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Saint-Sixte de Lamothe-Fénelon Church dans le Lot

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Eglise gothique
Clocher-mur
Lot

Saint-Sixte de Lamothe-Fénelon Church

    D141
    46350 Lamothe-Fénelon
Église Saint-Sixte de Lamothe-Fénelon
Église Saint-Sixte de Lamothe-Fénelon
Église Saint-Sixte de Lamothe-Fénelon
Église Saint-Sixte de Lamothe-Fénelon
Crédit photo : Michel Chanaud - 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 (seconde moitié)
Construction of the Romanesque apse
1253
Géraud de Massault Priory
XIVe siècle
Reconstruction façade and nave
vers 1490
Notre-Dame-de-Pitié Chapel
1497
Foundation burial Salignac
fin XVe - début XVIe siècle
Nave vault
1863
Partial restoration
3 mai 1913
Historical Monument
2011
Archaeological excavations
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Church: by decree of 3 May 1913

Key figures

Géraud de Massaut - Prior of Saint-Sixte Moin of Souillac in 1253
Jean de Salignac - Local Lord and patron Financer of the North Chapel (1490)

Origin and history

The church of Saint-Sixte, located in Lamothe-Fénelon (formerly Lamothe-Massat) in the Lot, is a non-conventual priory dependent on the Abbey of Souillac from the twelfth century. Its Romanesque apse, dated from the second half of the 12th century despite a plan evoking the High Middle Ages, contrasts with the nave enlarged in the 14th century and the western facade rebuilt at the same time. Lateral chapels, including that of Notre-Dame-de-Pitié financed by Jean de Salignac around 1490, illustrate late Gothic additions.

The 2011 excavations in the northern chapel revealed earlier masonries probably forming a primitive transept with the southern chapel, while the nave was vaulted between the late 15th and early 16th century. Mural paintings discovered in 1976 (Annunciation, Christ in Majesty) adorn the apse, their "crust" style suggesting a realization prior to the vaulting of the nave. The building, classified as a historic monument in 1913, also retains defensive elements such as the mâchicoulis of the façade.

The history of the church is marked by its link with the local lords: Jean de Salignac founded his grave there in 1497, and Géraud de Marssault, monk of Souillac, was its prior in 1253. The restorations of the 19th and 20th centuries (1863, post-1913) preserved this architectural testimony combining Romanesque and Gothic, reflecting the evolution of a rural priory from Lotais over nearly five centuries.

The interior decor includes carved bow keys and fallout, while the exterior is distinguished by a five-arch campanile and a polygonal staircase turret. The irregularity of the plan, with a sloping south wall and a trapezoidal nave, reveals the successive adaptations. The paintings, although partially erased, offer a rare example of medieval wall art in Quercy.

External links