Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Saint Peter's Church of Roye dans la Somme

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Eglise moderne
Architecture gothique flamboyant
Somme

Saint Peter's Church of Roye

    14-20 Rue du Docteur Duquesnel
    80700 Roye
Église Saint-Pierre de Roye
Église Saint-Pierre de Roye
Église Saint-Pierre de Roye
Église Saint-Pierre de Roye
Église Saint-Pierre de Roye
Église Saint-Pierre de Roye
Église Saint-Pierre de Roye
Église Saint-Pierre de Roye
Église Saint-Pierre de Roye
Église Saint-Pierre de Roye
Église Saint-Pierre de Roye
Église Saint-Pierre de Roye
Église Saint-Pierre de Roye
Église Saint-Pierre de Roye
Église Saint-Pierre de Roye
Église Saint-Pierre de Roye
Église Saint-Pierre de Roye
Église Saint-Pierre de Roye
Église Saint-Pierre de Roye
Église Saint-Pierre de Roye
Église Saint-Pierre de Roye
Église Saint-Pierre de Roye
Église Saint-Pierre de Roye
Église Saint-Pierre de Roye
Église Saint-Pierre de Roye
Église Saint-Pierre de Roye
Église Saint-Pierre de Roye
Église Saint-Pierre de Roye
Église Saint-Pierre de Roye
Église Saint-Pierre de Roye
Église Saint-Pierre de Roye
Église Saint-Pierre de Roye
Église Saint-Pierre de Roye
Église Saint-Pierre de Roye
Église Saint-Pierre de Roye
Église Saint-Pierre de Roye
Église Saint-Pierre de Roye
Église Saint-Pierre de Roye
Église Saint-Pierre de Roye
Église Saint-Pierre de Roye
Église Saint-Pierre de Roye
Église Saint-Pierre de Roye
Église Saint-Pierre de Roye
Église Saint-Pierre de Roye
Église Saint-Pierre de Roye
Église Saint-Pierre de Roye
Église Saint-Pierre de Roye
Église Saint-Pierre de Roye
Église Saint-Pierre de Roye
Église Saint-Pierre de Roye
Crédit photo : Torsade de Pointes - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1200
1500
1600
1900
2000
1184
First certificate
vers 1535
Gothic reconstruction
1908
First ranking
1914-1918
Destruction during the Great War
1931-1933
Art Deco reconstruction
1933
Installation of the Beuchet-Debierre organ
1940
Damage during World War II
1956-1957
Restoration of stained glass windows
1957
New Roethinger organ
1992
Restoration of the organ
1997
Classification of modern parts
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Church, with the exception of the nave and transept (first span of the choir) destroyed during the war: classification by decree of 20 July 1908 and by decree of 18 December 1924 - Nef, bell tower and transept (cad. AR 231): classification by decree of 29 April 1997

Key figures

Charles Duval - Architect Co-conceptor of Art Deco reconstruction (1931-1933).
Emmanuel Gonse - Architect Associated with Duval for the nave and bell tower.
Raymond Couvègnes - Sculptor Author of concrete sculptures of the facade.
Maurice Dhomme - Ceramicist Creator of varnished ceramic works (e.g.: *Mise au tombeau*).
Henri Marret - Painter Author of interior wall paintings.
Jean Hébert-Stevens - Glass painter Manufacturer of nave windows (partly destroyed).
Pauline Peugniez - Glass painter Restore the stained glass windows (1956-1957), widow of Hébert-Stevens.
Paul Bony - Glass painter Author of the stained glass of the choir, son-in-law of Peugniez.
Raymond Subes - Ferronier Creator of cast iron and copper grids.
Max Joseph Roethinger - Organ factor Designed the organ of 1957.
Jean Marais - Military Warner / Actor Posted at the bell tower during World War II.

Origin and history

The Saint-Pierre de Roye church, attested as early as 1184, was rebuilt around 1535 in a flamboyant Gothic style. This choir, the only medieval vestige, survived the massive destruction of the First World War, where the building was largely razed. The postwar reconstruction (1931-1933) entrusted the Parisian architects Charles Duval and Emmanuel Gonse with the task of raising a nave, a transept and a 64-metre bell tower, inspired by decorative art and the church of Notre-Dame du Raincy. This bold blend of styles, combining Gothic heritage and modernity, made St. Peter a symbol of renaissance for Roye, the martyr city of the Somme.

The interior and exterior decoration of the church illustrates the artistic innovation of the 1930s. The choir, restored in identical style, houses 16th-century stained glass windows with scattered fragments, while the nave hosts major works: varnished ceramics by Maurice Dhomme (such as La Mise au tombeau), murals by Henri Marret, and stained glass by Jean Hébert-Stevens, partially destroyed in 1940 and restored by Pauline Peugniez. Outside, Raymond Couvègnes' concrete sculptures and Raymond Subes' ironwork gratings, decorated with repelled coppers representing the tetramorph, highlight this fusion between tradition and avant-garde.

The 64-metre-high bell tower became a strategic location during World War II. Turned into an observation post by the British and French armies, it was used to spot enemy aircraft, with watchers like actor Jean Marais. Its four bells — "Adolphe", "Claire", "Henriette" and "Marguerite" — and its concrete arrow surmounted by a cross make it a visible landmark in the region. The organ, destroyed during the conflict, was replaced in 1957 by an instrument by Max Joseph Roethinger, restored in 1992. Three times (1908, 1924, 1997), the church also preserves relics of Saint Florent and Saint Antoine Daveluy, testifying to its spiritual and memorial role.

The building embodies the resilience of Roye, a city rebuilt after 1918. The architects Duval and Gonse, already authors of a local nursery school, applied here the principles of post-Great War reconstruction, combining the use of ancient materials and contemporary techniques. This bias, rare in the Somme, makes it a milestone in the religious architecture of the 20th century, where reinforced concrete borders the medieval stained glass windows. The damages of 1940 and subsequent restorations (glasses, organ) complete to seal its status as a hybrid monument, both memory of conflicts and artistic laboratory.

The Saint-Pierre church is owned by the commune and is protected for its choir (classified in 1908 and 1904) and its modern parts (classified in 1997). Its history, marked by wars and reconstructions, makes it a place of worship and an emblematic heritage of the Hauts-de-France, where faith, art and military history intersect. The relics that it houses, such as works by artists such as Dhomme or Marret, also make it an open-air museum, celebrating creativity in the service of the resurrection of a bruised territory.

External links