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Saint Peter's Church of Bazoches-sur-Vesles à Bazoches-sur-Vesles dans l'Aisne

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Eglise romane
Aisne

Saint Peter's Church of Bazoches-sur-Vesles

    1 Rue Saints-Rufin et Valère 
    02220 Bazoches-et-Saint-Thibaut
Église Saint-Pierre de Bazoches-sur-Vesles
Église Saint-Pierre de Bazoches-sur-Vesles
Église Saint-Pierre de Bazoches-sur-Vesles
Église Saint-Pierre de Bazoches-sur-Vesles
Église Saint-Pierre de Bazoches-sur-Vesles
Église Saint-Pierre de Bazoches-sur-Vesles
Église Saint-Pierre de Bazoches-sur-Vesles
Église Saint-Pierre de Bazoches-sur-Vesles
Église Saint-Pierre de Bazoches-sur-Vesles
Église Saint-Pierre de Bazoches-sur-Vesles
Église Saint-Pierre de Bazoches-sur-Vesles
Crédit photo : G.Garitan - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
XIIe siècle (3e quart)
Construction of the choir and transept
XIIIe siècle
Adding sidelines
1660
Modification of the Western Portal
1791-1792
Revolutionary assemblies
août 1918
Destruction during the First World War
10 décembre 1919
Historical Monument
1921-1932
Post-war restoration
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Church: by decree of 10 December 1919

Key figures

Lucien Sallez - Chief Architect of Historic Monuments Directed the restoration (1921-1932).
Robert Chaleil - Diocesan architect Supervised the work on site.

Origin and history

The church of Saint-Pierre de Bazoches-sur-Vesles, located in the department of Aisne, is a religious building built mainly in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. Its flat bedside choir and transept date back to the third quarter of the 12th century, while the sides, opened on the nave by broken arcades, were added in the 13th century. The Western gate, curved and dating back to 1660, as well as the northern pillars of the nave, transformed into rectangular massifs, testify to subsequent modifications in the seventeenth century.

Prior to the French Revolution, the church depended on the diocese of Soissons and served as the capital of a dean of the Archdiacony of Tardenois. His collator was the Benedictine priory next to Saint-Thibaut. During the Revolution, in 1791 and 1792, it housed the assemblies of the district of Bazoches, reflecting its central role in local life.

The building suffered major destruction in August 1918, when the German army retreated, with collapsed walls and vaults. Its restoration, led by the chief architect of the Historic Monuments Lucien Sallez and executed by Robert Chaleil, lasted from 1921 to 1932. The work was carried out successively on the lower sides (1921-1929), the nave (1928-1929), the choir (1929) and the transept (1921-1932). The church was classified as historical monuments on December 10, 1919.

Architecturally, the church presents a Latin cross plan with a square sanctuary completed by an apse. The transept, vaulted with warhead crosses, and the square choir share Gothic characteristics of transition, while the nave, capped, retains Romanesque elements. Covering materials vary between slate for the nave, the lower side and the bell tower, and flat tiles for the choir and the eastern sections of the transept.

The size of the building is notable: 28.20 metres long (including apse), 18.65 metres wide at the transept, and 13.15 metres for the nave with its collaterals. These elements underline the historical and architectural significance of this monument, both a place of worship and a witness to the upheavals of its time.

External links