Construction of church XVIIIe siècle (≈ 1850)
Building erected with two distinct naves.
9 mars 1979
Registration of the bell tower
Registration of the bell tower 9 mars 1979 (≈ 1979)
Protection under Historic Monuments.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Clocher (Case B 45): entry by order of 9 March 1979
Origin and history
The Church of St. John the Evangelist of Luke, located in the commune of Luc (Hautes-Pyrénées, Occitanie), is a religious building built in the 18th century. Although its foundations may go back to an older era, its current structure consists of two distinct naves: a main nave and a north nave, separated by three arcades. The entrance is to the south, while a stand and a bell tower occupy the western part. The latter, registered in the inventory of Historic Monuments by order of 9 March 1979, constitutes the protected element of the building.
The church illustrates a modest but characteristic religious architecture of the rural villages of the Pyrenees in the 18th century. Its two-nave plan suggests an adaptation to the needs of a local community, perhaps expanding or divided into distinct groups (paroisians, brotherhoods). The inner arcades, the rostrum and the bell tower reflect functional and symbolic choices: the welcome of the faithful, the diffusion of sound (cloches, preaching) and a spatial hierarchy between sacred spaces.
The location of the building, at 12 Cami Deth Pillauret in Luke, is documented in the Merimée base, although geographical accuracy is considered "a priori satisfactory" (note 6/10). Owned by the municipality, the church is not explicitly mentioned as to its current accessibility (visits, cults, or ancillary uses such as guest rooms). The available sources (Monumentum, internal data) also do not specify any restorations or modifications after its initial construction.
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