Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Strawberry Chapel à Beauzac en Haute-Loire

Patrimoine classé
Eglise romane auvergnat
Chapelle romane
Clocher-mur
Haute-Loire

Strawberry Chapel

    Le Fraisse Haut
    43590 Beauzac
Chapelle du Fraisse
Chapelle du Fraisse
Crédit photo : Jérôme Marcon - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
11 juillet 1273
Exchange with Saint-Chaffre
XIIe–XIIIe siècle
Hospital construction
1616
Sale to Jourda
1794
Revolutionary Pillage
1817
Abandonment of worship
22 juin 1972
MH classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Chapelle du Fraisse (ruins) (Box J 242): entry by order of 22 June 1972

Key figures

Robert de Montrognon - Grand Prior of Auvergne Signatory of the exchange of 1273.
Mainfroy de Châteauneuf - Commander of the Puy Witness to the 1273 transaction.
Jourdain de Montlaur - Abbé du Monastier-Saint-Chaffre Acquisition of the estate in 1273.
Nohé de Jourda - Owner in 1616 Buyer under emphyteosis.

Origin and history

The Strawberry Chapel, located in Beauzac in the Haute-Loire, is a vestige of an ancient medieval agricultural estate. Built in the 13th century by the Hospitallers of Saint John of Jerusalem, it was part of a priory including a church, cemetery and agricultural buildings. The foundations of the adjoining house are still visible today, testifying to its functional and religious past.

The site, occupied as early as Neolithic, was probably a Celtic place of worship before its Christianization. The Hospitallers, who arrived in the Velay in the 12th century, established an agricultural commissionory. In 1273, the estate was exchanged with Saint-Chaffre Abbey, becoming a Benedictine priory. The chapel, in Romanesque style with an ogival door, is surmounted by three typical bell towers.

During the French Revolution, the chapel was looted: its objects of worship disappeared in 1794, although its bell tower was spared. In the 19th century it became a communal good, but worship was abandoned there in 1817. Degraded in the 20th century (a tree grew on its vault), it was restored between 1970 and 2003. Today, it dominates the gorges of Ramel, between the villages of Fraisse-Haut and Fraisse-Bas.

Its name would come from the ash trees (occitan free) surrounding the site. The chapel, listed as a historical monument in 1972, illustrates the region's hospital and Benedictine heritage. Local excavations and archives also reveal traces of prehistoric occupation, highlighting its multi-secular importance.

Architecturally, the unique nave arched in cradle and the carved side door (mounted in 1925) reflect its evolution. The estate, sold in 1616 to the Jourda family, was maintained as a place of worship until the Revolution. Municipal registers and notarial acts document its turbulent history, between abandonment and preservation.

External links