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Saint Martial Church of Tauriac dans le Lot

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Eglise romane et gothique
Lot

Saint Martial Church of Tauriac

    Le Bourg
    46130 Tauriac
Église Saint-Martial de Tauriac
Église Saint-Martial de Tauriac
Église Saint-Martial de Tauriac
Église Saint-Martial de Tauriac
Église Saint-Martial de Tauriac
Église Saint-Martial de Tauriac
Église Saint-Martial de Tauriac
Église Saint-Martial de Tauriac
Église Saint-Martial de Tauriac
Église Saint-Martial de Tauriac
Église Saint-Martial de Tauriac
Église Saint-Martial de Tauriac
Église Saint-Martial de Tauriac
Église Saint-Martial de Tauriac
Église Saint-Martial de Tauriac
Église Saint-Martial de Tauriac
Église Saint-Martial de Tauriac
Église Saint-Martial de Tauriac
Église Saint-Martial de Tauriac
Église Saint-Martial de Tauriac
Église Saint-Martial de Tauriac
Église Saint-Martial de Tauriac
Église Saint-Martial de Tauriac
Église Saint-Martial de Tauriac
Église Saint-Martial de Tauriac
Église Saint-Martial de Tauriac
Église Saint-Martial de Tauriac
Église Saint-Martial de Tauriac
Église Saint-Martial de Tauriac
Église Saint-Martial de Tauriac
Église Saint-Martial de Tauriac
Église Saint-Martial de Tauriac
Crédit photo : VKaeru - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
900
1000
1100
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1900
2000
930
First donation to the abbey of Beaulieu
1281
Conflict for the Tauriac Bastide
1292
Royal confirmation by Philippe le Bel
1549
Date engraved on the nave
1906
Classification of wall paintings
1987
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Church of Saint-Martial, including murals (Box AL 65): Order of 22 September 1987

Key figures

Adhémar, vicomte des Échelles - Medieval donor Offered the church at Beaulieu Abbey in 930.
Raymond VI, vicomte de Turenne - Opposing the bastide Contested the project of Abbé de Dalon.
Simon de Melun - Sénéchal arbitrator Trancha the conflict in 1281.
Philippe le Bel - King confirmator Validated in 1281 in 1292.
Marie-Anne Sire - History of Art Studyed murals (1987).

Origin and history

The church of Saint-Martial de Tauriac, located in the Lot in Occitanie, is mentioned as early as 930 in the cartular of the abbey of Beaulieu-sur-Dordogne, when the Viscount Adhémar des Échelles gives it to the monks. In 971, an assignment extended their estate to the church, confirming its early importance. These early traces reveal its anchoring in the medieval religious network, linked to seigneurial rivalries and monastic foundations.

In 1281, a conflict between Abbé de Dalon, wishing to found a bastide in Tauriac, and Viscount Raymond VI of Turenne, feared economic competition. Sénéchal Simon de Melun sliced in favour of the abbot, but limited the settlement of the inhabitants of neighbouring villages. Philip the Bel confirmed this act in 1292, illustrating the tensions between ecclesiastical power and local nobility. The present church, rebuilt in the 16th century (dated 1549 engraved), replaces a 13th century building.

Ranked a Historical Monument in 1987, the church is distinguished by its 16th century painted decoration, covering vaults and walls of chapels. The scenes include Creation, the Prophets, the Passion of Christ, and the life of the Virgin, with a monumental Saint Christophe. These frescoes, classified as early as 1906, bear witness to an ambitious iconographic programme, mixing Christian prefiguration and biblical accounts. The furniture, like the retables of the eighteenth century or the reliquary of Saint Agapit (14th century, today in Rocamadour), completes this heritage.

The architecture combines medieval elements (square hem, low-sided vaulted ridges with ivy) and posterior additions, such as the last level of the bell tower (19th century). The nave, originally carpented, was later vaulted, while carved capitals and murals highlight the artistic richness of the site. The sacristy, covered with flat tiles, contrasts with the rest of the slate building.

The archaeological and historical sources (Memorial Bulletin, Archaeological Congress of France) highlight the restoration campaigns, especially that of paintings in 1987. Studies, such as those of Marie-Anne Sire or Father Clary, document his evolution, from his medieval origins to his classification. Today a communal property, the church remains a major testimony of religious art in Quercy.

External links