Construction of church XIIe siècle (≈ 1250)
Building of the original Romanesque building.
18 avril 1932
Historical Monument
Historical Monument 18 avril 1932 (≈ 1932)
Official protection of the building.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Church: by decree of 18 April 1932
Key figures
Moines de l'abbaye d'Aubazine - Occupants of the porch
Used the fitted rooms.
Origin and history
The church of Saint-Marcel de Lagraulière, built in the 12th century in Corrèze, presents an architectural plan typical of Limousin Romanesque art: a unique nave vaulted in cradle (later replaced by a wooden ceiling), an asymmetric transept and an apse in cul-de-four. The cross of the transept, supported by square pillars decorated with semi-cylindrical columns, is surmounted by an original spherical dome, pierced by eight arches in third-point evoking blinded bays. This arrangement, rare in the region, suggests a desire to symbolically illuminate the vault.
The western porch, vaulted in a cradle and surmounted by a square tower, once housed monks from the Abbey of Aubazine. Its inner faces are adorned with double archatures in the middle of the skin, decorated with carved capitals and three allegorical bas-reliefs: to the north, the death of the poor rich on his bed of suffering; To the south, the avarous tormented by a demon and a young man lying under a giant fish. These representations, inspired by monastic vices (avarice and lust), find a direct echo with the sculptures of the porch of Moissac Abbey, highlighting iconographic links between the two buildings.
Classified as a Historical Monument in 1932, the church illustrates the influence of monastic workshops in the dissemination of Romanesque motifs. The bas-reliefs, through their moralizing theme, were intended to remind the faithful and monks of the dangers of capital sins, in a context where the Church sought to strengthen its spiritual control over rural populations. The square bell tower, typical of limousine architecture, and rooms designed for monks also testify to the multifunctional role of these buildings in the Middle Ages.
The nave, although modified, preserves traces of its original vault in cradle, while the north crusillon of the transept preserved its primitive arrangement. The elliptical cap of the cross, with its pendants, reveals a remarkable geometric mastery for the time. These elements, combined with carved decorations, make Saint-Marcel a significant example of the Corrèzian novel, marked by borrowings from major artistic centers like Moissac.
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