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Chapelle Sainte-Anne du Pallet au Pallet en Loire-Atlantique

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Chapelle romane
Loire-Atlantique

Chapelle Sainte-Anne du Pallet

    Place Saint-Anne 
    44330 Le Pallet
Chapelle Sainte-Anne du Pallet
Chapelle Sainte-Anne du Pallet
Chapelle Sainte-Anne du Pallet
Chapelle Sainte-Anne du Pallet
Chapelle Sainte-Anne du Pallet
Chapelle Sainte-Anne du Pallet
Chapelle Sainte-Anne du Pallet
Chapelle Sainte-Anne du Pallet
Crédit photo : Selbymay - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
Avant 1646
Westward extension
1683
Reported condition
1853
Demolition of St. Vincent's Church
9 août 1941
Registration for historical monuments
1957
Restoration of the chapel
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Chapelle Sainte-Anne : inscription by decree of 9 August 1941

Key figures

Prosper Mérimée - Writer and Inspector of Historic Monuments Save the chapel in 1853.
Archidiacre Binet - 17th century cleric Describes the state of the church in 1683.
Seigneur de la Galissonnière - Owner of the castral choir Prevents repair before 1683.
L. Doomer - Designer of the seventeenth century Author of a drawing of 1646.

Origin and history

The chapel Sainte-Anne du Pallet, located in the Loire-Atlantique department, is a 12th century religious building, the last vestige of the parish church of Saint Vincent. It was built in the second half of the 11th century, adjacent to a pre-existing castral chapel dating from the late 10th or early 11th century. These two chapels were later extended westward to form the bedside of the Saint Vincent church, before 1646, as evidenced by a drawing preserved at the Dobbree Museum in Nantes.

In 1683, the Archdeacon Binet described the church of Saint Vincent as dilapidated, with a choir threatened with ruin, owned by the lord of the Galissonnière. During the Revolution, the choir, formerly castral chapel, disappeared. The church was finally razed in 1853, but the Sainte-Anne chapel was preserved thanks to the intervention of Prosper Mérimée. A new church is then built in the village, reusing the stones of the old building.

The chapel, listed as historical monuments in 1941, was restored in 1957. It is distinguished by its modest architecture: a square nave arched in cradle, extended by an apse in cul-de-four. Its north wall, marked by flat buttresses, belongs to the old castral chapel. Outside, later added foothills strengthen the structure. The façade, pierced by an arcade of full hanger, corresponded to the former junction with the collateral.

The chapel houses four tombstones from Saint John Chapel. Its location, near the ruins of the Roman dungeon, suggests a historical proximity to the stronghold. The windows of the abside, engraved with false harpsichords, and the incomplete initial plan evoke a poitevin inspiration, similar to the church of Saint-Nicolas-de-Brem in Vendée.

Today, the chapel of Sainte-Anne bears witness to the medieval history of the Pallet, linked to both seigneurial power and parish life. Its architecture and history reflect the successive transformations of the site, from its Castral origin to its preservation as a historical monument.

External links