Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Chapter of Salles-Arbuissonnas-en-Beaujolais dans le Rhône

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Chapitre
Rhône

Chapter of Salles-Arbuissonnas-en-Beaujolais

    Place du Chapître
    69460 Salles-Arbuissonnas-en-Beaujolais
Chapitre de Salles-Arbuissonnas-en-Beaujolais
Chapitre de Salles-Arbuissonnas-en-Beaujolais
Chapitre de Salles-Arbuissonnas-en-Beaujolais
Chapitre de Salles-Arbuissonnas-en-Beaujolais
Chapitre de Salles-Arbuissonnas-en-Beaujolais
Chapitre de Salles-Arbuissonnas-en-Beaujolais
Chapitre de Salles-Arbuissonnas-en-Beaujolais
Chapitre de Salles-Arbuissonnas-en-Beaujolais
Chapitre de Salles-Arbuissonnas-en-Beaujolais
Chapitre de Salles-Arbuissonnas-en-Beaujolais
Chapitre de Salles-Arbuissonnas-en-Beaujolais
Chapitre de Salles-Arbuissonnas-en-Beaujolais
Chapitre de Salles-Arbuissonnas-en-Beaujolais
Chapitre de Salles-Arbuissonnas-en-Beaujolais
Chapitre de Salles-Arbuissonnas-en-Beaujolais
Chapitre de Salles-Arbuissonnas-en-Beaujolais
Chapitre de Salles-Arbuissonnas-en-Beaujolais
Chapitre de Salles-Arbuissonnas-en-Beaujolais
Crédit photo : Nesme - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1000
1100
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
960
Foundation of the Priory
XIIe siècle
Construction of church and cloister
début XIVe siècle
Arrival of Benedictine nuns
1779
Transformation into a noble chapter
1781
The architectural project of Madame de Ruffey
1790
Dissolution of the Chapter
1862
Church ranking
1935
Classification of entry flags
2019
Registration of the cloister and canonical houses
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The two entrance pavilions of the Place du Chapître, the wrought iron gate that connects them and the moat attached thereto: classification by order of 1 August 1935

Key figures

Madame de Ruffey - Last Prioress of the Chapter Launched an architectural project in 1781.
Alix des Roys - Chanoinesse and mother of Lamartine Lives on the chapter before her marriage.
Alphonse de Lamartine - Poet and writer Describes the life of the canonesses in *Confedences*.
Suzanne de Lamartine - Chanoinesse and aunt of Alphonse An influential member of the noble chapter.

Origin and history

The chapter of Salles-Arbuissonnas-en-Beaujolais is an architectural complex located in the Rhône department, in the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes region. Founded in 960 as Benedictine priory under Cluny's authority, it welcomes monks who build a church and cloister there in the 12th century. At the beginning of the fourteenth century, the monks were replaced by thirty Benedictine nuns from a poor priory in Grelonges, an island of the Saône prone to flooding.

Over time, the priory evolves under the influence of young girls of the nobility, gradually abandoning Benedictine monarchy for a more worldly existence. In 1779 it officially became a noble chapter of Countess Canonesses, and in 1781 the Prioress Madame de Ruffey launched an ambitious architectural project, interrupted by the Revolution. The chapter was dissolved in 1790, and its residents left the site.

The architecture of the site includes entrance pavilions classified in 1935, a 12th century Romanesque church classified in 1862, and a cloister partially demolished during the Revolution. The capitular hall, decorated with frescoes of the fifteenth century, and parlor, with its carved vaults, bear witness to its rich past. The chapter is today a geosite of the Beaujolais geopark and houses a museum, Le Prieuré.

The site is marked by figures like Alphonse de Lamartine, whose mother, Alix des Roys, lived there. In his Confedences he describes the free and worldly life of the canonesses, between attenuated religious life and family stays. The last Prioress, Madame de Ruffey, tried in vain to preserve the chapter against the Revolution, ending in prison.

Protected elements include entrance pavilions, wrought iron gate, moat, St.Martin's church, cloister, capitular hall and parlor. Two canonical houses, including that of the Prioress and the present town hall, are also registered. The site illustrates the evolution of a medieval priory into an aristocratic chapter, reflecting the social and religious transformations of the Old Regime.

External links