Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Saint Peter's Church of the Genovefains à Châtillon-sur-Seine en Côte-d'or

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Eglise romane

Saint Peter's Church of the Genovefains

    14 Rue de la Libération
    21400 Châtillon-sur-Seine
Ownership of the municipality
Église Saint-Pierre des Génovéfains
Église Saint-Pierre des Génovéfains
Église Saint-Pierre des Génovéfains
Église Saint-Pierre des Génovéfains
Église Saint-Pierre des Génovéfains
Église Saint-Pierre des Génovéfains
Église Saint-Pierre des Génovéfains
Église Saint-Pierre des Génovéfains
Église Saint-Pierre des Génovéfains
Église Saint-Pierre des Génovéfains
Église Saint-Pierre des Génovéfains
Église Saint-Pierre des Génovéfains
Église Saint-Pierre des Génovéfains
Église Saint-Pierre des Génovéfains
Église Saint-Pierre des Génovéfains
Église Saint-Pierre des Génovéfains
Église Saint-Pierre des Génovéfains
Église Saint-Pierre des Génovéfains
Église Saint-Pierre des Génovéfains
Église Saint-Pierre des Génovéfains
Église Saint-Pierre des Génovéfains
Église Saint-Pierre des Génovéfains
Église Saint-Pierre des Génovéfains
Église Saint-Pierre des Génovéfains
Église Saint-Pierre des Génovéfains
Église Saint-Pierre des Génovéfains
Église Saint-Pierre des Génovéfains
Crédit photo : Claude PIARD - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Antiquité
Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
0
100
1100
1500
1600
1700
1800
1200
1900
2000
1797 (25 thermidor an V)
Sale at St. Peter's Hospital
20 septembre 1138
Regularization Bull
1132–1206
Construction of the abbey
XVe siècle
Partial destruction
1594
Damage in the Wars of Religion
1635
Reform of Sainte-Geneviève
1727
Renovation of portal
1807
Destruction of the old bell tower
1835
Reassignment to worship
1930
Historical Monument
2009
Opening of the museum
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Church of the Genovéfains (former), currently chapel of the hospital: by order of 21 November 1930

Key figures

Saint-Bernard - Religious and Reformer Initiator of the foundation of the Abbey (1140).
Aude - First Abbé Recipient of the 1138 bubble.
Henri Lenet de Larrey - Abbé (1662–1710) Commander of the church porch.
A. C. F. Gagne de Perrigny - Second-last abbot Responsible for redesigning the portal (1727).
Tridon - Châtillon architect Builder of the current bell tower (1825).

Origin and history

The Saint-Pierre des Genovéfains church, located in Châtillon-sur-Seine in Côte-d'Or, is an ancient abbey built between 1132 and 1206. It was built as the heart of Notre-Dame de Châtillon Abbey, founded in 1140 by canons of Saint-Vorles under the impulse of Saint-Bernard. These religious, who became regular canons around 1135, adopted the rule of Saint Augustine (bulle of regularization of 20 September 1138). The abbey, partially destroyed during the conflicts between Charles the Temerary and Louis XI, then during the Wars of Religion (1594), retained only his church.

In 1635 the abbey adopted the reform of Sainte-Geneviève, leading to the reconstruction of the convent building (capitular room, refectory, dormitory, etc.). The church porch, erected around 1662, was redesigned in 1727 by the addition of a Louis XV portal. The abbey was sold in 1797 (25 thermidor an V) to St. Peter's Hospital, which transformed it: the flat-bed choir and its side chapels were destroyed, while the transept and 7th span of the nave became rooms for the sick. The current bell tower, built in 1825 by architect Tridon, replaced the old one, destroyed in 1807.

The church, reassigned to worship in 1835, was dedicated to Saint Peter and listed as a historical monument in 1930. Its furniture, inventoried with cultural heritage, and its successive transformations (choir and sacristy remodelled in 1835), testify to its turbulent history. Since 2009, it has housed the collections of the Musée du Pays Châtillonnais, while remaining property of the municipality. Its three-nave Romanesque plan and its protected elements (façade, porch, convent building) make it a significant example of medieval religious architecture in Burgundy.

External links