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Notre-Dame d'Audignon Church dans les Landes

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Eglise
Eglise romane

Notre-Dame d'Audignon Church

    19-49 Route du Cap de Gascogne
    40500 Audignon
Ownership of the municipality
Église Notre-Dame dAudignon
Église Notre-Dame dAudignon
Église Notre-Dame dAudignon
Église Notre-Dame dAudignon
Église Notre-Dame dAudignon
Église Notre-Dame dAudignon
Église Notre-Dame dAudignon
Église Notre-Dame dAudignon
Église Notre-Dame dAudignon
Église Notre-Dame dAudignon
Église Notre-Dame dAudignon
Église Notre-Dame dAudignon
Crédit photo : Jibi44 - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1200
1300
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
fin XIe - début XIIe siècle
Church Foundation
XVe–XVIe siècle
Major expansions
1777
Painting by Jean-Baptiste Smets
1848-1849
St. Catherine's altarpiece
1962
Discovery of the Gothic altarpiece
12 mai 1975
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Notre Dame Church (Box F 220): Order of 12 May 1975

Key figures

Jean-Baptiste Smets - Painter Author of the painting (1777) of Saint Michael's altarpiece.
Raymond Lagarde "cadet" - Carpenter Made the retable of Saint Catherine (1848-1849).
Abbé Francis Rousseau - Local historian Studyed church retables (1966).
Jean-Georges Lavit - Researcher Analysed the retable of the 15th century (1990).

Origin and history

The Church of Notre-Dame d'Audignon, located in the Landes in New Aquitaine, is a religious building founded between the late 11th and early 12th centuries. Originally, it had a modest structure with a unique nave and a vaulted Romanesque bedside, typical of the small parish churches of the time. It is located in the Laudon valley, on the limousine way of the pilgrimage of Santiago de Compostela, which gave it importance for pilgrims crossing the region.

The successive wars and enlargements, especially in the 15th to 16th centuries, with the addition of lower sides and a fortified bell tower, have profoundly transformed the building. Today, only the Romanesque apse remains in its original state, marked by carved capitals and a cornice with balls. The nave, elongated and flanked by collaterals, reflects the architectural changes of the following centuries, while the bell tower-porch evokes a defensive past, possibly linked to an ancient dungeon.

The interior of the church is home to a remarkable heritage, including a 15th century stone altarpiece, discovered in 1962 and classified as a historical monument in 1963. This retable, in English Gothic style, was hidden behind an 18th century baroque altarpiece, illustrating the superposition of artistic periods. The historical Romanesque capitals, such as the Epiphany, and the stone pulpit, rare in the Landes, bear witness to the sculptural richness of the place.

Among the other notable elements, the altarpiece of Saint Michael, dating from the 18th century, is 5 meters high and includes a painting by Jean-Baptiste Smets (1777). The altarpiece of Saint Catherine, created in 1848-1849 by Raymond Lagarde, was inspired directly by that of Saint Michel, showing local artistic continuity. These retables, associated with the vault of liernes and thirdons on the south side, highlight the stylistic evolution of the church, from novel to neo-classical.

Classified as a historical monument in 1975, the Church of Notre-Dame d'Audignon embodies a religious, artistic and historical heritage. Its bell tower-porch, ancient dungeon, and its carved modillons recall its role in medieval community life, while its retables reflect the varied artistic influences, from English Gothic to Baroque. The building remains a living testimony to the architectural and cultural transformations of the region.

Historical sources, such as the work of Abbé Francis Rousseau (1966) or Jean-Georges Lavit (1990), highlight the links between church and local seigneurial history. The 15th century altarpiece, in particular, sheds light on artistic exchanges in Aquitaine at the end of the Middle Ages, reinforcing the heritage importance of this Dutch monument.

External links