Initial construction XIIe siècle (≈ 1250)
Clocher and walls of the novels
XVe siècle
Gothic enlargement
Gothic enlargement XVe siècle (≈ 1550)
Addition of the choir and northern collateral
vers 1635
Renovation by Sallier
Renovation by Sallier vers 1635 (≈ 1635)
Choir and apse reshuffle
22 août 1949
Registration MH
Registration MH 22 août 1949 (≈ 1949)
Protection as historical monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Church (cad. 2001 D1 64): registration by decree of 22 August 1949
Key figures
Philippe Sallier - Lord of Chenia
Finance the work of 1635
Origin and history
The Saint-Roman church of Athée-sur-Cher, located in the Indre-et-Loire department in the Centre-Val de Loire region, is a Catholic religious building dating back to the 12th century. From this period, the square bell tower, marked by bays in the middle, and part of the walls of the nave remain. These Romanesque elements testify to the first phase of construction, characteristic of medieval religious architecture in Touraine.
In the 15th century, the church was enlarged with the addition of a choir extending the nave, as well as a northern collateral. These changes reflect the evolution of liturgical needs and the influence of the Gothic style, visible in the third-point arcades and ogival vaults of the choir. However, the most significant transformation took place around 1635, under the impulse of Philippe Sallier, seigneur of Chenia. The latter financed major reshuffles, including the almost total reconstruction of the choir and its apse, now equipped with flamboyant Gothic-style bays.
The church is listed in the inventory of historical monuments by decree of 22 August 1949, thus recognizing its heritage value. His plan preserves traces of unaboutied projects, such as the dogive primers intended to vault the nave, never realized. Today, the building combines Romanesque, Gothic and classical elements, illustrating the successive strata of its architectural history.
The bell tower, the oldest element, is distinguished by its octagonal arrow with broken panels and its foothills of angle. Inside, the nave and its northern collateral, joined by arcades, house a panelled frame, while the choir, vaulted prismatic dogives, leads to a five-sided apse. These characteristics make it a representative example of the Tourangeau religious heritage, marked by centuries of transformation.
The church's location, in the centre of the village of Athée-sur-Cher, highlights its historic role as a community and spiritual gathering place. Its traditional orientation, with the nave open to the west and the choir facing east, follows the canons of medieval ecclesiastical architecture, symbolizing the march towards divine light.
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