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Saint Bartholomew of Montfalcon à Montfaucon dans le Lot

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Eglise gothique
Lot

Saint Bartholomew of Montfalcon

    Le Bourg
    46240 Montfaucon
Église Saint-Barthélemy de Montfaucon
Église Saint-Barthélemy de Montfaucon
Église Saint-Barthélemy de Montfaucon
Église Saint-Barthélemy de Montfaucon
Église Saint-Barthélemy de Montfaucon
Église Saint-Barthélemy de Montfaucon
Église Saint-Barthélemy de Montfaucon
Église Saint-Barthélemy de Montfaucon
Église Saint-Barthélemy de Montfaucon
Crédit photo : Pymouss - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1286
Transfer of the pech de Montfalcon
1292
Bastide Foundation
1370
Road traffic
début XIVe siècle
Construction of the choir
1440
Resumed by France
4 août 1482
Foundation of the Chapel of the Virgin
fin XVe siècle
Completion of the nave
XVIIe siècle
Reconstruction of the bell tower
1784
Roof Degradation
1819
Restoration of the roof
XIXe siècle
Construction of sacristy
11 février 1936
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Church: Order of 11 February 1936

Key figures

Pons de Gourdon - Lord of Labastide-Fortanière Ceda Montfaucon to the English in 1286.
Édouard Ier - King of England Founded the bastide of Montfaucon in 1292.
Bertucat d'Albret - Chief of Roads Occupied Montfaucon in 1370 during the Hundred Years War.
Rodrigue de Villandrando - Military Chief Reprit Montfaucon for France in 1440.
Jean Conté - Priest Founded the Chapel of the Virgin in 1482.
Jean Tournié - Baroque sculptor Author of the retables (1647–1721).
Armand Félix Marie Jobbé-Duval - Painter Author of the table *The Holy Women* (1863).

Origin and history

The church Saint-Barthélemy de Montfaucon, located in the Lot department in Occitanie, was built in two major phases. The first campaign, at the beginning of the 14th century, focused on the choir, while the nave and side chapels were added after the Hundred Years' War, until the end of the 15th century. Its origin is linked to the foundation of the bastide of Montfaucon by the English in 1292, on a pech (colline) ceded in 1286 by Pons de Gourdon, local lord. The building, in Gothic style with a Latin cross plan, incorporates defensive elements like a guard room above the northern chapel, reflecting its turbulent historical context.

During the Hundred Years War, Montfaucon was occupied by the roadmen of Bertucat d'Albret in 1370, before being taken over by Rodrigue de Villandrando for the king of France in 1440. These conflicts delayed the completion of the church, whose nave and lateral chapels were not completed until the end of the 15th century. The bell tower, originally planned above the chapel of the Virgin (founded in 1482 by the priest Jean Conté), was finally rebuilt in the seventeenth century above the chapel of Saint James, in the south.

The church houses exceptional furniture, including three baroque altarpieces made of polychrome and gold wood, made by Jean Tournié's workshop (1647–1721). These works, dedicated to God the Father, St James and the Virgin, illustrate the artistic and religious importance of the place. Ranked a historic monument in 1936, the church underwent major restorations in the nineteenth century, notably for its roof, degraded since 1784, and its sacristy, added against the northern flank of the nave.

The vaults on dogive crosses, decorated with keys carved with the weapons of England, recall its Anglo-Gasconian origin. A spiral staircase, located in a rectangular turret, allowed access to a shelter room above the chapel of the Virgin, then to the bell chamber. This defensive device, combined with the movement of the portal (late 13th century), bears witness to the religious and military duality of the monument.

The northern chapel, dedicated to the Virgin, was founded in 1482 by Jean Conté, while the southern chapel, surmounted by superimposed rooms, received a bell tower around 1830. These successive adjustments reflect the evolution of the liturgical and defensive needs of the community. Today, the church remains an architectural testimony of medieval bastids and English influences in Guyenne.

Finally, a painting of the Saintes Femmes (1863), painted by Armand Félix Marie Jobbé-Duval, completes the furniture. This heritage, combined with the retables of Jean Tournié, underscores the cultural and spiritual role of the church throughout the centuries, from its Anglo-Norman foundation to its ranking among French historical monuments.

External links