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Church of Saint Martin de Commensacq dans les Landes

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Eglise romane et gothique
Landes

Church of Saint Martin de Commensacq

    D45
    40210 Commensacq
Église Saint-Martin de Commensacq
Église Saint-Martin de Commensacq
Église Saint-Martin de Commensacq
Église Saint-Martin de Commensacq
Église Saint-Martin de Commensacq
Église Saint-Martin de Commensacq
Église Saint-Martin de Commensacq
Église Saint-Martin de Commensacq
Église Saint-Martin de Commensacq
Église Saint-Martin de Commensacq
Église Saint-Martin de Commensacq
Église Saint-Martin de Commensacq
Église Saint-Martin de Commensacq
Église Saint-Martin de Commensacq
Église Saint-Martin de Commensacq
Église Saint-Martin de Commensacq
Église Saint-Martin de Commensacq
Église Saint-Martin de Commensacq
Église Saint-Martin de Commensacq
Église Saint-Martin de Commensacq
Crédit photo : Jibi44 - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1100
1200
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
XIe siècle
First archival record
XVe siècle
Gothic transformation
1608
Oak bell tower arrow
1692
Construction of the porch
1866
Reconstruction of the bell tower
8 octobre 1968
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Church (Doc. E3 330): Registration by decree of 8 October 1968

Key figures

Martin de Tours - Holy patron Devise the early church
Quitterie - Local patron saint Chapel and fountain dedicated
M. de Lapossade (ou La Poussade) - Sponsor of the porch Family chapel in 1692
Frères Mazzetti - Sculptors of the high altar Italian marble (1781)
Jacques Dulau - Contemporary sculptor Statue Notre-Dame de France (1993)

Origin and history

The church of Saint-Martin de Commensacq, located in the department of Landes in New Aquitaine, is a religious building whose origins date back to at least the eleventh century, as evidenced by the archives of the chapter of Dax. Originally, it presented itself as a simple wooden nave, evoking a barn, before being deeply transformed in the 12th and 15th centuries. Its role exceeded the cult function: fortified during the wars (especially of Religion), it served as a defensive reduction for the village, with raised walls, niches and murderers still visible today.

In the 15th century, the church underwent major changes: the early nave was vaulted with dogives, a lateral nave was added, and frescoes narrated biblical episodes (like Genesis) or representing the four evangelists adorn the vaults. The bell tower, initially a square tower surmounted by an oak arrow (1608), was rebuilt in 1866 after a fire caused by lightning. The current porch, formerly a chapel dedicated to Saint Quittterie (1692), houses symbolic sculptures and a stone pavement of Bidache, while a miraculous fountain dedicated to the saint remains nearby.

The church preserves Romanesque (semicircular) and Gothic elements (voûts, carved capitals), as well as mysterious re-uses, such as a frieze of animals and figures on a pillar, or enigmatic secular scenes (the "petengueule"). The main altar in Italian marble (1781) and the baldaquin (19th century) testify to its subsequent enrichment. Ranked a historic monument in 1968, it illustrates the architectural and cultural evolution of a rural place of worship gascon, marked by conflicts, local devotions (holy Quittery) and medieval art.

Outside, the church reveals its defensive past: cruciform murderers pierce the walls, and shooting chambers were set up under the attic. The Notre-Dame chapel, dependent on the Hospitallers and demolished in 1793, once rivaled Saint-Martin in importance. Today, the building, a communal property, remains a living testimony to the religious and military history of the Landes, between Romanesque, late Gothic and popular traditions.

The Saint-Quitterie fountain, located behind the church, was a place of pilgrimage to treat headaches, in connection with the martyrdom of the saint (decapitated). The last processions date back to the 1950s, but floral offerings perpetuate his worship. As for the statue Notre-Dame de France (1993), carved by Jacques Dulau, it symbolizes the village's contemporary devotion.

External links