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Saint Uniac Church of Saint Uniac à Saint-Uniac en Ille-et-Vilaine

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Eglise romane et gothique
Ille-et-Vilaine

Saint Uniac Church of Saint Uniac

    1-3 Allée du Prieuré
    35360 Saint-Uniac
Église Saint-Uniac de Saint-Uniac
Église Saint-Uniac de Saint-Uniac
Église Saint-Uniac de Saint-Uniac
Église Saint-Uniac de Saint-Uniac
Église Saint-Uniac de Saint-Uniac
Église Saint-Uniac de Saint-Uniac
Église Saint-Uniac de Saint-Uniac
Église Saint-Uniac de Saint-Uniac
Église Saint-Uniac de Saint-Uniac
Église Saint-Uniac de Saint-Uniac
Église Saint-Uniac de Saint-Uniac
Église Saint-Uniac de Saint-Uniac
Église Saint-Uniac de Saint-Uniac
Église Saint-Uniac de Saint-Uniac
Église Saint-Uniac de Saint-Uniac
Église Saint-Uniac de Saint-Uniac
Église Saint-Uniac de Saint-Uniac
Église Saint-Uniac de Saint-Uniac
Église Saint-Uniac de Saint-Uniac
Église Saint-Uniac de Saint-Uniac
Église Saint-Uniac de Saint-Uniac
Église Saint-Uniac de Saint-Uniac
Église Saint-Uniac de Saint-Uniac
Église Saint-Uniac de Saint-Uniac
Église Saint-Uniac de Saint-Uniac
Église Saint-Uniac de Saint-Uniac
Église Saint-Uniac de Saint-Uniac
Église Saint-Uniac de Saint-Uniac
Église Saint-Uniac de Saint-Uniac
Église Saint-Uniac de Saint-Uniac
Église Saint-Uniac de Saint-Uniac
Église Saint-Uniac de Saint-Uniac
Église Saint-Uniac de Saint-Uniac
Église Saint-Uniac de Saint-Uniac
Église Saint-Uniac de Saint-Uniac
Crédit photo : Styfler bzh - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
600
700
800
900
1000
1100
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
VIe siècle
Foundation of the Priory
IXe siècle
Transformation into a parish
Début XIe siècle
Romanesque construction
Fin XIVe siècle
Ship of the nave
XVe siècle
Gothic changes
1853
Destruction of the bell tower
1856–1859
Reconstruction of the façade
1997
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Church (Cd. A 175): by order of 24 December 1997

Key figures

Saint Uniac - Founder of the Priory 6th century Breton monk.
Hippolyte Béziers-Lafosse - 19th century architect Reconstructed facade and bell tower in 1856–59.

Origin and history

The church of Saint Uniac, located in the village of Saint Uniac in Ille-et-Vilaine, finds its origins in the sixth century with the foundation of a priory by Saint Uniac, a Breton monk having established a monastery nearby. This priory, initially dependent on the Abbey of Saint-Méen, became a parish in the ninth century. The present volume of the church and part of its walls date back to the early 11th century, marking the transition to a Romanesque building. The traces of this period could remain in the nave, the choir, and the location of the old sacristy, perhaps inherited from the original monastic choir.

In the 14th century, the church was enriched with two seigneurial chapels north of the nave, one of which, in the east, was partially rebuilt and raised in the 15th century. A third chapel, added to the south during the same period, bears witness to the increasing importance of the place. The structure of the nave, dated from the end of the 14th century, and that of the choir, of the 15th century, reveal a remarkable craftsmanship: the "short punch" frame is decorated with plant motifs drawn with charcoal on a background of lime, with alternate inscriptions "IHS" and "MARIA". These elements, rediscovered in 1990, are a rare example of preserved medieval decor.

The 19th century marked a major transformation with the destruction of the cross-tower in 1853, replaced by a bell tower erected in 1859 by the Malouin architect Hippolyte Béziers-Lafosse. The latter also rebuilt the western façade between 1856 and 1859, incorporating an old re-used door. The interior decor, typical of the period, contrasts with the preserved medieval elements, such as the south window of the choir dated 1547, originally located in the northern chapel. The church, which has been a historic monument since 1997, embodies almost a millennium of Breton religious and architectural history.

External links