Existence Church of Saint Martin IXe-XVIIe siècle (≈ 1750)
Missing building, neighbour of Notre-Dame.
1920
Historical Monument
Historical Monument 1920 (≈ 1920)
Order of February 2, 1920.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Church: Order of 2 February 1920
Key figures
Information non disponible - No character cited
Sources do not mention any historical actors.
Origin and history
The church of Notre-Dame de Voncq, located in the Ardennes department in the Grand Est region, is a religious building whose oldest parts, including the five-part choir, date back to the thirteenth century. This Gothic-style choir is distinguished by its warheads resting on bandaged columns, its formationets supporting the windows, and capitals decorated with leaves and hooks. The nave, shorter and rougher, as well as the massive pooch tower, date back to the 15th or 16th century, when churches also served as refuges. The flamboyant southern gate is particularly remarkable for its sculpted right-and-right legs and vegetal interlaces, while inside, the capitals on the north side feature motifs of oak leaves, vines, hops and interlaced mulberry trees.
The church furniture includes an 18th-century altar, decorated with four Corinthian marble columns with golden capitals, topped by a baldaquin, as well as a 17th-century statue of the Virgin and Child, placed under the porch. A Gallo-Roman hardwood capital, discovered in the basement, attests to an ancient occupation of the site. The church, listed as a Historic Monument in 1920, dominates the village of Voncq, built on a spur overlooking the Aisne valley. This strategic site, already used in Roman times for its route from Reims to Trier, once housed two religious buildings: a Saint Martin church, attested from the 9th century and disappeared in the 17th century, and the present Notre Dame church.
The location of Voncq, on a major historical axis between Reims and Sedan, contributed to its regional importance. The church, situated in the northeast of the town formed by the houses, illustrates the architectural and religious evolution of the region, from its medieval origins to its enrichments of modern times. Its classification among historical monuments highlights its heritage value, both for its architecture and for its preserved furniture.
The defensive role of the building, visible in its slender structure and pooch tower, reflects the protection needs of rural communities in the 15th and 16th centuries, an era marked by conflict and insecurity. The plant ornaments of the capitals and the portal, typical of flamboyant Gothic art, also bear witness to a refined artisanal know-how, while the presence of Gallo-Roman remains recalls the long history of the site, at the crossroads of cultural and religious influences.
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