Restoration and staircase XVIIe siècle (≈ 1750)
Access to the fitted bell tower.
1970-1980
Archaeological excavations
Archaeological excavations 1970-1980 (≈ 1975)
Discovery of Merovingian sarcophagi.
4 décembre 1995
Historical monument classification
Historical monument classification 4 décembre 1995 (≈ 1995)
Official registration of the building.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Church (Box B 939): registration by order of 4 December 1995
Key figures
Guillaume V d'Angoulême - Count of Angoulême
Donor of the church at the abbey.
N.B. Brunelière - Bell founder
Author of a bell dated 1604.
Origin and history
The church of Saint Christophe de Vindelle, located 12 km north of Angoulême in Charente, is one of the oldest Romanesque churches in the region. Mentioned as early as 988-1028 in the cartular of Saint-Amant-de-Boixe, it was given by Count Guillaume V of Angoulême to the abbey of Saint-Amant-de-Boixe to found a priory. This priory, dedicated to Saint James and Saint Christophe, shared the church with the parish and enjoyed seigneurial rights, such as the perception of tithes.
Built in the 11th and 12th centuries, the church retained a remarkable architectural unit, with a three-span nave, an asymmetric transept (one north arm) and an apse decorated with carved modillons. During the Hundred Years' War (14th century), it was fortified: the nave was enhanced for a round road, and an archetra was added to the bell tower. Major restorations took place in the seventeenth century (stairs of the bell tower) and in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, revealing merovingian sarcophagi (VIIth century) in the choir.
The Romanesque bell tower, a rare example intact, dominates the building with its geminied bays and its roof with cut strips. The interior houses carved capitals (palmettes, lions, winged monsters) and traces of medieval murals. Ranked a historic monument in 1995, the church also houses three bells from the 17th century, one of which has been classified since 1944. Today, it is part of the parish of Gond-Pontouvre-Balzac-Vindelle.
The exterior architecture is distinguished by its western triangular frontal façade, decorated with figurative modillons (beardheads, leonian masks) and a billet corded portal. The walls in small local stone apparatus (Kimmeridgian) and the flat foothills underline the sobriety of romance. The prioral house, partially preserved, bears witness to past monastic life, with a Romanesque window still visible.
The excavations of the 1970s-1980s revealed the Merovingian sarcophagi and foundations of the 10th century, confirming the former occupation of the site. The northern absidiole, adjacent to the abside, and the stained glass of the choir complete this homogeneous ensemble. The church thus illustrates the architectural and religious evolution of Angoumois, from the high Middle Ages to the modern era.
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