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Cross à Saint-Yrieix-le-Déjalat en Corrèze

Corrèze

Cross

    6 Rue du Presbytere
    19300 Saint-Yrieix-le-Déjalat
Croix
Croix
Croix
Croix
Croix
Crédit photo : Avocat jean - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
XIVe–XVIe siècles
Construction of the cross
26 janvier 1927
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Cross located on the square: inscription by order of 26 January 1927

Key figures

Information non disponible - No character identified Sources do not mention names

Origin and history

The Cross of Saint-Yrieix-le-Déjalat is a monumental French granite cross erected between the 14th and 16th centuries. It is distinguished by its rectangular base supported by a three-step staircase, and a diamond medallion decorated with circular feasts. In the centre, a Christ on the cross dominates the Holy Women, while a capital embedded in the base represents a sitting Christ, surrounded by a character holding a censer and a fantastic creature partially visible.

Listed as historical monuments by order of 26 January 1927, this cross is located in the square of the church of Saint-Yrieix-le-Déjalat, in Corrèze (New Aquitaine). His iconography mixes Christian symbols with enigmatic elements, such as the inscription engraved near the scratched wing, whose meaning remains unspecified in the sources. The re-use of a capital, probably from the nearby church, suggests close links between the monument and local history.

The architectural description underscores the singularity of its structure: the staircase not girding the anterior face of the base, and the half-sphere integrated into the wing of the frustrate animal. These details, combined with the overlapping dating (XIVth–XVIth centuries), reflect a stylistic evolution and a possible overlay of periods of construction or modifications. The cross, owned by the commune, remains a material testimony of the religious and artistic practices of the medieval and reborn Limousin.

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