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Champagne Abbey à Rouez dans la Sarthe

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Abbaye
Sarthe

Champagne Abbey

    L'Abbaye de Champagne
    72140 Rouez
Private property
Abbaye de Champagne
Abbaye de Champagne
Abbaye de Champagne
Crédit photo : Louis Boudan (fl. 1687–1709) Descriptiondessinateu - 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
1188
Foundation of the Abbey
XIIIe siècle
Reconstruction of the Abbey Church
XVIe siècle
Commendation
1791
Sale as a national good
1932
Registration for historical monuments
1981
Start of restorations
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The western wing, as well as the woodwork on the floor, the entrance door and the two 18th century pavilions: inscription by order of 4 October 1932

Key figures

Foulques Riboul - Lord of Assé and founder Initiator of the Abbey in 1188.
Geoffroy Freslon - Bishop of Le Mans Consecrate the church in 1261.
Guy de Lavardin-Beaumanoir - Beaumanoir family member Stuck in the abbey with his wife.
Cardinal de Retz - Abbé commendataire Named by the king in the 17th century.
Famille Luzu - Owner since 1899 Restore the abbey from 1981.

Origin and history

The Abbey of Champagne is a former Cistercian abbey founded in 1188 by Foulques Riboul, lord of Assé, with the help of monks from Savigny Abbey. The site, isolated and watered by two streams, offered ideal conditions for a Bernardine community, with ponds, a mill and a source for drinking water. The abbey adopts the coat of arms of its founder and develops rapidly under the protection of the local lords, accumulating property in about fifty parishes in Maine at the end of the thirteenth century.

In the 13th century, the abbey church, damaged by the troops of Philip Augustus, was rebuilt and consecrated in 1261 by the Bishop of Mans, Geoffroy Freslon. The abbey also became a necropolis for benefactory families, such as the Beaumanoir, including Guy de Lavardin-Beaumanoir and his wife Jeanne d'Estouteville were buried there. This period marks the culmination of its prosperity, supported by gifts and seigneurial protections.

As early as the 14th century, the abbey began to decline, with an area that was gradually shrinking. In the 16th century, it passed under the regime of commende, where the abbots, often nobles appointed by the king, were no longer religious. Among them are Cardinal Retz and members of the Gondi family. In the 17th century, despite an attempt to reform with the adoption of Trappist "close observance", the decline continued, and conversants disappeared.

At the Revolution, the abbey, reduced to eight monks and an abbot, was sold as a national property in 1791. All its buildings are destroyed, except for the west and south wing, which are transformed into a farm. These vestiges include the pantry, kitchens and converse room. In 1899, the Luzu family acquired the premises and started a restaurant financed by a farm-inn.

The western wing, the entrance gate and the 18th century pavilions were listed as historical monuments in 1932. Today, the abbey, still owned by the Luzu family, bears witness to its medieval history and its post-revolutionary transformations, mixing religious heritage and modern agricultural use.

External links