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Commanderie Saint-Jean du Tâtre au Tâtre en Charente

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine Templier
Commanderie templière
Eglise romane
Charente

Commanderie Saint-Jean du Tâtre

    Le Bourg
    16360 Le Tâtre
Commanderie Saint-Jean du Tâtre
Commanderie Saint-Jean du Tâtre
Commanderie Saint-Jean du Tâtre
Commanderie Saint-Jean du Tâtre
Commanderie Saint-Jean du Tâtre
Commanderie Saint-Jean du Tâtre
Commanderie Saint-Jean du Tâtre
Commanderie Saint-Jean du Tâtre
Commanderie Saint-Jean du Tâtre
Commanderie Saint-Jean du Tâtre
Commanderie Saint-Jean du Tâtre
Commanderie Saint-Jean du Tâtre
Commanderie Saint-Jean du Tâtre
Commanderie Saint-Jean du Tâtre
Crédit photo : Jack ma - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
début XIIIe siècle
Foundation of the Templar Chapel
1312
Transfer to Hospitallers
XIVe siècle
Expansion and Gothic vaults
1624
Closed Bell
1992
Registration for Historic Monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The two spans of the choir, excluding the modern nave (cad. A 1029): inscription by decree of 3 March 1992

Key figures

Pierre de Limoges - Deffend Templar Commander Sergeant around 1286-1287.
Guillaume le Chandelier - Deffend Templar Commander Sergeant around 1305-1307.
Jean Arnaud - Deffend Hospital Commander Mentioned in 1370 and 1373.

Origin and history

The Saint-Jean du Tâtre Commanderie, located in Le Tâtre in Charente, is a former Templar Commanderie which became a hospital after the dissolution of the Order of the Temple. Although its exact foundation date is unknown, its Templar origin is attested. It was located near a secondary road on the roads of Compostela, stressing its importance for pilgrims. The Commander of the Tale exercised seigneurial rights, including low, medium and high justice, reflecting his local influence.

The Templar Chapel, dating from the early 13th century, corresponds to the present parish church Saint John. After the abolition of the Templars, the command office was transferred to the Hospitallers of St John of Jerusalem, dependent on the command office of the Sparrows. In the 14th century, the building was enlarged and became the seat of the parish. Architectural changes, such as the replacement of the Romanesque vaults by crossovers of warheads adorned with a Maltese cross, date back to this period. A bell of 1624, classified as a historical monument, and restorations in the 19th and 20th centuries marked its evolution.

The command office was linked to another nearby Templar Foundation, the command office of the Deffend, less than 500 metres away. The latter, mentioned in templar minutes and papal investigations of the fourteenth century, was attached to the Hospitallers before disappearing after the Revolution. Both sites may have formed a single entity originally. Today, only the vestiges and toponymic traces, such as the "Governor's Field", recall their existence.

The present church preserves medieval elements, such as the flat bedside and a Romanesque bay with columns. The two spans of the choir, inscribed in historical monuments since 1992, illustrate its architectural heritage. The command office played a religious, seigneurial and economic role, with mills and lands attached to its estate, before declining after the Middle Ages.

External links