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Church of Saint Pierre-ès-Liens de Clairac dans le Lot-et-Garonne

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Eglise de style classique
Eglise romane
Lot-et-Garonne

Church of Saint Pierre-ès-Liens de Clairac

    1 Place de l'Église
    47320 Clairac
Église Saint-Pierre-ès-Liens de Clairac
Église Saint-Pierre-ès-Liens de Clairac
Église Saint-Pierre-ès-Liens de Clairac
Église Saint-Pierre-ès-Liens de Clairac
Église Saint-Pierre-ès-Liens de Clairac
Église Saint-Pierre-ès-Liens de Clairac
Église Saint-Pierre-ès-Liens de Clairac
Crédit photo : MOSSOT - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
800
900
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
VIIIe siècle
Origin of Benedictine Abbey
Fin XIe - début XIIe siècle
Beginning of Romanesque construction
1453
End of the Hundred Years War
1530
Appointment of Gérard Roussel
1565
Apostasy of the monks
1604
Link to Lateran
1606-1648
Reconstruction by Garganti
1792
Revolutionary seizure
1846
Installation of organ
1996
Registration for Historic Monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Church and the plate floor of the destroyed parts of Saint-Pierre-ès-Liens Church (Box AB 435, 417, 418): inscription by order of 1 July 1996

Key figures

Gérard Roussel - Reformed Abbé (1530) Propagator of Protestantism in Clairac.
Geoffroy de Caumont - Protestant abbot (post-1530) Directed the monks' apostasy in 1565.
Paolo Garganti - Administrator of the Lateran (1606-1648) Reconstructed facade, south wall and bedside.
Henri IV - King of France Ratifia union with Saint John of Lateran in 1606.
Jules Magen - Organ factor (1846) Author of the organ of the gallery.
Giovanni Carlo Masutti - Painter (1930s) Author of the trompe-l'oeil decor.

Origin and history

The church Saint-Pierre-ès-Liens de Clairac, located in the Lot-et-Garonne department, finds its origins in the eighth century as a Benedictine abbey. Its construction began in the late 11th or early 12th century, with nave fence walls and a northern crusillon still visible today. Similar to the church of Moirax, it was 18 metres wide, with 3.50 metres of lower sides. The destruction began during the Hundred Years' War, where French and English troops ravaged the abbey, leaving only 9 religious in 1453.

In 1530 the abbey was entrusted to Gérard Roussel, a Reformer, appointed by Marguerite de Navarre. Under his successor Geoffroy de Caumont, the monks apostasied in mass in 1565, and the abbey was looted and demolished. Henry of Angoulême, great prior of France, took possession of it before it was attached to the chapter of Saint John of Lateran in 1604, following diplomatic negotiations involving Henry IV and Pope Paul V. The canon Paolo Garganti, sent by the Lateran, then undertook the reconstruction of the facade, the south wall, the bedside and a spiral staircase in the choir.

The French Revolution aggravated the deterioration: the abbey was seized as a national good in 1792 and sold in 1799. In the 19th century, several restoration campaigns took place, notably in 1824 (façade), 1840-1841 (carpent and false vaults by Jean Mounié) and 1863 (façade again). The organ, installed in 1846 by Jules Magen, was restored in 1985 and 2003. The trompe l'oeil decoration of the cul-de-four, probably made in 1936-1937 by Giovanni Carlo Masutti, and the high altar from the abbey of Eysses (installed in 1988) complete the building, inscribed in historical monuments since 1996.

The church preserves Romanesque elements (north wall, absidiole, square bell tower with charter hall) and Gothic additions (northern 15th century chapel). The materials vary between limestone-cut stone for the old parts and stone, bricks and stone mixed for reconstruction. The current plan includes a low-side nave, a flat-side choir and a vaulted northern chapel. The stained glass, furniture and organ reflect successive restorations, from the 17th century to the contemporary era.

External links