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Saint-Étienne de Chameyrat Church en Corrèze

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Eglise romane et gothique
Corrèze

Saint-Étienne de Chameyrat Church

    D130
    19330 Chameyrat
Église Saint-Étienne de Chameyrat
Église Saint-Étienne de Chameyrat
Église Saint-Étienne de Chameyrat
Église Saint-Étienne de Chameyrat
Église Saint-Étienne de Chameyrat
Église Saint-Étienne de Chameyrat
Crédit photo : Topobaloo - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1200
1300
1400
1800
1900
2000
XIIe siècle
Construction of church
XIIIe siècle
Abbatial dependence
1828
Acquisition by General Hugo
1958
Church Restoration
10 octobre 1963
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Church (Doc. D 61): registration by decree of 10 October 1963

Key figures

Général Louis-Joseph Hugo - Owner and military Uncle of Victor Hugo, died in Chameyrat.
Léopold Hugo - Mayor of Chameyrat (1859-1866) Son of the General, exploiting local land.
Moines de l’abbaye de Beaulieu - Medieval destroyers At the origin of the parish's displacement.

Origin and history

Église Saint-Étienne de Chameyrat, located in the Corrèze department in Nouvelle-Aquitaine, is a 12th-century Romanesque building. It is distinguished by its rectangular plane, its nave with three arches arched in cradle, and its semicircular choir arched in cul-de-four. The capitals sculpted with leafy and historic motifs, as well as the exterior mascarons, bear witness to a medieval artistic know-how preserved despite some later changes.

From the Middle Ages, Chameyrat's parish moved westward around this church, following the clearings led by the monks of Beaulieu-sur-Dordogne Abbey. The parish depended on this abbey in the 13th century. Nearby, the remains of the castle of the Viscounts of Turenne, raised between the 12th and 13th centuries, recall the strategic role of the site. The church, classified as a historical monument in 1963, retains a remarkable architectural homogeneity.

In the 19th century, General Louis-Joseph Hugo, Victor Hugo's uncle, acquired a property in Chameyrat. His son, Léopold Hugo, became mayor of the commune between 1859 and 1866 and exploited the local lands. A tombstone of the general, reused as altar table during the restoration of the church in 1958, bears an epitaph written by Leopold. This link with the Hugo family adds a historical and cultural dimension to this religious heritage.

Chameyrat's territory, crossed by the Corrèze River, is marked by an altered ocean climate and by the risk of flooding, as evidenced by the historical floods of 1982 and 1999. The church, located on the central square of the village, remains a focal point of the rural commune, surrounded by meadows and forests, reflecting the traditional occupation of the Limousin soils.

External links