First restoration 1781 (≈ 1781)
Addition of a sacristy to the building.
4e quart XVIIIe siècle
Construction of church
Construction of church 4e quart XVIIIe siècle (≈ 1887)
Construction after destruction of the castral settlement.
20 novembre 1979
Classification of furniture
Classification of furniture 20 novembre 1979 (≈ 1979)
Choir ensemble classified historical monument.
2 août 2006
Registration of the church
Registration of the church 2 août 2006 (≈ 2006)
Protection with its cemetery wall.
18 mai 2019
Reopening to the public
Reopening to the public 18 mai 2019 (≈ 2019)
After major restoration financed collectively.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
The entire church and the wall of the cemetery surrounding it (Box AB 55): inscription by decree of 2 August 2006
Key figures
Information non disponible - No character named in the sources
The texts do not cite any specific actors.
Origin and history
The church Saint-Thiébaud de Sainte-Anne, located in the Doubs department in Burgundy-Franche-Comté, was built at the end of the 18th century, when the village was moved after the destruction of the castral village by the French. This new location, along departmental 229 towards Crouzet-Migette, marked a collective reconstruction after a violent episode. The building, typical of franco-comtoise religious architecture, incorporates a bell tower topped by an imperial dome, characteristic of the churches of the Counter-Reform.
By 1781 the church underwent a first restoration with the addition of a sacristy, testifying to its importance to the local community. His furniture, including an 18th-century carved and painted wooden choir (master altar, altarpiece, tabernacle), was classified as a historical monument in 1979. The building and its adjacent cemetery wall were listed in 2006 despite a prolonged closure from 1970 due to its disrepair.
The reopening of the church to the public in May 2019 resulted from a joint mobilisation of the town hall, local associations and the DRAC (Regional Directorate of Cultural Affairs). This restoration project saved an emblematic heritage, linked to the parish of Levier and the diocese of Besançon. The interior architecture, with its three-span nave and vaulted choir, illustrates the aesthetic and spiritual principles of the time.
Today, the Church of St. Thiébaud embodies both a place of worship and a historical testimony of the upheavals in the region at the end of the Old Regime. Its dedicated cemetery, lined with a wall, and its location on an ancient road axis underline its anchoring in the landscape and collective memory.
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