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Église Saint-Étienne de La Guerche-sur-l'Aubois dans le Cher

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Eglise
Cher

Église Saint-Étienne de La Guerche-sur-l'Aubois

    11 Avenue du Maréchal Leclerc
    18150 La Guerche-sur-l'Aubois
Église Saint-Étienne de La Guerche-sur-lAubois
Église Saint-Étienne de La Guerche-sur-lAubois
Église Saint-Étienne de La Guerche-sur-lAubois
Église Saint-Étienne de La Guerche-sur-lAubois
Église Saint-Étienne de La Guerche-sur-lAubois
Église Saint-Étienne de La Guerche-sur-lAubois
Crédit photo : Franz Alp - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1100
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1110
Inauguration under Louis VI the Big
XIVe siècle
Grouping of large companies
1464
Restoration by Jean de Bar
XVIe siècle
Fire by Protestants
1793-1794
Autodafé of archives under the Terror
1962
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Eglise du Gravier (cad. AB 97): Order of 7 August 1962

Key figures

Louis VI le Gros - King of France During his reign, inauguration in 1110.
Jean de Bar de Baugy - Local Lord Restore the church in 1464.
Jean IV de Bar - Lord of La Guerche Donor of the Blessed One (XVI century).
Louis Pajot - Self-proclaimed "King of La Guerche" Order the destruction of the archives.
Joseph Fouché - Politician Honor motivating the autodafé of 1793.

Origin and history

The Romanesque church of Saint Stephen was inaugurated in 1110 under the reign of Louis VI le Gros. Located on the outskirts of La Guerche-sur-l-l-Aubois (Dear), in the 14th century it became a rallying point for large companies during the Hundred Years War. Ravaged and burned, it was restored in 1464 by Jean de Bar de Baugy, who added two Gothic windows. A new fire, perpetrated by Protestants in the 16th century, damaged the capitals of the cross, then redone.

Under the Terror, the communal archives were burned by order of Louis Pajot, self-proclaimed "King of La Guerche", to honor Joseph Fouché. The bells, which were down to be melted, were partly saved by peasants: two of them would only be raised in 1966 by the Saugrin company. In 1984 a bumblebee was added to the bell tower, and the carillon was restored. The church, replaced as parish in 1860 by Notre-Dame due to the urban expansion linked to the industrial revolution, was classified as Historic Monument in 1962.

The building houses a 16th-century limestone bentier from Apremont, decorated with the four evangelists and the shields of the sons of John IV of Bar, local lord and donor. Its copper bell cock (1590), one of the oldest in France, bears the inscription "IDRS" (Jesus, Deus, Rex & Salvator). The plan in Latin cross, without buttresses, rests on columns and a light vault, with a portal in full hanger and an octagonal dome on tubes.

The association "Friends of the Church of the Gravel" continues its appreciation through guided tours. The monument thus illustrates the religious, political and social upheavals that marked the Berry and the Loire Valley, from the Middle Ages to the contemporary era.

External links