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The great mountain of the Bronzes à Saint-Léger-Magnazeix en Haute-Vienne

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Prieuré

The great mountain of the Bronzes

    Les Bronzeaux
    87190 Saint-Léger-Magnazeix
Ownership of a private company
Celle grandmontaine des Bronzeaux
Celle grandmontaine des Bronzeaux
Crédit photo : Iveragh - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1172
Foundation of the Priory
1258
Confirmation of property
1295
Monastic census
1317
Union in Grandmont
fin XVIe siècle
Architectural renovations
1999
Classification and excavations
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The grandmontaine, including recent constructions, and the soil of the corresponding plots (see E 210 to 214): classification by decree of 8 September 1999

Key figures

Guillaume Chauvet - Founder Lord of Magnac, creator of the priory in 1172.
Marquise Chauvet - Co-founder Wife of Guillaume, involved in the foundation.
Hugues XII de Lusignan - Count of La Marche Confederates the monks' property in 1258.

Origin and history

The grandmontaine of the Bronzeaux is a former monastic dependency of the order of Grandmont, located in Saint-Léger-Magnazeix in Haute-Vienne. Founded in 1172 by Guillaume Chauvet, his wife Marquise and their brothers, it was dedicated to the Virgin Mary and Saint Mark. This priory, also called the one (from the Latin cella), functioned as a small unit dependent on the mother abbey of Grandmont, following an austere eremitic rule focused on prayer, poverty and loneliness.

In 1258 Hugues XII de Lusignan, Count of La Marche, confirmed the monks' possessions. The census of 1295 included five clergy. In 1317 the priory was united with Grandmont Abbey, becoming a simple ecclesiastical benefit. The buildings, built between the 12th and 13th centuries, were renovated in the 16th century. After the Revolution, the church was destroyed and the church turned into a farm, while keeping traces of its original plan (cloister, dormitory, capitular room).

The excavations of 1999 revealed a dry stone enclosure, a 25-metre-long dormitory, and remains of the granite church. The priory's income came from donations (land, mills, tithes) and local productions like a tilery. Ranked a historic monument in 1999, the site illustrates the monastic architecture of Grandmont, marked by austerity and isolation, with spaces such as the dining room, the kitchen, and an unidentified large room, perhaps an attic or a second dorm.

External links