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Chapelle Notre-Dame des Vignères in Cavaillon dans le Vaucluse

Patrimoine classé
Clocher-mur
Chapelle romane
Vaucluse

Chapelle Notre-Dame des Vignères in Cavaillon

    Rue des Vendangeuses
    84300 Cavaillon
Chapelle Notre-Dame des Vignères à Cavaillon
Chapelle Notre-Dame des Vignères à Cavaillon
Chapelle Notre-Dame des Vignères à Cavaillon
Chapelle Notre-Dame des Vignères à Cavaillon
Chapelle Notre-Dame des Vignères à Cavaillon
Chapelle Notre-Dame des Vignères à Cavaillon
Chapelle Notre-Dame des Vignères à Cavaillon
Chapelle Notre-Dame des Vignères à Cavaillon
Chapelle Notre-Dame des Vignères à Cavaillon
Chapelle Notre-Dame des Vignères à Cavaillon
Chapelle Notre-Dame des Vignères à Cavaillon
Chapelle Notre-Dame des Vignères à Cavaillon
Chapelle Notre-Dame des Vignères à Cavaillon
Chapelle Notre-Dame des Vignères à Cavaillon
Chapelle Notre-Dame des Vignères à Cavaillon
Chapelle Notre-Dame des Vignères à Cavaillon
Chapelle Notre-Dame des Vignères à Cavaillon
Chapelle Notre-Dame des Vignères à Cavaillon
Chapelle Notre-Dame des Vignères à Cavaillon
Chapelle Notre-Dame des Vignères à Cavaillon
Chapelle Notre-Dame des Vignères à Cavaillon
Chapelle Notre-Dame des Vignères à Cavaillon
Crédit photo : Jean-Marc Rosier - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1100
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
XIe siècle
Initial construction
2e quart XIIe siècle
Romanesque renovation
XIIIe siècle
Hospitallers' Hospital
1626
Enlargement
8 mars 1982
MH classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Chapelle Notre-Dame des Vignères (Box AE 64): Order of 8 March 1982

Key figures

Jean XXII - Pope (14th century) Connect the chapel to Bonpas.
Mme de Lamothe - Owner (XX century) Save the chapel in 1962.

Origin and history

The Notre-Dame des Vignères chapel, located in the hamlet of the Vigneres in Cavaillon (Vaucluse), is a Romanesque religious building dating back to the 11th century. Built near an ancient supposed cultural site (perhaps a fanum), it was redesigned in the 12th century, including the addition of a porch decorated with a sundial and an engraved axe. Its bedside and apse could date from the late 11th or early 12th century, while the vaulted nave and foothills were built in the late 12th or early 13th century. In the 13th century, the Hospitallers of Saint-Jean-de-Jérusalem, managing a passenger hospital, settled nearby.

In the 14th century, the chapel was attached to the Chartreuse of Bonpas by Pope John XXII, marking its integration into regional religious networks. Repairs and expansions took place in 1626, with the installation of side chapels and the restoration of the porch. After serving as an agricultural building in the 19th century, it was classified as a historic monument in 1982 for its remarkable architecture: cradle vaults, carved capitals, and re-use of a stele dedicated to Mercury as a master altar. Its history reflects the religious and social transformations of medieval and modern Provence.

The chapel consists of a unique nave extended by a cul-de-four choir, adorned with an arcature falling on six columns with various capitals. The south porch, arched in a cradle, preserves traces of an old opening in the middle of the pit and an engraved stone with a chrism, a sign, and a sundial. Local materials (calcary, bellows, hollow tiles) and remnants of murals in the choir testify to medieval constructive techniques. Acquired by the municipality in 1962 after being saved from the ruin, it illustrates the preservation of the Romanesque heritage in Provence.

External links