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Notre-Dame-sur-l'Eau or Notre-Dame-sous-l'Eau Church à Domfront dans l'Orne

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Eglise romane
Orne

Notre-Dame-sur-l'Eau or Notre-Dame-sous-l'Eau Church

    19 Rue de la Gare
    61700 Domfront en Poiraie
Église Notre-Dame-sur-lEau de Domfront
Eglise Notre-Dame-sur-lEau ou Notre-Dame-sous-lEau
Eglise Notre-Dame-sur-lEau ou Notre-Dame-sous-lEau
Eglise Notre-Dame-sur-lEau ou Notre-Dame-sous-lEau
Eglise Notre-Dame-sur-lEau ou Notre-Dame-sous-lEau
Eglise Notre-Dame-sur-lEau ou Notre-Dame-sous-lEau
Eglise Notre-Dame-sur-lEau ou Notre-Dame-sous-lEau
Eglise Notre-Dame-sur-lEau ou Notre-Dame-sous-lEau
Eglise Notre-Dame-sur-lEau ou Notre-Dame-sous-lEau
Eglise Notre-Dame-sur-lEau ou Notre-Dame-sous-lEau
Eglise Notre-Dame-sur-lEau ou Notre-Dame-sous-lEau
Eglise Notre-Dame-sur-lEau ou Notre-Dame-sous-lEau
Eglise Notre-Dame-sur-lEau ou Notre-Dame-sous-lEau
Eglise Notre-Dame-sur-lEau ou Notre-Dame-sous-lEau
Eglise Notre-Dame-sur-lEau ou Notre-Dame-sous-lEau
Eglise Notre-Dame-sur-lEau ou Notre-Dame-sous-lEau
Eglise Notre-Dame-sur-lEau ou Notre-Dame-sous-lEau
Eglise Notre-Dame-sur-lEau ou Notre-Dame-sous-lEau
Eglise Notre-Dame-sur-lEau ou Notre-Dame-sous-lEau
Eglise Notre-Dame-sur-lEau ou Notre-Dame-sous-lEau
Eglise Notre-Dame-sur-lEau ou Notre-Dame-sous-lEau
Eglise Notre-Dame-sur-lEau ou Notre-Dame-sous-lEau
Eglise Notre-Dame-sur-lEau ou Notre-Dame-sous-lEau
Eglise Notre-Dame-sur-lEau ou Notre-Dame-sous-lEau
Eglise Notre-Dame-sur-lEau ou Notre-Dame-sous-lEau
Eglise Notre-Dame-sur-lEau ou Notre-Dame-sous-lEau
Eglise Notre-Dame-sur-lEau ou Notre-Dame-sous-lEau
Eglise Notre-Dame-sur-lEau ou Notre-Dame-sous-lEau
Eglise Notre-Dame-sur-lEau ou Notre-Dame-sous-lEau
Eglise Notre-Dame-sur-lEau ou Notre-Dame-sous-lEau
Eglise Notre-Dame-sur-lEau ou Notre-Dame-sous-lEau
Eglise Notre-Dame-sur-lEau ou Notre-Dame-sous-lEau
Eglise Notre-Dame-sur-lEau ou Notre-Dame-sous-lEau
Eglise Notre-Dame-sur-lEau ou Notre-Dame-sous-lEau
Eglise Notre-Dame-sur-lEau ou Notre-Dame-sous-lEau
Eglise Notre-Dame-sur-lEau ou Notre-Dame-sous-lEau
Eglise Notre-Dame-sur-lEau ou Notre-Dame-sous-lEau
Eglise Notre-Dame-sur-lEau ou Notre-Dame-sous-lEau
Eglise Notre-Dame-sur-lEau ou Notre-Dame-sous-lEau
Eglise Notre-Dame-sur-lEau ou Notre-Dame-sous-lEau
Eglise Notre-Dame-sur-lEau ou Notre-Dame-sous-lEau
Eglise Notre-Dame-sur-lEau ou Notre-Dame-sous-lEau
Eglise Notre-Dame-sur-lEau ou Notre-Dame-sous-lEau
Eglise Notre-Dame-sur-lEau ou Notre-Dame-sous-lEau
Eglise Notre-Dame-sur-lEau ou Notre-Dame-sous-lEau
Eglise Notre-Dame-sur-lEau ou Notre-Dame-sous-lEau
Eglise Notre-Dame-sur-lEau ou Notre-Dame-sous-lEau
Eglise Notre-Dame-sur-lEau ou Notre-Dame-sous-lEau
Eglise Notre-Dame-sur-lEau ou Notre-Dame-sous-lEau
Eglise Notre-Dame-sur-lEau ou Notre-Dame-sous-lEau
Eglise Notre-Dame-sur-lEau ou Notre-Dame-sous-lEau
Crédit photo : TCY - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1000
1100
1200
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
vers 1020
Donation to Lonlay Abbey
1050
Norman annexation of Domfront
1156
Church Consecration
1162
Baptism of Alienor Plantagenet
1578
Postwar Restoration of Religion
1826
Replacement of arrow
1836
Partial destruction of the nave
1840
Historical Monument
1944
Second World War Bombings
1957
Discovery of murals
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The church: list by 1840

