Legendary Foundation 545 (≈ 545)
Assigned to Clotilde according to tradition.
XIe siècle
Certification of a Chapter
Certification of a Chapter XIe siècle (≈ 1150)
Prebends created in 1128.
1595
Destruction of Notre-Dame-au-Marché
Destruction of Notre-Dame-au-Marché 1595 (≈ 1595)
The church takes its present name.
1688
Arrival of Mac-Mahon
Arrival of Mac-Mahon 1688 (≈ 1688)
Refugee family after the Stuarts.
1791
Sale as a national good
Sale as a national good 1791 (≈ 1791)
Loss of abside.
1842
Transformation into housing
Transformation into housing 1842 (≈ 1842)
Change in nave.
1934
Registration for Historic Monuments
Registration for Historic Monuments 1934 (≈ 1934)
Protection of the cornice.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Corniche XIIth century of the South Wall: inscription by decree of 26 March 1934
Key figures
Clotilde - Queen of the Francs
Legendary founder in 545.
Claude de Mac-Mahon - Member of the Mac-Mahon family
Entered into the church in 1747.
Marie-Marguerite Mac-Arty - Wife of Florent Mac-Arty
He was buried in 1776.
Origin and history
The church Saint-Pierre-au-Marché de Laon, located in the department of Aisne in the Hauts-de-France region, dates mainly from the 12th century, with traces of an older foundation attributed to Clotilde in 545. It was rebuilt in the early 12th century and had a cloister adjacent to its southern face, with four doors. The building, originally named Saint-Pierre du Haut du Cloître, later took the name of Saint-Pierre-au-Marché, then that of Notre-Dame-au-Marché after the destruction of the neighbouring church in 1595.
The church was located in the district of Saint-Georges, the oldest part of Laon, which was profoundly redesigned when the citadel was built in 1595. His illustrious parishioners included members of the Mac-Mahon family, who had fled after the fall of the Stuarts in 1688. Claude de Mac-Mahon was buried there in 1747, as was Marie-Marguerite Mac-Arty in 1776. The building also housed a chapter attested from the 11th century, which gained in importance in 1128 with the creation of twelve prebends.
Sold as a national property in 1791, the church lost its apse and was partially transformed into a home in 1842. Today, the southern wall of the nave, dating from the early 12th century, with its characteristic cornice and modillons remains. The monument was included in the inventory of Historic Monuments in 1934, protecting notably the cornice of the south wall, a witness of its Romanesque architecture.
Excavations revealed the foundations of the southern absidiole, confirming its original elongated plan, probably completed by an apse. The current roof, in mechanical tiles, covers what remains of the old nave. The church, originally attached to the chapter of Saint-Jean-au-Bourg in 1702, illustrates the transformations suffered by the religious heritage after the Revolution, between abandonment and reallocation.
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