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Church of Keraudy à Ploumilliau en Côtes-d'Armor

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Eglise gothique

Church of Keraudy

    D88
    22300 Ploumilliau
Ownership of the municipality
Église de Kéraudy
Église de Kéraudy
Église de Kéraudy
Église de Kéraudy
Église de Kéraudy
Église de Kéraudy
Crédit photo : Fanchonline - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1530
Kerbuzic-Goesbriand Wedding
2e moitié XVe siècle
Initial construction
1653
Exchange with Lanascol
XIXe siècle
Partial restoration
16 janvier 1935
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Church of Kéraudy, with the Calvary and the walls forming the enclosure of the cemetery (Box ZN 47): classification by decree of 16 January 1935

Key figures

Yves de Kerbuzic - Local Lord Arms on the vault key (1530)
Marie de Goesbriand - Wife of Yves de Kerbuzic Associate Blason in the Church
Guillaume de Quoleue (ou Quelneuc) - Suspected donor Registration on a window (bath 4)
René de Saint-Offange - Commander of La Feuillée Exchange the church in 1653
Louis-Marie-Emmanuel de Quemper de Lanascol - Viscount and last lord Burial dated 1890

Origin and history

The church of Kéraudy, located in Ploumilliau in the Côtes-d'Armor, is a granite relief chapel built between the late 15th and early 16th centuries. Typical of the small Breton churches, it presents a plan in tau with nave with four spans, low side, transept and flat bedside. Its south porch, equipped with a screw staircase and a vault on a dogive cross, preserves an old carpentry. Inside, a carved wooden stand and glass fragments from the 15th to 16th centuries remain, including a Virgin with Child under an architectural dais in the axial bay.

Ranked as a Historic Monument on January 16, 1935, with its calvary and enclosure, the church initially depended on the commandory of Pont-Melvez, then on that of La Feuillée in the sixteenth century. In 1653 it was exchanged by Commander René de Saint-Offange for 16 bushels of wheat to the seigneur of Lanascol, thus passing under the jurisdiction of the Quemper family of Lanascol. This local nobility, notably Yves de Kerbuzic and Marie de Goesbriand (married in 1530), marked the building of his weapons, visible on the arch key of the porch.

The ancient stained glass windows, including a Calvary dated from the years 1490-1500 and a Virgin with Child accompanied by Saint-Jean-Baptiste and Saint-Yves, testify donors such as Guillaume de Quoleue (or Quelneuc), mentioned on an inscription. The church, early trevial of Ploumilliau under the name of Saint John the Baptist, was restored in the 19th century (north and nave elevation). Its granite calvary, dated from the first half of the sixteenth century, and an 18th century cross (attributed to Hernot workshops) complete the enclosure.

The wall of fence in granite bellows, open scaffolds, delimits an elevated placister. The three-bayed bell tower crowns the west gable, while the south and north facades reveal changes: the first preserves 14th century elements (O-rings), the second was rebuilt in the 19th century. A tombstone of the former hospital cemetery of Saint-Jean de Brézéhan and the burial of the Viscount Louis-Marie-Emmanuel de Quemper de Lanascol (1890, workshop Hernot) recall his hospital and seigneurial history.

External links