The church of Notre-Dame des Olieux is the last vestige of a Cistercian abbey founded in 1204 near Narbonne. This monastery, which flourished in the 13th century, was abandoned in 1614 after centuries of unrest, including the invasions of looters in 1393 and the religious conflicts of 1574. The nuns, who were initially refugees in the city, finally left the place because of the ruin of the buildings, transforming the estate into a simple farmhouse called the Monges barn.
At the Revolution, the property was acquired by a slave who changed the church in 1804, removing a span and adding a fence wall. The building, typical of Cistercian architecture with its bedside illuminated by three windows (trinitarian symbol), retains a vaulted nave on warheads and carved capitals. The 19th century additions include buildings surrounding the west entrance and an internal separation through a transverse wall.
Classified as a Historic Monument in 1951, the church illustrates both the Cistercian rigor and the upheavals suffered by the southern abbeys, between wars, abandonment and lay reuse. Its rectangular plan and Gothic details make it a rare witness to this religious heritage in Occitanie.
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