Origin and history
The church of Saint-Félix, located in the municipality of the same name in the Oise (Hauts-de-France), is a parish Catholic building built between the beginning of the 12th century for the nave and the 13th century for the Gothic choir. The latter, composed of three parallel vessels finished with a flat bedside, contrasts with the unique nave with barn-like appearances, supported by a wooden frame worn by rustic poles. The western portal, of primitive Gothic style, was originally to be integrated into a new facade never completed, probably due to financial constraints.
The oriental parts, redesigned in the 16th century, show great flamboyant arcades neat, while the vaults and supports reflect successive, often cost-effective, covers. The windows, with partially incomplete networks, combine late and primitive Gothic radiating elements. The choir, although partitioned, preserves remains of Renaissance stained glass and murals, including a probable representation of Saint Louis or Christ in majesty in the southern chapel. The building, listed as a historic monument in 1960, once depended on the Saint Lucian Abbey of Beauvais, one of the richest in the diocese.
Under the Ancien Régime, the parish of Saint-Félix was known for its wealth and participated annually in a procession in Montmorency, in homage to Saint Felix, a martyr associated with Vernot (Diocese of Sens). The nave, initially dark, was provided with additional windows after 1835, while the church avoided closing the cult thanks to its detachment from Hondainville in 1832. Today, affiliated with the parish of Sainte-Claire de Mouy, it welcomes more than a few annual Masses, but it houses remarkable furniture, including classified baptismal fonts and a 16th century beam of glory.
The exterior architecture reveals a heteroclite apparatus: irregular moellons for the nave, stone for the foothills, and a sober bell tower with geminied bays. The portal, mutilated from an ancient period, preserves capitals carved from d ́eau leaves, typical of the first Gothic period. The foothills of the eastern parts, particularly massive to the north, and the cornice modillons, sometimes decorated with grimaçant masks, add to the rustic character of the building. The adjacent cemetery, now disused, limits the visibility of the bedside, which is better observed from nearby pastures.
The furniture includes, in addition to the baptismal fonts of the 11th–12th century, a Virgin with the Mutilated Child, a Saint Catherine, and a rare statue of Saint Felix martyr, inspired by the representations of St Sebastian. A beam of glory, adorned with a Calvary and symbols of the Tetramorph, as well as an eagle-lutrin of the 17th–15th centuries, complete this ensemble. The murals of the southern chapel, though fragmentary, and the Renaissance stained glass windows, although degraded, bear witness to an unknown but precious artistic heritage.
The history of the church remains partly enigmatic: neither its date of foundation nor the precise motivations of the reshuffles are clearly established. Assumptions, such as that of a reported portal, are contested by architectural remains. The links with the abbey of Saint Lucian, the procession in Montmorency, and the past richness of the parish underline its local historical importance. Today, despite a reduced cult, the building retains a major heritage value, illustrating the architectural and liturgical evolution of the rural churches of Beauvais.
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