Key figures

Guillaume Ier de Bellême - Founder of Domfront Castle Donor of the site at Lonlay Abbey around 1020.
Henri II Plantagenêt - Duke of Normandy and King of England Baptize his daughter Alienor in 1162.
Pierre Ledin de Chaslerie - Royal Governor of Domfront Restore the church in 1578 after wars.
Prosper Mérimée - Inspector of Historic Monuments Opposes destruction in 1836.
Alphonse Simil - Architect restorer Directs the work from 1897 to 1904.

Origin and history

The Church of Notre-Dame-sur-l'Eau, located in Domfront in Poiraie (formerly Domfront in the Passais), is a Catholic building built between the 11th and 12th centuries. It was originally part of Lonlay Abbey, founded by William I of Bellême, founder of Domfront Castle. Given around 1020 at the abbey, she became a Benedictine priory dependent on Saint-Benoît-sur-Loire. Its Romanesque structure, typical of Normandy post-1050, makes it a model of religious architecture of the time. It was dedicated in 1156 and served as an aristocratic parish, even welcoming the baptism of Alienor, daughter of Henry II Plantagenet, in 1162.

Over the centuries, the church underwent multiple restorations and partial destruction. In the 16th century, it was restored after damage, especially in 1578. During the Revolution, it escaped destruction thanks to its aristocratic burials, but served as a warehouse, saltpeter factory, and spinning. In 1836 four of the six spans of the nave were destroyed to break through a road, reducing its length from 40 m to 9.45 m. An octagonal frame arrow, replaced in 1826 by a quadrangular pyramid, once ran the tower.

The church is a mixture of two nearby construction phases, with a nave and a transept slightly disoriented southward. His transept, particularly remarkable, presents cruciform supports rare in France, inspired by Germanic models. The choir, vaulted with ridges and decorated with blind arches, houses murals discovered in 1957. The granite capitals, carved with geometrical and animal motifs, bear witness to the influence of the Caennais and Breton shipyards. Ranked in 1840, it was restored after the 1944 bombings, preserving its apse and apsidioles intact.

The furniture includes a 12th century high altar, a 14th century Virgin with Child, and funerary slabs, including that of the Marquise of Lesdin (17th century). The church, originally named Notre-Dame-sous-l'Eau (until the 19th century), owes its present name to its proximity to a ford of Varenne. Its history reflects the political and religious upheavals of Normandy, from its Benedictine foundation to its role during the Wars of Religion and the Revolution.

Today, the building retains a shortened nave, a salient transept, and a semicircular bedside. The remains of the collaterals, now blocked, recall its old greatness. The bays in the middle of the hanger, the oculus of the transept, and the imposing cross tower, decorated with capitals, make it a unique testimony of Norman Romanesque art. The successive restorations, notably those of Alphonse Simil (1897–1904), preserved his medieval paintings and his original structure.

External links