Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Lochrist Chapel of Plounévez-Lochrist dans le Finistère

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Chapelle gothique

Lochrist Chapel of Plounévez-Lochrist

    Le Bourg
    29430 Plounévez-Lochrist
Ownership of the municipality
Chapelle de Lochrist de Plounévez-Lochrist
Chapelle de Lochrist de Plounévez-Lochrist
Chapelle de Lochrist de Plounévez-Lochrist
Chapelle de Lochrist de Plounévez-Lochrist
Chapelle de Lochrist de Plounévez-Lochrist
Chapelle de Lochrist de Plounévez-Lochrist
Chapelle de Lochrist de Plounévez-Lochrist
Chapelle de Lochrist de Plounévez-Lochrist
Chapelle de Lochrist de Plounévez-Lochrist
Chapelle de Lochrist de Plounévez-Lochrist
Chapelle de Lochrist de Plounévez-Lochrist
Chapelle de Lochrist de Plounévez-Lochrist
Chapelle de Lochrist de Plounévez-Lochrist
Chapelle de Lochrist de Plounévez-Lochrist
Crédit photo : GO69 - 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
XIIe siècle
Construction of the bell tower
1253
Tomb of Alain de Carman
1331
Link to Saint-Mathieu Abbey
XVe siècle
Western Portal Recast
1785
Demolition of the chapel
1914
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Clocher (cad. A 334): by order of 8 June 1914

Key figures

Alain de Carman - Member of the founding family He was buried in the chapel in 1253.
Hervé de Carman - Descendant and Signatory Agreement of 1331 with the Abbey.
Guillaume - Abbé de Saint-Mathieu Recipient of the priory in 1331.

Origin and history

The 12th century bell tower is the only vestige of the chapel and monastery of Lochrist. Evicted to its base by arches, it is full in its upper part, crowned with twin bays, and surmounted by an arrow redone in the fourteenth century. This priory, possibly linked to Templars or Hospitallers, was founded by Carman's family. The chapel housed the tomb of Alain de Carman, dated 1253.

In 1331, the priory came under the dependence of the abbey Saint-Mathieu by agreement between Hervé de Carman and Abbé Guillaume. The western portal, which was rebuilt in the 15th century, marks an architectural evolution. In the 16th century, Benedictines abandoned the priory, then served by a secular priest. In 1778 a fire destroyed the priorial house, and in 1785 the chapel was demolished, leaving only the bell tower.

In 1910, the flooded arrow was rebuilt. The bell tower, classified as a Historic Monument in 1914, is now owned by the municipality. A monumental 19th-century wooden cross remains at the bedside, while the Gothic fountain mentioned by the texts has disappeared. The site thus preserves traces of its medieval and religious past.

External links