Initial construction XIIe siècle (≈ 1250)
Building of the Romanesque church and the abside.
XIVe siècle
Fortification of the church
Fortification of the church XIVe siècle (≈ 1450)
Added defensive bahut and shooting hole.
Fin XVe siècle
Gothic enlargement
Gothic enlargement Fin XVe siècle (≈ 1595)
Construction of the north side and vaults.
15 février 1974
Historical Monument
Historical Monument 15 février 1974 (≈ 1974)
Registration by ministerial decree.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Church (Cd. E 147): inscription by decree of 15 February 1974
Key figures
Famille de Champagnac - Local Lords
Owned a seigneurial chapel in the choir.
J. Secret - Historian or archaeologist
Studyed the vault above.
Origin and history
The church of Saint-Pantaléon in Valeuil, located in Brantôme, Périgord, is a religious building built mainly in the 12th and 15th centuries. Elongated plan, it consists of a central nave and a north side bottom, with a vaulted vessel in a full hanger cradle. The forerunner, wearing a dome on pendants, supports a square bell tower, while the semicircular abside, adorned with blind archatures, preserves remains of mural paintings. A spiral staircase leads to an old vault above the abside, highlighted by a modillon cornice. The church, dependent on the diocese of Périgueux in the 14th century, was damaged during the Hundred Years and Religion wars.
In the 12th century, the church was erected in a Romanesque style, with a nave initially divided into spans by doubles. The original vault, replaced by a panel at the end of the seventeenth century, gives way to a pendant dome marking the entrance of the choir. The latter, arched in cul-de-four, has seven blind arches resting on columnettes and pilasters. A seigneurial chapel, reserved for the family of Champagnac, opens on a separate span. The quadrangular bell tower, pierced by four bays, and traces of fortifications (fire hole, defensive cornice) attest to its defensive role during the Hundred Years War. A north side is added at the end of the 15th century, completing the building.
The church Saint-Pantaléon illustrates the architectural adaptations associated with medieval conflicts. Its raised bell tower and defensive installations (bahut, fire) reflect the protection needs of the fourteenth century. Classified as a Historical Monument in 1974, it preserves elements of Romanesque (abside, modillons) and Gothic (star vaults, warheads), reflecting its evolution over five centuries. The presence of murals and a vault underlines its importance both religious, seigneurial and strategic in the medieval Périgord.
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