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Church of St. Nicholas of Ostrich à Autruche dans les Ardennes

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Eglise fortifiée
Eglise gothique
Ardennes

Church of St. Nicholas of Ostrich

    Les Vauzelles
    08240 Autruche
Ownership of the municipality
Église Saint-Nicolas dAutruche
Église Saint-Nicolas dAutruche
Église Saint-Nicolas dAutruche
Église Saint-Nicolas dAutruche
Église Saint-Nicolas dAutruche
Église Saint-Nicolas dAutruche
Église Saint-Nicolas dAutruche
Église Saint-Nicolas dAutruche
Église Saint-Nicolas dAutruche
Église Saint-Nicolas dAutruche
Église Saint-Nicolas dAutruche
Église Saint-Nicolas dAutruche
Église Saint-Nicolas dAutruche
Église Saint-Nicolas dAutruche
Église Saint-Nicolas dAutruche
Église Saint-Nicolas dAutruche
Crédit photo : Florent Simonet - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
XIVe siècle
Construction of the choir
2e moitié XVIe siècle
Period of main construction
18 juillet 1683
Abjuration of Anne de Schélandre
19 juillet 1683
Remarriage of Anne de Schélandre
1869
Restoration of the building
25 mars 1980
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Church (Box C 242): Registration by Order of 25 March 1980

Key figures

Anne de Schélandre - Ardene Calvinist Noble Abjured his faith in 1683.
Louis de Montguyon - Husband of Anne de Schélandre Marriage 19 July 1683.
Charles de Schélandre - Father of Anne, Lord of Tourteron Noble family converted to Protestantism.
Marie d'Averhoult - Mother of Anne de Schélandre Member of Averhoult's family.

Origin and history

The church of Saint-Nicolas d'Ostrich, located in the village of Ostrich (Ardennes, Grand Est), is a building built from the 14th to the 16th century. The choir, dating from the 14th century, bears witness to its medieval origin, while defensive elements such as murderers and mâchicoulis, added in the 16th century, reflect the religious tensions of the time. Its portal is extended by a monumental staircase, highlighting its architectural and symbolic importance in the local landscape.

On 18 July 1683 the church was the framework for the public abjuration of Anne de Schélandre, a 31-year-old widow from the Ardennes nobility converted to Calvinism. This gesture, followed by his remarriage the next day with Louis de Montguyon, illustrates the pressure exerted on Protestants after the revocation of the edict of Nantes (1685) and the discriminatory measures of Louis XIV. The event also reveals the role of the church as a place of social and religious reaffirmation for the local aristocracy.

The Ardennes nobility, mostly Calvinist at this time, had to choose between its faith and its status in a society dominated by Catholicism. The Saint-Nicolas Church, restored in 1869 and listed as a historic monument in 1980, thus embodies both an architectural heritage and a symbol of the religious conflicts that marked the region. Its defensive features also recall the unrest associated with the religious wars, where religious buildings became refuges.

Today, the church belongs to the municipality of Ostrich and remains a testimony of the cultural and political transformations of the Ardennes, between the Middle Ages and the modern era. Its inscription in the historic monuments in 1980 preserved its unique elements, such as the mâchicoulis or the stairway gate, while anchoring its history in collective memory.

External links