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Abbey of Bonnevaux à Marçay dans la Vienne

Vienne

Abbey of Bonnevaux

    2 Abbaye de Bonnevaux
    86370 Marçay
Ownership of a private company

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1100
1200
1700
1800
1900
2000
1119
Benedictine Foundation
1124
Passage to Cîteaux
1768
Revolutionary decline
1789
Sale as a national good
1967
Cloister classification
2017
Back to religious vocation
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The remaining gallery of the cloister (cf. H 13): inscription by decree of 27 June 1967

Key figures

Hugues VII de Lusignan - Lord and Benefactor Support for the foundation in 1119.
Sarrasine (ou Saracena) de Lezay - Wife of Hugues VII Co-founder of the Abbey.

Origin and history

The abbey of Bonnevaux was founded in 1119 by Benedictine monks, with the support of Hugues VII of Lusignan and his wife Sarrasine de Lezay. Five years later, in 1124, the community adopted the Cistercian rule and affilia at Cadouin Abbey, becoming one of its "daughters". This change marked its integration into an influential monastic network, while consolidating its local anchor thanks to the support of the Lords of Lusignan.

The wars of religion and the system of commende, from the sixteenth century onwards, gradually weakened the abbey. On the eve of the French Revolution, in 1768, it had only five monks. The revolutionary decrees dispersed the community, and the site was sold as a national good. Some of the buildings were demolished, while the rest were transformed into a private castle, incorporating medieval elements such as a wing of the 12th–15th century cloister, classified as a historical monument in 1967.

The current H-shaped architecture combines a central section of the late eighteenth century with two older wings, preserving vaulted rooms and medieval chimneys. After serving as a private home, the abbey regained a religious vocation in 2017, becoming the seat of the World Community for Christian meditation. This return to spiritual sources is part of a dynamic of heritage preservation and monastic renewal.

External links