of its property by an association in available sources suggests collective or community management, typical of local monuments preserved by civic or religious initiatives. Its precise address, 1 Place Jean Guillo in Plumelec, confirms its anchoring in the urban fabric of the village.
The available data do not specify the exact circumstances of its construction or the craftsmen involved, but its style and location reflect the Breton sculptural traditions of the modern era. The calvaries of this period were often erected at crossroads or near churches, serving as landmarks as well as objects of veneration. Their presence attests to the importance of the Catholic faith in everyday life and in the organization of public space in Brittany in the 17th and 18th centuries.
Finally, Callac Calvary is part of a wider set of similar monuments listed in Morbihan, illustrating the density of the religious heritage of this department. Its inscription in the title of Historic Monuments in 1935 coincides with a period of heritage awareness in France, marked by the desire to preserve the emblematic buildings of local and national history.
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