Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Chapelle Saint-Servais à Pont-Scorff dans le Morbihan

Chapelle Saint-Servais

    1 Saint-Servais
    56620 Pont-Scorff
Ownership of the municipality
Crédit photo : Monstruosator - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
milieu du XVe siècle
Initial construction
XVIe siècle
West Gable Restoration
1677
Adding sacristy
1780
Fountain of devotion
1865
Repair of the pavement
20 mars 1934
Door MH classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

South gate: inscription by decree of 20 March 1934

Key figures

H. Le Boilay - Sponsor or craftsman Name engraved on the sacristy (1677).

Origin and history

The Saint-Servais Chapel is a small Catholic religious building located at the place called "Saint-Servais", in the commune of Pont-Scorff, Morbihan (British). Built mainly in the middle of the 15th century, as evidenced by its ogival south gate and bays, it adopts a simple plan with single ship and flat bedside. Its partially coated granite bellow walls support an open gable roof. A sacristy of cut stone, covered with a polygonal rump, was added to him in 1677, as indicated by the inscription H. LE BOILAY F. engraved on the south wall.

The chapel underwent a first restoration campaign in the 16th century, especially on its western gable. Its bell, partially illegible, bears an inscription dated 172.., while its inner pavement was redone in 1865. Nearby, a fountain of devotion dated 1780 (marked as initials C and E) attests to its role in local religious practices. The south gate, adorned with deciduous columns and an archvolt carved of subjects, has been classified as a historic monument since March 20, 1934.

Architecturally, the chapel illustrates the stylistic transitions between the flamboyant Gothic (ogival door, plant decorations) and the posterior classical additions (sacristy, bellet). Its present state results from these successive strata, reflecting both its liturgical use and its anchoring in the Breton devotional landscape. The property of the commune remains a modest but characteristic testimony of the rural religious heritage of the region.

External links