Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil dans l'Eure

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Collégiale
Eglise romane

Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil

    Place de l'Église
    27160 Breteuil
Ownership of the municipality
Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil
Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil
Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil
Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil
Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil
Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil
Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil
Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil
Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil
Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil
Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil
Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil
Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil
Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil
Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil
Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil
Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil
Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil
Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil
Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil
Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil
Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil
Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil
Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil
Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil
Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil
Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil
Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil
Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil
Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil
Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil
Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil
Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil
Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil
Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil
Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil
Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil
Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil
Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil
Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil
Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil
Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil
Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil
Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil
Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil
Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil
Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil
Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil
Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil
Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil
Collégiale Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil
Crédit photo : Gregofhuest - 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
1900
2000
avant 1015-1025
First written entry
1138
A devastating fire
milieu du XIe siècle
Assignment to Lyre Abbey
1932
Registration historical monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Church of Breteuil: registration by decree of 3 June 1932

Key figures

Guillaume de Crépon - Local Lord Gives the church to Lyre Abbey.

Origin and history

The collegiate Saint-Sulpice de Breteuil, located in the Eure in Normandy, is a religious building whose origins date back to a first mention before 1015-1025. At that time, the church, originally built of wood, was rebuilt in stone and mortar. This monument is marked by its attachment to local and religious history: in the middle of the 11th century, Guillaume de Crépon gave it to Lyre Abbey, sealing its monastic destiny. The Romanesque structure of the nave, the transept and the tower-lantern, still visible today, bear witness to this pivotal period.

In 1138, a fire ravaged the building, resulting in the reconstruction of a grazestone, a typical material of the region. This sinister event marks a turning point in its architecture, although the Romanesque traces remain. The work of the 12th and 16th centuries, the key periods of its construction, gives it a mixture of Romanesque and Gothic styles. The church, which became a collegiate church, was finally included in the inventory of historical monuments in 1932, recognizing its heritage value.

Beyond its architecture, the college illustrates the importance of religious buildings in the Norman medieval organization. In places of spiritual and social power, these churches structured community life around cult practices, markets and gatherings. Breteuil, like many towns in the region, was structured around his church, the heart of religious and civil activities, thus reflecting the lasting influence of Christianity in the Norman rural landscape.

External links