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Church of Saint-Mamet of Peyrusse-Grande dans le Gers

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Caquetoire
Eglise romane
Gers

Church of Saint-Mamet of Peyrusse-Grande

    D252
    32320 Peyrusse-Grande
Église Saint-Mamet de Peyrusse-Grande
Église Saint-Mamet de Peyrusse-Grande
Église Saint-Mamet de Peyrusse-Grande
Église Saint-Mamet de Peyrusse-Grande
Église Saint-Mamet de Peyrusse-Grande
Église Saint-Mamet de Peyrusse-Grande
Église Saint-Mamet de Peyrusse-Grande
Église Saint-Mamet de Peyrusse-Grande
Église Saint-Mamet de Peyrusse-Grande
Église Saint-Mamet de Peyrusse-Grande
Église Saint-Mamet de Peyrusse-Grande
Église Saint-Mamet de Peyrusse-Grande
Église Saint-Mamet de Peyrusse-Grande
Église Saint-Mamet de Peyrusse-Grande
Église Saint-Mamet de Peyrusse-Grande
Église Saint-Mamet de Peyrusse-Grande
Église Saint-Mamet de Peyrusse-Grande
Église Saint-Mamet de Peyrusse-Grande
Église Saint-Mamet de Peyrusse-Grande
Église Saint-Mamet de Peyrusse-Grande
Église Saint-Mamet de Peyrusse-Grande
Église Saint-Mamet de Peyrusse-Grande
Église Saint-Mamet de Peyrusse-Grande
Église Saint-Mamet de Peyrusse-Grande
Église Saint-Mamet de Peyrusse-Grande
Église Saint-Mamet de Peyrusse-Grande
Église Saint-Mamet de Peyrusse-Grande
Église Saint-Mamet de Peyrusse-Grande
Église Saint-Mamet de Peyrusse-Grande
Église Saint-Mamet de Peyrusse-Grande
Église Saint-Mamet de Peyrusse-Grande
Église Saint-Mamet de Peyrusse-Grande
Église Saint-Mamet de Peyrusse-Grande
Église Saint-Mamet de Peyrusse-Grande
Église Saint-Mamet de Peyrusse-Grande
Église Saint-Mamet de Peyrusse-Grande
Église Saint-Mamet de Peyrusse-Grande
Église Saint-Mamet de Peyrusse-Grande
Église Saint-Mamet de Peyrusse-Grande
Église Saint-Mamet de Peyrusse-Grande
Église Saint-Mamet de Peyrusse-Grande
Église Saint-Mamet de Peyrusse-Grande
Église Saint-Mamet de Peyrusse-Grande
Église Saint-Mamet de Peyrusse-Grande
Église Saint-Mamet de Peyrusse-Grande
Église Saint-Mamet de Peyrusse-Grande
Église Saint-Mamet de Peyrusse-Grande
Église Saint-Mamet de Peyrusse-Grande
Église Saint-Mamet de Peyrusse-Grande
Crédit photo : MOSSOT - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1100
1200
1700
1800
1900
2000
vers 1060
First indirect indication
1115
Papal Bull of Pascal II
dernier quart du XIe siècle
Construction of the choir
XVIe–XVIIe siècles
Reconstruction of the North Collateral
1759
Date engraved on a foothill
1883–1885
Major renovations
29 mars 1972
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Saint-Mamet Church (Box F 84): Order of 29 March 1972

Key figures

Pape Pascal II - Religious Authority Confirms Clunisian possessions in 1115.
Roger de Montaut - Prior of Saint-Orens of Auch Recipient of the papal bubble of 1115.
Paul Deschamps - Art historian Linking the inscriptions to the Carolingian period.
Marcel Durliat - Archaeologist and historian Date the 11th century choir, analyzes the capitals.
Georges Gaillard - Size Technique Specialist Study the *gutter size* of the decorations.

Origin and history

The Church of Saint-Mamet of Peyrus-Grande is a former clunisian priory mentioned as early as 1115 in a papal bubble of Pascal II confirming the possessions of the Priory of Saint-Orens of Auch. Its existence before 1060 is suggested by sources evoking the transport of the bust of Saint Mamet to Nogaro. This priory is part of the network of roads of Santiago de Compostela organized by Cluny. Two dedicatory inscriptions, with rare characters, probably date from the Carolingian transition (late 9th–Xth century), although the choir was attributed to the last quarter of the 11th century by Marcel Durliat.

The original Romanesque architecture consisted of a bedside with three partitioned apses (choir and side chapels), a non-bending transept, and a unique nave of which only the pillars remain. The walls of the nave were demolished to create collaterals: the southern one reused the walls of the priory, while the north was rebuilt after the wars of religion (16th-17th centuries). The transept was extended by a chapel and sacristy, with major modifications in the nineteenth century: false plaster vault (1883), ovoid domes (1884), and destruction of the domes of the chapels in 1885.

The bedside, inspired orientally, presents an original plan with three separate elements (choir and chapels) vaulted in cul-de-four, reshaped awkwardly around 1850. The original windows, now blocked, suggest a more crushed apse, allowing a room above the choir. The exterior and interior decorations (interlaces, palmettes) (geometrical capitals) reveal carolingian, pre-Roman, and clunisian influences, comparable to southwestern churches such as Bougneau or Saint-Thomas-de-Conac. These stylistic similarities are explained by their connection to the order of Cluny and the mobility of craftsmen.

Ranked a Historical Monument in 1972, the church retains a reference furniture (tables, reliquary) and illustrates medieval artistic exchanges between Gascony, Languedoc and Spain. The capitals, inspired by Italian or Spanish models, broadcast in Occitanie in the 11th century, combine paleo-Christian motifs (colombes confronted) and local techniques such as gutter size. Subsequent changes (XVI–XIX centuries) reflect the liturgical adaptations and damage of religious conflicts.

Historical sources are lacking to accurately trace the origins, but architectural and epigraphic analysis can date the major phases. The studies of Marcel Durliat and Paul Deschamps highlight his role in the compostellan pilgrimage and his hybrid artistic heritage, between Carolingian traditions and novel innovations. The protection under the Historical Monuments aims to preserve this rare testimony of medieval religious art in Gascony.

External links