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Chapelle Sainte-Madeleine à Monistrol-d'Allier en Haute-Loire

Haute-Loire

Chapelle Sainte-Madeleine

    833 Montée de la Madeleine
    43580 Monistrol-d'Allier
Chapelle Sainte-Madeleine
Chapelle Sainte-Madeleine
Chapelle Sainte-Madeleine
Chapelle Sainte-Madeleine

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1312
First text mentioning the site
1615–1631
Period of exhumed currencies
1682–1781
Notarial Archives
1872–1873
Archaeological excavations
2005
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The entire chapel (Box E 59): inscription by order of 10 October 2005

Key figures

Charles d'Anjou - Provencal Prince Discoverer of the relics of Sainte-Baume (1280).
Gouverneur du Puy (anonyme) - Legendary Benefactor Would have financed the facade after a miracle.
Femme de Saint-Alban (anonyme) - Pilgrim At the origin of the founding legend.

Origin and history

The Sainte-Madeleine chapel of Monistrol-d'Allier is a hybrid construction, combining a natural cave with a stone façade of Langeac. Its origin dates back to legendary stories of the Middle Ages: a woman from Saint Alban would have discovered there an image of Saint Madeleine holding a skull, promising to erect an oratory there if she won her trial. Another account evokes a governor of Puy, saved from a fall by a prayer to the saint, who would have financed the present facade. These oral traditions, although difficult to verify, are supported by a 1312 treaty mentioning the burial of the site as early as the 13th century.

The first tangible material evidence, however, dates from the early 17th century. Excavations carried out in 1872–73 exhumed graves and coins, which were mostly struck between 1615 and 1631, confirming a cult activity at that time. The notarial archives (1682–81) attest to gifts for mass and repairs, suggesting the existence of a building as early as the seventeenth century. The neoclassical façade, typical of the second half of the 18th century, could however incorporate older elements, such as re-used 17th century balusters.

The local cult was inspired directly by that of the Sainte-Baume in Provence, where Madeleine's relics were rediscovered in 1280. A model of this mountain, once preserved in the chapel, strengthened this link. The most plausible hypothesis is that a returning pilgrim from Sainte-Baume imported this devotion into Upper Loire. Despite perhaps medieval origins, the most reliable architectural and archaeological traces placed its growth between the 17th and 19th centuries, with a façade remodeled in a locally persistent style until the 1840s.

The chapel is distinguished by its atypical architecture: a stone façade closing a rocky cavity, with a bossed door and a triangular pediment pierced by an oculus. Inside, the nave embraces the depth of the cave, while traces of paint and carved motifs on the tympanum testify to a careful decoration. Ranked a historical monument in 2005, it remains communal property and illustrates the persistence of troglodytic cults in the volcanic areas of Auvergne.

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