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Church of Our Lady of Joy of Merleven à Merlevenez dans le Morbihan

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Eglise romane

Church of Our Lady of Joy of Merleven

    15 Route de Pont Lorois
    56700 Merlevenez
Ownership of the municipality
Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez
Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez
Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez
Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez
Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez
Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez
Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez
Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez
Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez
Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez
Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez
Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez
Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez
Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez
Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez
Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez
Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez
Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez
Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez
Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez
Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez
Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez
Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez
Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez
Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez
Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez
Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez
Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez
Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez
Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez
Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez
Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez
Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez
Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez
Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez
Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez
Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez
Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez
Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez
Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez
Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez
Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez
Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez
Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez
Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez
Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez
Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez
Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez
Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez
Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez
Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez
Crédit photo : XIIIfromTOKYO - Sous licence Creative Commons

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
XIe–XIIe siècles
Construction begins
XIVe siècle
Uplift of the nave and bell tower
1533
Restoration of the bell tower
1789–1799
Destruction of the southern tympanum
1944–1945
Bombardments during World War II
Années 1960
Post-war restoration
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Église Notre-Dame-de-Joie (cad. C 1317): classification by decree of 22 September 1927

Key figures

Roger Grand - History of Art Described the church in 1927 in the Monumental Bulletin*.
Architecte Cornon - Head of catering ( 1950s) Reconstruction of the nave and capitals.
Architecte Lisch - Head of catering (from 1955) Work on transept and rediscovery of absidiole.

Origin and history

The church Notre-Dame-de-Joie de Merlevenez, located in Morbihan, finds its origins in a construction started in the 11th century, with major modifications in the 14th and 16th centuries. The foundations rest on a Templar Chapel, although this attribution remains hypothetical. The nave, raised in the fourteenth century, and the bell tower, built at the end of the same century, illustrate an architectural evolution between Romanesque and Gothic. The tympanum of the southern gate, destroyed during the Revolution, represented a Virgin surrounded by angels, reflecting the name of the church.

In the 14th century, the bell tower was restored after a fire caused by lightning (1533), and a frame was laid in 1410. The crossover of the transept, initially equipped with a dome, is replaced by a warhead arch. Historical capitals, influenced by poitevin art, bear witness to a rich figurative repertoire (monsters, hunting scenes, martyrs). During World War II, the bell tower, used as an observation post by the Germans, was destroyed by bombings (1944-1945).

The restorations of the 1960s revealed the foundations of the ancient southern absidiole, which had been abolished in the 19th century to build a sacristy. The bays of the south wall, remodeled in the 18th and 19th centuries, and the foothills added in the 14th and 15th centuries underline the successive adaptations. Classified as a Historic Monument in 1927, the church combines Romanesque elements (sculpted portals, broken arcades) and Gothic elements (voûts, flamboyant bays), while bearing the stigmas of modern conflicts.

The hypothesis of a Templar foundation, advanced in the nineteenth century, remains unsubstantiated chronologically, the Templars having arrived in Brittany only in the twelfth century. The oldest parts (nef, collateral) date from the last quarter of the 12th century, with broken arcades characteristic of late Romanesque art. The initial project, perhaps planned with high windows, was abandoned, leaving a dark nave. The changes of the 14th century (voûtement, flamboyant bays) and the revolutionary destructions (tympanum) profoundly marked its history.

The post-Second World War restorations, carried out by the architects Cornon and Lisch, allowed to reconstruct the structure and rediscover medieval elements, such as the entrance arch of the southern absidiole. The new capitals are inspired by the preserved models, thus preserving the stylistic heritage. Today, the church embodies both a Breton religious heritage and a witness to historical upheavals, from the wars of Religion to the conflicts of the twentieth century.

External links