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Commandery of the Bordes à Jussy-le-Chaudrier dans le Cher

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine Templier
Commanderie templière
Cher

Commandery of the Bordes

    4-6 Route de Couy
    18140 Jussy-le-Chaudrier
Crédit photo : Fitamant - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1170
First reference to Templar
1225
Dispute with Bourges
1269
Trade in receivables
1312
Transition to Hospitallers
fin XVe–début XVIe siècle
Construction of the tower
1791
Revolutionary suppression
1995
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Chapel, including its underground rooms and access stairs; Residual tower of the residence of the commander (cad. AR 100, placed Les Bordes, 101, placed Château des Bordes); door covered with a lintel decorated with an arch in a braid, practiced in the adjoining wall separating the old garden and the old courtyard, between plot AR 12 and plot AR 101: inscription by order of 19 July 1995

Key figures

Frère Gérard - Master of Auvergne-Limousin province Head templier in 1225.
Amaury de La Roche - Master of the Province of France Valid exchange of 1269.
Honorius III - Pope Arbitrate the 1225 dispute.

Origin and history

The Commanderie des Bordes, located in Jussy-le-Chaudrier in the Cher, finds its origins in the 12th century under the order of the Temple. Mentioned for the first time in 1170, she was a member of the Templar Province of Auvergne-Limousin, as evidenced by an arbitral award of 1225 settling a dispute between the Templars and the Archdiocese of Bourges. In 1269, an exchange of debts between the monks of Fontmorigny and the Templars of Jussy was made by Amaury de La Roche, master of the province of France. This strategic site, close to Sancerre, illustrates the economic and religious establishment of order in the region.

Upon the dissolution of the Templars in 1312, the Commanderie passed to the Hospitallers of Saint John of Jerusalem, becoming a major administrative center under the name of commanderie des Bordes in the 16th century. It then absorbs several nearby houses (Villeville, Précilly, Francheville, etc.), forming a powerful ensemble. The chapel, built between the late 13th and early 14th centuries, and the tower (late 15th–early 16th) reflect these architectural and functional transitions. The religious wars partially damaged the site, although restorations took place in the 17th and 18th centuries.

Today, this complex remains only the truncated chapel of its western spans, the tower of the archives (vestige of the home of the Commanders), and a Gothic gate adorned with an arch in a braid. The lower rooms accessible under the chapel, as well as the traces of the enclosure and dovecote (destroyed around 1900), recall its medieval organization. Private property, the chapel is not open to the public, preserving a heritage both templier and hospitable, marked by religious conflicts and seigneurial recompositions.

Historical sources, such as the memoirs of Emile de Toulgoët-Tréanna (1907) or the archives of the Order of Malta, underline his role in the Berry's network of commanding offices. Ranked a Historical Monument in 1995 for its remaining elements (chapel, tower, decorated door), the Commandery of the Bordes embodies the changes of military orders between the Middle Ages and the Renaissance, in a territory marked by rivalries between ecclesiastical and secular powers.

External links