Foundation start XIIIe siècle (≈ 1350)
First pillars supporting the current tower.
1345-1375
Vertical Gothic construction
Vertical Gothic construction 1345-1375 (≈ 1360)
Transept, choir and north elevation built.
3 mai 1375
English fire
English fire 3 mai 1375 (≈ 1375)
Partial destruction during the War of Succession.
1399
Completion of the west façade
Completion of the west façade 1399 (≈ 1399)
End of 14th century work.
ca. 1439-1472
Coronation of the arrow
Coronation of the arrow ca. 1439-1472 (≈ 1456)
Added the floor bells and bells.
1680
Lazarist legation
Lazarist legation 1680 (≈ 1680)
Becoming chapel of the Major Seminary.
1807
Napoleonic restoration
Napoleonic restoration 1807 (≈ 1807)
Arrow saved by decree of Napoleon I.
1840
Historical Monument
Historical Monument 1840 (≈ 1840)
First list of Prosper Mérimée.
1993
Modern renovation
Modern renovation 1993 (≈ 1993)
Restoration of gargoyles and interiors.
2014
Contemporary stained glass
Contemporary stained glass 2014 (≈ 2014)
Rosace by Kim En Joong inaugurated.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Church (Box AM 6): ranking by list of 1840
Key figures
Jean IV de Bretagne - Duke of Brittany
Partially financed the construction.
Yves (évêque de Léon) - 13th century bishop
Promotes reconstruction after 1277.
Pierre Benoît - Bishop of Leo (1344)
Consacra the nearby cathedral.
Jean Prigent - Bishop of Leo (1436-1439)
Weapons carved in the vault key.
Vauban - Military engineer
Qualified the bell tower as "hardi".
Napoléon Ier - Emperor of the French
Ordained restoration in 1807.
Kim En Joong - Dominican Artist
Author of the contemporary window (2014).
Origin and history
The Notre-Dame du Kreisker Chapel, located in the heart of Saint-Pol-de-Léon in Brittany, is an emblematic building of Breton religious architecture from the 14th and 15th centuries. Its granite bell tower, 78 meters high, is the highest in Brittany and embodies medieval architectural daring, mixing Norman influences (arrow inspired by Saint-Pierre de Caen) and English (Perpendicular style). Based on the location of an ancient oratory dedicated to the Virgin, its construction began in the 13th century, but the major works took place between 1345 and 1472, under the impulse of the merchant corporations and the bishop of Leon. The chapel served in turn as a town hall, a capitular hall for the brotherhoods, and a Marian place of worship for the pilgrims of Tro Breiz.
The tower, completed around 1440, was designed as a symbol of municipal and religious power, incorporating guard rooms and a watch system. Its disconnection to the south is explained by urban constraints, including the street Verderel, an ancient road bordering the building. Damaged by fires (1375) and lightning (1630, 1770), it was restored under Napoleon I in 1807 for its role as a maritime bitter. From 1680, the chapel became the school chapel of the Grand Séminaire, then of the Collège de Léon, before being classified as a Historical Monument in 1840. Its northern porch, a 15th century sculptural masterpiece, and its stained glass windows destroyed during the Revolution, bear witness to its rich past.
The interior, marked by a three-span nave and a disoriented choir, once housed more than twenty private altars financed by corporations (shipowners, goldsmiths, tailors). The armored stained glass windows, which were hammered in 1794, were replaced in the 20th century by contemporary creations, such as Kim En Joong's rosette (2014). The chapel, owned by the city since the 19th century, remains a place of memory and culture, managed in part by the association Les Amis du Kreisker. Its bell tower, although "mutilated" since the Revolution, still dominates the Léonnais landscape, a symbol of a religious, municipal and maritime heritage.
The etymology of the name Kreisker (or Creisker) reflects its location in the "centre of the city" (kreiz kear in Breton), although alternative hypotheses suggest a link with the "bottom of the city" (Ker-iz-ker) or a crucifix (Christ Caer). The medieval archives use the Creizkaer spelling, confirming its anchoring in the urban fabric since ancient times, at the crossroads of the Roman cardo and decumanus. The local legend attributes its foundation to a repentant lord of the sixth century, but the first architectural traces date from the thirteenth century, with a major reconstruction after the fire of 1375.
Classified in 1840 by Prosper Mérimée, the chapel benefited from restorations in the 19th and 20th centuries, although moisture today threatens its interior walls. Its north porch, carved by the Grand Ducal workshop of the Folgoët, and its openwork arrow, described by Vauban as a "hardest piece of architecture", make it a model for Breton bell towers. The chapel also illustrates the social tensions of the Lower Middle Ages, where bourgeois, clergy and nobility disputed its use, before it became a teaching place under the Lazarists (1680-1970).
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