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Église Saint-Vigor de Colleville-Montgomery dans le Calvados

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Eglise romane et gothique
Calvados

Église Saint-Vigor de Colleville-Montgomery

    7-11 Grande Rue
    14880 Colleville-Montgomery
Église Saint-Vigor de Colleville-Montgomery
Église Saint-Vigor de Colleville-Montgomery
Église Saint-Vigor de Colleville-Montgomery
Église Saint-Vigor de Colleville-Montgomery
Église Saint-Vigor de Colleville-Montgomery
Église Saint-Vigor de Colleville-Montgomery
Église Saint-Vigor de Colleville-Montgomery
Église Saint-Vigor de Colleville-Montgomery
Église Saint-Vigor de Colleville-Montgomery
Église Saint-Vigor de Colleville-Montgomery
Église Saint-Vigor de Colleville-Montgomery
Église Saint-Vigor de Colleville-Montgomery
Église Saint-Vigor de Colleville-Montgomery
Église Saint-Vigor de Colleville-Montgomery
Église Saint-Vigor de Colleville-Montgomery
Église Saint-Vigor de Colleville-Montgomery
Église Saint-Vigor de Colleville-Montgomery
Église Saint-Vigor de Colleville-Montgomery
Église Saint-Vigor de Colleville-Montgomery
Église Saint-Vigor de Colleville-Montgomery
Église Saint-Vigor de Colleville-Montgomery
Église Saint-Vigor de Colleville-Montgomery
Église Saint-Vigor de Colleville-Montgomery
Église Saint-Vigor de Colleville-Montgomery
Église Saint-Vigor de Colleville-Montgomery
Église Saint-Vigor de Colleville-Montgomery
Église Saint-Vigor de Colleville-Montgomery
Église Saint-Vigor de Colleville-Montgomery
Église Saint-Vigor de Colleville-Montgomery
Église Saint-Vigor de Colleville-Montgomery
Crédit photo : Hugues Desponts - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1100
1200
1300
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1082
First mention of Colleville
XIIe siècle
Initial construction of the church
1680
Meeting of the two cures
1789-1799
Refractory during the Revolution
1927
Historical Monument
7 juin 1944
Damage during Disembarkation
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Choir: registration by order of 16 May 1927

Key figures

Guillaume le Conquérant - Duke of Normandy and King of England Signatory of the charter of 1082 mentioning Colleville.
Mathilde de Flandre - Wife of William the Conqueror Co-signatory of the charter of 1082.
Saint Vigor - Bishop of Bayeux (VIth century) Patron of the church, dedicated to several Norman buildings.
Jacques Michel - Master glassmaker (XX century) Author of modern stained glass windows after 1944.

Origin and history

The Saint-Vigor Church, located in Colleville-Montgomery, Calvados, is a Catholic building dating back to the 12th century. Although partially rebuilt in the 13th and 15th centuries, it preserves Romanesque elements such as arches in full hanger and carved modillons. Its square bell tower, typical of Norman architecture, was damaged in 1944 during the fighting of the Liberation and then restored to the same style. The nave, never vaulted, and the choir separated by an arc in the middle of the spectrum, testify to its architectural evolution over the centuries.

The first written mention of Colleville (then Colivilla) dates from 1082, in a charter signed by William the Conqueror and Mathilde, assigning tithes to the abbey of the Trinity of Caen. The church, dedicated to Saint Vigor (Bishop of Bayeux in the 6th century), was under the alternating patronage of this abbey and the chapter of Bayeux. Until 1680, the parish was headed by two parish priests, a common practice in Normandy. The tithe revenues were shared between the abbey, the bishopric, and other religious institutions, reflecting the economic importance of religious buildings in the Middle Ages.

At the time of the Revolution, the parish priest of Colleville, like many in the West, refused to take the oath of the Civil Constitution of the clergy and was declared refractory. In the 19th century, the church was listed as a Historic Monument in 1927 for its choir. In 1944, English shells targeting German soldiers stationed in the bell tower destroyed part of the choir and damaged the tower. Subsequent restorations, faithful to the original, include the piercing of a large doorway in the bedside and the relocation of the baptismal fonts of the eighteenth century in the chapel.

The building is distinguished by its three-level tower-clocher, crowned with niches, and its modern stained glass windows created by Jacques Michel after 1944, depicting biblical scenes and Saint Vigor. The nave, flaked with buttresses, preserves traces of walled arcades and stones arranged in fish ridge. The chapel Notre-Dame-des-Vœux, added in the 13th century, communicates with the nave by arches in broken arches. The ensemble illustrates the stylistic transitions between Roman and Gothic, characteristic of Norman architecture.

The Le Sueur de Colleville family, a noble Protestant converted in the 17th century, owned much of the local land but resided outside the village. Their absence and the religious tensions of the time (such as the refusal of the constitutional oath) reflect the social upheavals that marked the history of the parish. Today, the church, a communal property, remains a testimony of the links between religious, seigneurial and community power in Normandy since the Middle Ages.

External links