First mentions of Wolfian Xe siècle (≈ 1050)
Cited in cartulars as *Lupianum villa*.
XIIe siècle
Construction of the chapel
Construction of the chapel XIIe siècle (≈ 1250)
Built in Romanesque style, dependent on Psalmody.
XIVe siècle
Fortification of the Church
Fortification of the Church XIVe siècle (≈ 1450)
Integration into the local defensive system.
17 décembre 1923
Historical monument classification
Historical monument classification 17 décembre 1923 (≈ 1923)
Official protection by the French State.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Saint-Hippolyte Church: Order of 17 December 1923
Key figures
Information non disponible - No character cited
Sources don't mention names.
Origin and history
Saint-Hippolyte Chapel, also known as the Castral Church, is a 12th-century Romanesque building located in Loupian, Herault. It initially depended on the abbey of Psalmody and was incorporated in the 14th century into the defensive system of the city, with the addition of a tower and fortifications around the bedside. Its architecture combines wisigothic influences (overpassed arches) and omayyads (festooned arches), reflecting the medieval history of Languedoc.
Built in stone assembled in opus monspeliensis, the chapel features a fortified pentagonal bedside, adorned with discharge arches and windows. The western facade, with a carved portal and a scauguette, illustrates the fusion of preroman and novel styles. Inside, the unique nave arched in cradle and the capitals adorned with interlaces testify to a poitevin influence, while the carved wolf heads evoke local symbols.
Ranked a historic monument in 1923, the chapel embodies the evolution of a place of worship as a defensive element, typical of Occitan villages in the Middle Ages. Its Romanesque staircase integrated in the thickness of the walls and its partially destroyed niches recall its role in protecting the castrum of Loupian, mentioned from the tenth century in the regional cartulars.
Archaeological and historical sources, such as the works of Maurice de Dainville or Henri Lefebvre, underline its importance in the Languedoc Romanesque heritage. Its bedside, flanked by schauguers and surmounted by mâchicoulis, makes it a rare example of militarized religious architecture, linked to pilgrimage routes such as Via Tolosana.
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