Initial construction XIIe siècle (≈ 1250)
Romanesque building with Lombard apse.
XVe siècle
Wall paintings
Wall paintings XVe siècle (≈ 1550)
Fresques *God and Evangelists* on starry background.
XVIe siècle
Consolidation
Consolidation XVIe siècle (≈ 1650)
Addition of foothills and monumental paintings.
1757
Portal north
Portal north 1757 (≈ 1757)
Opening of the current portal (dated engraved).
1768
Modification of the bell tower
Modification of the bell tower 1768 (≈ 1768)
Conversion into rectangular section.
1994
MH classification
MH classification 1994 (≈ 1994)
Inventory of historical monuments.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Church (Box A 353): registration by decree of 19 April 1994
Key figures
Raymond Sabatier? - Presumed Painter
Possible author of frescoes (1589-1592).
Valerius Rusticus et Campana - Gallo-Roman dedications
Mentioned on a stele discovered in 1877.
Origin and history
The church of Saint-Félix of Armenteule, located in Loudenvielle in the Hautes-Pyrénées, is a Romanesque building dating from the 12th century. It is distinguished by its semicircular apse decorated with Lombardic bands, typical of regional Romanesque architecture, and a bell tower-wall modified in 1768. The atypical orientation (choir to the west) and its isolated location on a hillside, bordering the D25, highlight its historical anchoring in the landscape.
The interior reveals a unique nave extended by an apse, later enlarged by two side chapels (North/South) and a sacristy. Among the remarkable elements are a 17th century altarpiece, a tabernacle of the same period, and wall paintings: a cul-de-four vault decorated in the 1950s, as well as a 15th century decoration depicting God the Father and the four Evangelists on starry background. These frescoes, attributed perhaps to an artist who worked in Bourisp (1589-1592), testify to the stylistic evolution of the monument.
Several transformations mark its history: consolidation by foothills in the 16th century, opening of a northern gate in 1757 (replacing a south gate), and modification of the bell tower in 1768 (engraved date). A Gallo-Roman stele discovered in 1877 in the nave, now extinct from the site, recalls the ancient occupation of the place. Classified as a historical monument in 1994, the church belongs to the commune and retains lapidary inscriptions (1757, 1768, 1777) traces of its past.
Architecturally, the building illustrates the transition between Romanesque and Gothic: Lombard arches of the abside, modillons of the bell tower, and false dogive vault in planks (south Chapter). Its Renaissance portal contrasts with Romanesque sobriety, while the bell tower, initially walled, adopts a rectangular section after 1768. These superpositions of styles make it a witness to local constructive practices, from the twelfth to the eighteenth centuries.
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