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Saint-Thyrse de Châteauponsac parish church en Haute-Vienne

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Eglise gothique
Haute-Vienne

Saint-Thyrse de Châteauponsac parish church

    Le Bourg
    87290 Châteauponsac
Église paroissiale Saint-Thyrse de Châteauponsac
Église paroissiale Saint-Thyrse de Châteauponsac
Église paroissiale Saint-Thyrse de Châteauponsac
Église paroissiale Saint-Thyrse de Châteauponsac
Église paroissiale Saint-Thyrse de Châteauponsac
Église paroissiale Saint-Thyrse de Châteauponsac
Église paroissiale Saint-Thyrse de Châteauponsac
Église paroissiale Saint-Thyrse de Châteauponsac
Église paroissiale Saint-Thyrse de Châteauponsac
Église paroissiale Saint-Thyrse de Châteauponsac
Église paroissiale Saint-Thyrse de Châteauponsac
Église paroissiale Saint-Thyrse de Châteauponsac
Église paroissiale Saint-Thyrse de Châteauponsac
Église paroissiale Saint-Thyrse de Châteauponsac
Église paroissiale Saint-Thyrse de Châteauponsac
Crédit photo : Mica - 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
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1041
Lay first stones
XIVe siècle
Damage during the English Wars
XVe siècle
Gothic restaurant
1870
Reconstruction of the arrow
9 avril 1910
Historical monument classification
XXIe siècle
Recent renovation
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Church: by decree of 9 April 1910

Key figures

Information non disponible - No character cited The sources do not mention any specific historical actors related to this monument.

Origin and history

The parish church Saint-Thyrse de Châteauponsac, located in Haute-Vienne (Nouvelle-Aquitaine), has its origins in the 11th century. The first stones were laid in 1041, marking the beginning of a Romanesque building whose cruciform plan, the two narrow collaterals and the three circular apses to the west still bear witness today. A dome surmounted by a bell tower, whose arrow was enlarged in 1870, crowned the intersection of the transept and the nave. The choir, separated from the collaterals by columns with cylindrical drums, illustrates the sobriety and elegance of the limousin Romanesque art.

In the 14th century, wars of English domination seriously damaged the church: the vault of the nave and the western facade collapsed. The repairs undertaken in the 15th century partially transformed the building. The Romanesque berries are blinded, the foothills removed, and new windows pierced. The nave and the collaterals then receive a vault with prismatic veins, while a western facade in flowered warheads crowns the whole. These changes reflect the adaptation of Romanesque architecture to late Gothic tastes.

Under the southern transept, a vaulted crypt rests on four columns, one of which is carved, adding a mystery to this underground space. The church, classified as a historic monument on 9 April 1910, recently benefited from renovations to save its threatening vault. It remains a major testimony of medieval architectural evolution in Limousin, mixing Romanesque heritage and Gothic influences.

Historical sources, such as the works of Evelyne Proust and Eliane Vergnolle (2016), underline the importance of St.Thyrsus in regional religious heritage. Its bell tower, visible from afar, and its dome make it a visual and spiritual landmark for the commune of Châteauponsac, while its crypt and cylindrical columns attract the attention of archaeologists and medieval art lovers.

External links