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Castle or old monastery of Lérins à Cannes dans les Alpes-Maritimes

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Monastère
Eglise fortifiée
Alpes-Maritimes

Castle or old monastery of Lérins

    Île Saint-Honorat
    06150 Cannes
Monastère fortifié de labbaye de Lérins
Château fort ou ancien monastère de Lérins
Château fort ou ancien monastère de Lérins
Château fort ou ancien monastère de Lérins
Château fort ou ancien monastère de Lérins
Château fort ou ancien monastère de Lérins
Château fort ou ancien monastère de Lérins
Château fort ou ancien monastère de Lérins
Château fort ou ancien monastère de Lérins
Château fort ou ancien monastère de Lérins
Château fort ou ancien monastère de Lérins
Château fort ou ancien monastère de Lérins
Château fort ou ancien monastère de Lérins
Château fort ou ancien monastère de Lérins
Château fort ou ancien monastère de Lérins
Château fort ou ancien monastère de Lérins
Château fort ou ancien monastère de Lérins
Château fort ou ancien monastère de Lérins
Château fort ou ancien monastère de Lérins
Château fort ou ancien monastère de Lérins
Château fort ou ancien monastère de Lérins
Château fort ou ancien monastère de Lérins
Château fort ou ancien monastère de Lérins
Château fort ou ancien monastère de Lérins
Château fort ou ancien monastère de Lérins
Château fort ou ancien monastère de Lérins
Château fort ou ancien monastère de Lérins
Château fort ou ancien monastère de Lérins
Château fort ou ancien monastère de Lérins
Château fort ou ancien monastère de Lérins
Château fort ou ancien monastère de Lérins
Château fort ou ancien monastère de Lérins
Château fort ou ancien monastère de Lérins
Château fort ou ancien monastère de Lérins
Château fort ou ancien monastère de Lérins
Château fort ou ancien monastère de Lérins
Château fort ou ancien monastère de Lérins
Château fort ou ancien monastère de Lérins
Château fort ou ancien monastère de Lérins
Château fort ou ancien monastère de Lérins
Château fort ou ancien monastère de Lérins
Château fort ou ancien monastère de Lérins
Château fort ou ancien monastère de Lérins
Château fort ou ancien monastère de Lérins
Château fort ou ancien monastère de Lérins
Château fort ou ancien monastère de Lérins
Château fort ou ancien monastère de Lérins
Château fort ou ancien monastère de Lérins
Château fort ou ancien monastère de Lérins
Crédit photo : Alberto Fernandez Fernandez - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
700
800
900
1000
1100
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
732
Massacre of monks by Saracens
1088-1103
Consecration of the Abbey of Saint-Honorat
1120-1125
Pontifical Bulls of Calixte II and Honorius II
fin XIe - début XIIe siècle
Construction of the early tower
1390-1392
Deposit of the relics of Saint Honorat
1450-1470
Construction of superimposed cloisters
1787
Secularization of the Abbey
1840
Historical monument classification
2020
Start of major restorations
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Castle fort : liste de 1840

Key figures

Saint Honorat - Founder of the Abbey (circa 410) Relics transferred in 1392.
Saint Porcaire - Abbé martyr in 732 Killed during the buckwheat raid.
Aldebert II - Abbé (1088-1103) Launch the defense tower in 1101.
Calixte II - Pope (1119-1124) Defence indulgence.
Jean Castol - Worker monk (15th century) Designed tank and refectory.
Vincent Barralis - Monastic columnist (XVIIe) Described 90 pieces in 1613.
Henri Jordany - Bishop of Fréjus (XIXe) Buy the island back in 1859.

Origin and history

The fortified monastery of Lérins, also called the tower-monastery, was built from the end of the 11th century by the monks of the abbey of Lérins on the island of Saint-Honorat, near Cannes. Its initial objective was to protect the religious from the Saracen raids, frequent since the eighth century. The first quadrangular tower, completed in the 12th century, served as a refuge and was strengthened after deadly attacks, such as that of 732 where 500 monks were massacred.

In the 13th century, the tower was enlarged eastward and loomed on three sides, forming a defensive and residential complex. The popes, like Calixte II and Honorius II, encouraged its fortification by granting indulgences to defenders. Between 1450 and 1470, two superimposed cloisters were added, with re-use columns and genoese marble capitals, gradually transforming the site into an autonomous fortified monastery.

The tower became the heart of monastic life from 1390 onwards, sheltering the relics of Saint Honorat and the chapel of Saint Croix, considered the "Saint of Saints". Despite repeated attacks (Spanish in 1524, Austro-Sardes in 1746), the monastery remained occupied until its secularization in 1787. Ranked a historic monument in 1840, it is now subject to major restorations.

The building illustrates the architectural adaptation of Mediterranean abbeys to external threats, combining religious, defensive and residential functions. Its successive transformations reflect the needs of the monks, from anti-sarasine fortifications to liturgical arrangements of the 15th century. The tower, with its raised door and its cloisters, remains a unique testimony of Provencal monastic history.

In the Middle Ages, the abbey of Lérins played a major spiritual and strategic role in Provence. The monks, threatened by pirates and conflicts, developed a system of signaling by fire with the Suquet tower in Cannes from 1327. The pontifical protection and gifts of the faithful allowed costly work, such as the vaulted tank or the structure of the upper cloister, despite interruptions for lack of funds.

After the Revolution, the monastery changed hands several times before being redeemed in 1859 by the bishop of Fréjus. Today, it embodies both a preserved religious heritage and a symbol of monastic resistance in the Mediterranean, with its 90 historical pieces and medieval relics.

External links