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Church of Saint Martin of Lombron dans la Sarthe

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Eglise
Sarthe

Church of Saint Martin of Lombron

    2 D25
    72450 Lombron
Ownership of the municipality
Église Saint-Martin de Lombron
Église Saint-Martin de Lombron
Église Saint-Martin de Lombron
Église Saint-Martin de Lombron
Église Saint-Martin de Lombron
Église Saint-Martin de Lombron
Église Saint-Martin de Lombron
Église Saint-Martin de Lombron
Église Saint-Martin de Lombron
Église Saint-Martin de Lombron
Église Saint-Martin de Lombron
Crédit photo : Pymouss - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1100
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1100-1200
Initial construction
1409
Death of Jehan Dupin
1513
Death of Gervais Le Verrier
1516
Restoration of the chapel
1764
Burning benches
1808
Donation to the municipality
1905
Ranking of seigneurial bench
1973
Registration historical monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Church (Case C 76): registration by order of 5 December 1973

Key figures

Jehan Dupin - Curé and donor Offered the land of the High Tool in 1409
Gervais Le Verrier - Curé and donor Donna the Presbyteral House in 1513
Seigneur de Bresteau - Chapel patron Funded works in 1516
Mathurin Rahet - Craft glassware Author of the preserved stained glass
Gabriel Tison - Wood burner Sculpta the benches in 1764
Jean de Laval - Lord of Boisdauphin Husband of Renée de Saint-Mars
Renée de Saint-Mars - Bresteau heiress Forwards the sponsorship of Lombron

Origin and history

The church of Saint-Martin de Lombron, located in the Sarthe department in Pays de la Loire, is a Romanesque building dating back to the 12th century. It underwent changes in the fourteenth, seventeenth and nineteenth centuries, reflecting the stylistic evolutions and liturgical needs of each era. The building was listed as historic monuments in 1973, recognizing its heritage value.

The church houses a 16th century seigneurial bench, adorned with the arms of the Montmorency-Laval-Boisdauphin, a noble family linked to the parish since the marriage of Jean de Laval with Renée de Saint-Mars. This bench, classified as a historic monument in 1905, bears witness to the seigneurial patronage of the church. The benches of the building, engraved in 1764 by Gabriel Tison, bear the names of the local donors, illustrating the community's involvement in his interview.

Two epitaphs embedded in the walls recall the gifts of influential parish priests: Jehan Dupin, who died in 1409 after having offered the land of the High Tool, and Gervais Le Verrier, who died in 1513, donor of the Presbyteral House. In 1516, the lord of Bresteau financed the restoration of the gable of the chapel and the addition of an ogival window, whose stained glass, made by Mathurin Rahet, is still preserved. These elements highlight the close links between the church, the local nobility and the faithful.

Given to the commune in 1808, as attested by the communal deliberations, Saint-Martin Church remains a symbol of Lombron's religious and social history. Its furniture, inscriptions and stained-glass windows bear witness to the cultural and artistic practices of the medieval and modern eras in Sarthe.

External links