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our Lady of Prayers abbey church dans le Morbihan

Morbihan

our Lady of Prayers abbey church

    56190 Bel air
    56190 Billiers

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1248–1252
Foundation of the Abbey
6 janvier 1251
Episcopal approval
31 octobre 1252
Arrival of monks
28 mai 1254
Papal Bull of Innocent IV
1286
Burial of John I
1328
Burial of Isabelle de Castille
1499
Beginning of Commende
1606
Reform of the Abbey
1715–1726
Reconstruction of the church
1790
Community Disappearance
1841
Rediscovered burials
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Jean Ier de Bretagne (dit le Roux) - Duke of Brittany and founder Finished construction, buried in 1286.
Innocent IV - Pope (1243–1254) The foundation was approved by bubble in 1254.
Cadioc - Bishop of Vannes (11th century) Donna agree despite tensions.
Geoffroy - First Abbé (from 1252) Directed the monks from Buzay.
Blanche de Navarre - Duchess of Brittany Contributed to the foundation, obtained right of entry.
Henri Le Barbu - 10th Abbé (XIVth century) Becoming Bishop of Vannes and Chancellor Ducal.
Charles de Hangest - Abbé commerndataire (from 1499) Imposed against the elected monks.
Bernard Carpentier - Reformer Prior (died 1647) Restore the Cistercian rule in 1606.
Dom Paul-Yves Pezron - Historian monk (17th century) Breton linguist and doctor of theology.
Eudon de la Roche-Bernard - Local Lord (11th century) Conflict over tolls in 1274.

Origin and history

The Abbey of Our Lady of Prayers, founded in the 13th century by John I of Brittany, is a former Cistercian abbey located in Billiers (Morbihan). His name would come from prayers for the shipwrecked, reflecting his proximity to the ocean and the isolated marshes, ideal for the contemplative life of the "white monks". Daughter of the abbey of Buzay, from its creation (1252) she received the support of the Dukes of Brittany, who made it a powerful spiritual and land centre, endowed with seigneurial rights and tithes on the ductal clearings.

The abbey experienced periods of decline, especially in the 16th century under the regime of commende, where its abbots plundered it. It regained its rigour in the 17th century thanks to the reform of the order of Cîteaux, impulsed by the Abbé de Rancé and the Trappe. The buildings were rebuilt in the 17th to 18th centuries, showing its prosperity, but the French Revolution (1790) led to its sale as a national good, its transformation into a barracks, and its partial destruction to serve as a stone quarry. Only part of the abbey of 1726, bought in the 19th century, remains today in the form of a chapel.

The abbey housed the burials of several members of the ducal family of Brittany, including Jean I (died 1286) and Isabelle de Castille (1328). Their bones, moved in 1726 and rediscovered in 1841, were reburied in the rebuilt chapel. The site also served as a place of power: Abbé Henri Le Barbu (14th century), now bishop of Vannes and chancellor of Duke John IV, illustrates the close links between the Abbey and the Breton aristocracy. Despite its demographic decline in the modern era, it remained a symbol of Cistercian reform, with figures such as dom Paul-Yves Pezron (17th century), Breton historian and linguist.

Conflicts with local lords, such as Eudon de la Roche-Bernard (1274), which destroyed the abbey boats to challenge tolls, revealed tensions around its privileges. Equipped with land in Ambon, Pénerf or Nantes, the abbey extended its influence thanks to ducal and seigneurial gifts, while being exempted from tithes and episcopal jurisdiction by a papal bubble of 1254. His library and works of art, scattered during the Revolution, bear witness to his past cultural influence.

Today, the site houses a rehabilitation centre in the rare remains preserved. The ruins, mainly those of the 18th century Abbey, recall its turbulent history, between religious fervour, political power and decline. The Abbey of Prayers thus embodies the contrasting destiny of Cistercian establishments in Brittany, marked by phases of glory and forgetfulness.

External links