Transfer to Saint-Victor Abbey 1155 (≈ 1155)
Bishop Aldebert gave up the chapel.
1294
Mention as priory
Mention as priory 1294 (≈ 1294)
Independent of La Canourgue, quoted in Balmelle.
XVIIe siècle (début)
State of advanced degradation
State of advanced degradation XVIIe siècle (début) (≈ 1715)
Need repairs or reconstruction.
1984
Registration for Historic Monuments
Registration for Historic Monuments 1984 (≈ 1984)
Order of 16 July 1984.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Chapelle Saint-Frézal (Box B 1159) : inscription by order of 16 July 1984
Key figures
Aldebert - Bishop of Mende
Passed the chapel in 1155.
Saint Frézal - Holy local venerated
Tomb sheltered in the chapel.
Origin and history
The chapel of Saint-Frézal de La Canourgue, located in the department of Lozère in Occitanie, is a religious building whose origins date back to the thirteenth and sixteenth centuries. It is distinguished by its bedside and nave dating from the thirteenth century, while its western facade, later, is attributed to the sixteenth century. This votive chapel, dedicated to the cult of Saint Frézal, presents a rectangular plan with a nave of five vaulted bays in a broken cradle, and an apse cul-de-four raised in relation to the cover of the nave. Remains of doors in the south wall suggest the ancient existence of an adjacent priory.
The chapel is located on an ancient site marked by a source and basin of Gaulish origin, as well as Gallo-Roman remains, including a cippe. In 1155, the bishop of Mende, Aldebert, gave the chapel to the abbey of Saint-Victor in Marseilles. Mentioned in 1294 as a priory dependent on La Canourgue, it could date from the twelfth century according to certain sources. At the beginning of the 17th century, the building, in very poor condition, requires major repairs or even partial reconstruction. Enlisted for historical monuments in 1984, it is now owned by the commune.
The chapel Saint-Frézal illustrates the importance of medieval pilgrimage sites in Gevaudan, a region where the worship of local saints, like Frézal, played a central role in religious and community life. Its architecture combines Romanesque elements and Renaissance additions, reflecting stylistic evolutions and liturgical needs over centuries. The surrounding archaeological traces highlight the continuity of occupation of the site, from the Gaulish period to the medieval period, through the Gallo-Roman period.
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