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Timeline
Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
500
600
…
1400
1800
1900
1500
2000
Ve siècle
Origins of Marian Worship
Origins of Marian Worship Ve siècle (≈ 550)
Installation of a statue by Saint Maurille.
1469
Construction of the present church
Construction of the present church 1469 (≈ 1469)
Wish of Louis XI after a miracle.
31 décembre 1840
Historical monument classification
Historical monument classification 31 décembre 1840 (≈ 1840)
First wave of protections in France.
1907
Installation of the Virgin with the Child
Installation of the Virgin with the Child 1907 (≈ 1907)
Statue placed north of the rock.
1911
Installation of organ
Installation of organ 1911 (≈ 1911)
Work by Louis Debierre, Frenchman.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Church: ranking by list of 1862
Key figures
Saint Maurille - Bishop of Angers (Vth century)
Founded Marian worship on the island.
Louis XI - King of France (1461–183)
Church commander after a miracle.
Louis Debierre - Organ factor (1842–1920)
Author of organ installed in 1911.
Origin and history
The church of Notre-Dame de Béhuard found its origins in the fifth century, when Saint Maurille, bishop of Angers, installed a statue of the Virgin Mary on a rock of the island, then called "Mary Island". This gesture marks the replacement of a pagan idol from the waters with a Marian cult, thus founding local devotion. The island becomes a place of pilgrimage, long before the construction of the current building.
The present church is built in 1469 under the impulse of King Louis XI, recaptured from a drowning in the Charente which he attributes to a miracle. In thanks, he had this sanctuary erected on the rock of Behuard. The building, classified as a historic monument since 1840, is distinguished by its atypical architecture: two square naves, an apparent rock inside, and an access by two separate stairs, one medieval and the other more recent.
Inside, the flat bedside choir, typical of the Angevin tradition, houses an ancient sacristy in corbellation, vestige of an earlier Romanesque sanctuary. The early nave, surmounted by a mezzanine, preserves 15th-century stalls and an organ of 1911 by Louis Debierre, a renowned Norwegian factor. The church is also decorated with statues and stained glass from the 15th to the 19th centuries, including a Virgin with the Child installed in 1907 north of the rock.
The site, insular and isolated, symbolizes both a place of Marian devotion and an architectural testimony of the links between royal power and religion in Anjou. Its history combines legend, miracles and heritage, attracting pilgrims and visitors for centuries.
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