Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Commanderie du Ruou et Chapelle des Templiers de Villecroze dans le Var

Patrimoine classé
Eglise romane
Chapelle des Templiers
Commanderie templière
Var

Commanderie du Ruou et Chapelle des Templiers de Villecroze

    Les Templiers
    83690 Villecroze
Chapelle des Templiers de Villecroze
Commanderie du Ruou et Chapelle des Templiers de Villecroze
Commanderie du Ruou et Chapelle des Templiers de Villecroze
Crédit photo : Edouard-rainaut - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1200
1300
1400
1500
1800
1900
2000
1150-1155
Foundation by the Templars
1157
Extension of assets
1195
High Command Office
XIVe siècle
Partial destruction
1843
Processing
1929
Historical classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Chapelle des Templiers : inscription by decree of 6 November 1929

Key figures

Peire de Rovira - Master Templar of Provence Supervised the gifts of 1157.
Hugues Raimond - First Commander Directed the command office in 1195.
Antoine Lombard Malespine - Industrial 19th century Turned the site into a factory.

Origin and history

The commandory of the Ruou and its chapel, located in Villecroze in the Var, date back to the second half of the 12th century. This estate was given to the Templars between 1150 and 1155 by the local lords of Salernes, Entrecasteaux, Tourtour and Flayosc, including the lands of Ruou, Salgues and Singuettes. In 1157 ten lords of Flayosc also gave up land to the House of the Temple of Ruou, placed under the authority of Templar Brother Peire de Rovira, then master of the province of Provence. The command office, led by Hugues Raimond as the first commander, had fourteen brothers in 1195 and had 240 lands in the surrounding villages.

Upon the dissolution of the Order of the Temple in 1312, the goods passed to the Hospitallers of St John of Jerusalem. Partly destroyed in the 14th century, the command office was transferred to Montfort-sur-Argens and then to Saint-Jean de Marseille. In the 19th century, in 1843, the site was converted into a factory for the manufacture of tomettes and varnished trunks by Antoine Lombard Malespine, whose initials ("A.L.M.") and a tower appear on certain productions. Today, the chapel of the Templars, classified as a historical monument in 1929, and the vestiges of the commandory form a private estate not accessible to the public.

The Templar site of Villecroze is part of a landscape marked by medieval Provencal history. The nearby troglodytic caves and the 35-metre waterfall, as well as the priory of Notre-Dame-des-Anges attested since 1007, testify to a continuing religious and artisanal occupation. The chapel, always used for concerts organized by the International Academy of Music, perpetuates the memory of military orders and their architectural heritage in the region.

External links