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Twelve Apostles cross à Logonna-Daoulas dans le Finistère

Finistère

Twelve Apostles cross

    114 Rungleo
    29460 Logonna-Daoulas
Croix dite des Douze Apôtres
Croix dite des Douze Apôtres
Croix dite des Douze Apôtres
Croix dite des Douze Apôtres
Croix dite des Douze Apôtres
Croix dite des Douze Apôtres
Croix dite des Douze Apôtres
Croix dite des Douze Apôtres
Crédit photo : Gilbert LE MOIGNE - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
2000
1570
Definition of tridentin rite
4e quart du XVIe siècle
Construction of the cross
27 juillet 2015
Registration for Historic Monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The so-called cross of the Twelve Apostles, located in the so-called Rungléo, on the old vicinal road of Logonna-Daoulas, at the Hospital-Camfrout, in its entirety (not cadastralized): inscription by decree of 27 July 2015

Key figures

Pie V - Pope (1566–1572) Defined the bound tridentin rite.
Castel - Historician or Researcher Cited Analyzed the canonical link.

Origin and history

The cross of the Twelve Apostles is a building located in Logonna-Daoulas, Finistère, Brittany. It is located on the old vicinal road between Logonna-Daoulas and L-Hôpital-Camfrout, near the hamlet of Rungléo. This monument consists of a trapezoidal monolith of 2.20 m high, probably a re-use of an old menhir or an iron age stele, on which is inserted a quadrangular cross. Its base is a rounded block of granite. The particularity of this cross lies in its anterior face, carved of bas-reliefs representing the twelve Apostles in niches, surmounted by a figure of the blessed Christ holding a globe.

The arrangement and the list of the apostles would be linked to the Roman canon of the tridentine rite, defined by Pope Pius V in 1570, which placed its realization in the last quarter of the sixteenth century. This rare iconography in Brittany also evokes the Irish high Crosses of the 9th–Xth centuries. Although Christianized menhirs and steles are common in the region, no comparable crosses have been identified to date. The monument was listed as historical monuments by order of 27 July 2015.

The hypothesis of a re-employment of a pagan monolith (menhir or Milestone) re-aligned and Christianized underscores the symbolic continuity between pre-Christian cultures and Christian tradition. The cross of the Twelve Apostles thus bears witness to a common practice in Brittany, where prehistoric stones were often reinvested by Christianity to mark places of worship or crossroads. Its location on an ancient vicinal path reinforces its role as a spiritual and geographical landmark for travellers and pilgrims.

External links