Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Church of Our Lady of Redon-Espic en Dordogne

Church of Our Lady of Redon-Espic

    103 Impasse de Luziers Nord
    24220 Castels et Bézenac
Mairie de Castels

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1200
1300
1400
1700
1800
1900
2000
XIIe siècle (dernier quart)
Foundation of the Priory and Church
1327
First document attesting the priory
1722
State of ruin reported
2 décembre 1999
Historical monument classification
2007 et 2017
Major restorations
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Raymond d'Apremont de Roquecorne - First Bishop of Sarlat Unite the priory at the cathedral.
Marie de Beynac - Hypothetical religious woman in Fontevrault Foundation assigned without archival evidence.
Antoine Saintclar - Dean of Sarlat and Prior in 1722 Report the ruin of the priory.
Antoine ou Jean-Baptiste Chabanne - Site owner in 1814 Use the church as a sheepfold.

Origin and history

The church Our Lady of Redon-Espic was originally integrated into a Benedictine priory founded in the 12th century, as confirmed by the archaeological excavations of 2006. Its architecture, marked by an enlightened bedside of a triplet, gave rise to hypotheses about a possible Grandmontan origin or a foundation by nuns. Although the archives are missing precisely to date its creation, later documents, such as those of the bishopric of Sarlat in 1327, attest to its attachment to this institution after the establishment of the bishopric. The priory, mentioned as ruined in 1722, escaped revolutionary sales and became communal property in the 19th century, even serving as a sheepfold before being restored in 2007 and 2017.

The history of the priory remains partly enigmatic: no trace confirms the foundation by Marie de Beynac, a religious in Fontevrault, although sources of the sixteenth century evoked. The first bishop of Sarlat, Raymond d'Apremont de Roquecorne, united the priory with the office of claustral prior of his cathedral, marking his lasting integration with local ecclesiastical structures. The archives also reveal its gradual decline: in 1814, the site belongs to the Chabanne family, and the church, a communal property, is used as a storage place. Ranked a historic monument in 1999, it now illustrates the medieval and Benedictine heritage of the Périgord.

On the architectural level, the church is distinguished by its unique nave and its lauze cover, characteristics unchanged since the 12th century. The triplet of the bedside, rare in the region, reinforces the hypothesis of a grandmontan influence, known for its sober and luminous buildings. Recent restorations have preserved this testimony of perigordin Romanesque art, while revealing remains of the original priory, now protected. Its geographical isolation, on a rural road leading to the D25, has undoubtedly contributed to its relative conservation, despite centuries of abandonment.

External links