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Saint-Crépin-et-Saint-Crépinien Church of Saint-Crépin dans les Hautes-Alpes

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Eglise romane et gothique
Hautes-Alpes

Saint-Crépin-et-Saint-Crépinien Church of Saint-Crépin

    Le Village
    05600 Saint-Crépin
Église Saint-Crépin-et-Saint-Crépinien de Saint-Crépin
Église Saint-Crépin-et-Saint-Crépinien de Saint-Crépin
Église Saint-Crépin-et-Saint-Crépinien de Saint-Crépin
Église Saint-Crépin-et-Saint-Crépinien de Saint-Crépin
Église Saint-Crépin-et-Saint-Crépinien de Saint-Crépin
Crédit photo : MOSSOT - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
500
600
1400
1500
1900
2000
Ve siècle
First Religious Traces
1452
Construction of church
1552
Adding sacristy
1912
Restoration of the bell tower
18 août 1931
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Church: by order of 18 August 1931

Key figures

Guigues André (Dauphin) - Lord of the Castrum (1210) Donation to the Archbishop of Embrun
Charles VIII - King of France Stay in Saint-Crépin in 1494
Alberto de Cattané - Grand Inquisitor Temporarily replaced by the local priest (1488)
Lesdiguières - Protestant leader Taking of the village in 1581
François Chopin - Ancestor of Frédéric Chopin Born in Saint-Crépin around 1676

Origin and history

The church of Saint-Crépin-et-Saint-Crépinien de Saint-Crépin, built in 1452, marks the architectural renaissance of the diocese of Embrun after the medieval crisis. Its northern portal bears this date engraved in Roman numerals, while the sacristy, added in 1552, and restorations in 1912 (visible on a window of the bell tower) testify to its evolution. The building replaces the old church of Notre-Dame, attested since the twelfth century, which also served the neighbouring village of Eygliers.

The structure combines a two-span nave vaulted with warheads and a narthex covered with warhead crosses, a unique feature for the time. The bell tower, integrated with the west façade, and the local pink marble bays (paus stone) highlight its geographical anchor. The choir, narrower than the nave, features a flat bedside typical of alpine churches. An IHS M. H. 1721 inscription on the west gate refers to subsequent developments.

The church is part of the turbulent history of Saint-Crépin, a Dauphin village marked by religious conflicts (siège des inquisitors contre les Vaudois in 1488) and the passages of kings of France (Charles VIII in 1494). Its architecture also reflects cultural exchanges with neighbouring Piedmont, visible in the independent bell tower, inspired by Italian models. Ranked a Historic Monument in 1931, it remains a symbol of the Alpine sacred heritage.

The site also houses older remains, such as the Gallo-Roman Old Church and Paleo-Christian tombs, revealing a continuing religious occupation since the fifth century. The chapel Saint-Michel (XVIth century) and other local religious buildings (chapelles des Penitents-Blancs, Saint-François-Régis) complete this heritage landscape, linked to the pastoral and artisanal history of the Durance Valley.

Saint-Crépin, a rural commune in the Hautes-Alpes region, derives its name from Saints Crépin and Crépinien, patrons of the shoemakers, perhaps reflecting a medieval artisanal activity. The region, marked by its mountain climate and its forests of thuriferous juniper trees (Thurifères), was also a strategic crossroads, as evidenced by the remains of the 13th century castrum and the Roman way through the hamlet of Chanteloube.

External links