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Chapel Saint-Nicolas d'Harambels à Ostabat-Asme dans les Pyrénées-Atlantiques

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Chapelle
Clocher-mur
Pyrénées-Atlantiques

Chapel Saint-Nicolas d'Harambels

    Harambels
    64120 Ostabat-Asme
Chapelle Saint-Nicolas dHarambels
Chapelle Saint-Nicolas dHarambels
Chapelle Saint-Nicolas dHarambels
Chapelle Saint-Nicolas dHarambels
Chapelle Saint-Nicolas dHarambels
Chapelle Saint-Nicolas dHarambels
Chapelle Saint-Nicolas dHarambels
Crédit photo : Evillafruela - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1100
1200
1300
1400
1700
1800
1900
2000
1059
First will mentioning hospital
1106
Quote of the hospital in an act
1209
Land donation by Pierre-Arnaud I
fin XIIe - XIIIe siècle
Construction of the chapel
XVIIe siècle
Interior decor and tabletop
1760
Death of the last prior
1784
Abolition of Priory Hospitals
1795
Repurchase as a national good
1944, 1987
First MH protections
2001
Historical Monument
2008-2010
Complete restoration
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

To be rehabilitated, the chapel (Box B 87): classification by decree of 19 February 2001

Key figures

Loup-Eneco (Lope Eneco) - Viscount of Baigorry First donor in 1059 (testament).
Loup II-Eneco - Little son of Wolf-Eneco Cash donation in 1106.
Pierre-Arnaud I - Baron de Luxe, Lantabat and Ostabat Land donation in 1209.
Jacques de Borda - Last Prior of Harambels Died in 1760, buried in the chapel.
Odilon Redon - Artist Drawing of the chapel in 1866 (visible hospital).

Origin and history

The chapel Saint-Nicolas d'Harambels, located at the place called Harambeltz in Ostabat-Asme (Pyrénées-Atlantiques), was built in the late 12th or 13th century. It was supported by a medieval hospital founded in the 11th century, forming a priory-hospital independent of the religious brotherhoods. This complex, managed by four donats (Sala, Etxeberria, Borda, Etxeto) under the authority of a prior, welcomed pilgrims on the Roman way Bordeaux-Astorga and at the confluence of the paths of Compostela, especially the navarro camino.

The hospital was mentioned as early as 1059 in the Will of Loup-Eneco, Viscount of Baigorry, then in acts of 1106 and 1209. Unlike similar institutions, it depended directly on the donates, who chose their prior — a notable local supervisor of the neighboring parish priests. The last prior, Jacques de Borda (died 1760), managed the parishes of Uhart-Mixe and Arhansus. The institution declined in the 18th century: Louis XVI abolished the priories-hospitals in 1784, and the hospital section, already abandoned before 1756, disappeared after 1866.

The chapel, classified as Historic Monument in 2001, is a rectangular building (13x8 m) with a single vessel and flat bedside, with a Romanesque tympanum decorated with a chrism, a Maltese cross and a star. Its interior preserves a homogenous 17th century decor: a glazed vault painted by the Evangelists, a baluster stand, and a monumental altar dedicated to Saint Nicholas of Bari. The two-storey porch was used as a dwelling, while the Trinitarian bell tower, with two bays, dominated the whole. Restored between 2008 and 2010, it remains a major testimony of the reception of pilgrims in the Middle Ages.

The site, located on the GR65 (classified at UNESCO), also marked the departure of a secondary road to the Achurde Pass, avoiding tolls from the Ostabaret. The four surrounding houses (Sala, Etxeberria, Borda, Etxeto) belonged to the donats, whose descendants bought the chapel as a national good in 1795. Today, it is the co-ownership of their heirs. There is no trace of the priory or hospital, but the cemetery retains ancient graves.

The toponymy Harambeltz (or Harambels), meaning "black valley" in Basque, evokes the surrounding forest. The place has been mentioned in various forms since 1106 (Hospitale Sancti Nicolai de Arambels). The chapel, although after the hospital, perpetuates its memory as a spiritual and hospital stop on the jacquarian roads.

External links