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Corbelin Grill Bridge à Griselles dans le Loiret

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine urbain
Pont
Loiret

Corbelin Grill Bridge

    Le Bourg
    45210 Griselles
Pont du Gril de Corbelin
Pont du Gril de Corbelin
Pont du Gril de Corbelin
Pont du Gril de Corbelin
Pont du Gril de Corbelin
Pont du Gril de Corbelin
Pont du Gril de Corbelin
Pont du Gril de Corbelin
Pont du Gril de Corbelin
Pont du Gril de Corbelin
Pont du Gril de Corbelin
Pont du Gril de Corbelin
Pont du Gril de Corbelin
Pont du Gril de Corbelin
Pont du Gril de Corbelin
Pont du Gril de Corbelin
Crédit photo : Roulex_45 - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1300
1400
1500
1600
1900
2000
Fin XIIe - Début XIIIe siècle
Initial construction
XVe siècle
Partial reconstruction
3 octobre 1929
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Pont sur la Cléry dit Le Gril de Corbelin : inscription by order of 3 October 1929

Key figures

Louis de Blanchefort - Abbé de Ferrières Reconstructs the bridge, coat of arms on the central arch.
Dom Morin - History Summon the limit of monastic lands.

Origin and history

The bridge of the Gril de Corbelin, located in Griselles in the Loiret, is a masonry work dating mainly from the 13th century, although reconstructions took place in the 15th century. Built by the monks of the Abbey of Ferrières-en-Gâtinais, it crossed the Cléry, a tributary of the Loing. Its name evokes either a nearby forge ("grind the iron"), or its function as a skeleton filter the rubbish carried by the river to protect a monastic pond upstream. This system, consisting of cross-sections pressing on the pilasters, also made it possible to recover debris or corpses in the event of flooding, avoiding pollution of the waters or offering a Christian burial to the drowned.

Partially destroyed during the Hundred Years' War, the bridge was rebuilt under Abbé Louis de Blanchefort, whose weapons appear on the central arch. Its seven arches in broken arches, typical of Gothic, contrast with a straight apron on the upstream side and elegant warheads on the downstream side. These technical characteristics reflect a dual vocation: road crossing and hydraulic management. The bridge, a communal property since its inscription in historic monuments in 1929, bears witness to medieval ingenuity in terms of river development and environmental control.

The crows of the piles, dated from the 15th century, and the traces of missing shields ( previously carrying the weapons of the religious of Ferrières) recall its connection with the abbey. According to historian Dom Morin, the bridge delineated monastic lands in the Middle Ages. Today, there remains a rare example of medieval bridge-barrage, combining practical utility, religious symbolic and architectural heritage. Its conservation status and location on the Gril Bridge Road make it an accessible site, although its geographical accuracy is considered "satisfactory" (level 7/10).

External links