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Saint Vincent de Cros Church dans le Gard

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Art roman languedocien
Gard

Saint Vincent de Cros Church

    L'Église
    30170 Cros
Église Saint-Vincent de Cros
Église Saint-Vincent de Cros
Crédit photo : Roland Castanet - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Antiquité
Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
0
100
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
22–23 décembre 1702
Fire camisard
XIIe siècle (début)
Construction of church
1314
First written entry
1562–1598
Wars of Religion
1686
Post-Revocation Expansion
1961
Historical monument classification
2012–2013
Complete restoration
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Church (C 1081): registration by order of 27 September 1961

Key figures

Abbé Goiffon - Local historian Cits the episcopal visit of 1611.
Évêque Valernod - Episcopal Visitor (1611) Ordone of repairs not performed.
Louis XIV - King of France Launch the Catholic reconquest post-1685.
Famille Caylus - Benefactors (19th century) Finance bell and objects of worship.
Nathalie d’Artigues - Heritage architect Master of restoration (2012).

Origin and history

The church of Saint Vincent de Cros, built in the 12th century on a nipple overlooking the Vidourle, is part of a garrigue landscape marked by transhumance drails. Its isolated settlement, surrounded by rare houses and scattered hamlets, suggests a role both spiritual and practical for travelers or shepherds. The term Saint Vincent, attested from 1314 (ecclesia de Sancto Vincencio de CROSO), probably dates back to its foundation, although its written history begins late.

The architecture, homogeneous and dated from the end of the 11th or early 12th century, is characterized by a unique nave of two vaulted bays in cradle, a semicircular sanctuary in cul-de-four, and thick walls (1.35 m) buttocked by discreet foothills. The absence of carved decorations, the partial lumbar arches on the abside, and the windows in the middle of a double-brassed hanger reflect the sober Romancevenol style. The sacristy, added in the 17th century, and the wooden stands of the 18th century (destroyed since) testify to subsequent adaptations for a growing parish.

From the beginning, the church depends on the diocese of Nîmes and the canonial chapter of Our Lady. In the 16th century, the parish, converted to the Reformation, suffered the wars of Religion (1562–98) and the wars of Rohan (until 1629), during which time the building, neglected, partially lost its roof. The episcopal visits of 1611 and 1675 ordered reparations, never carried out for lack of means. The revocation of the edict of Nantes (1685) revived the work: in 1686, the diocese financed galleries to enlarge the church, then considered too small for 650 inhabitants.

The Camisard revolt (1702–04) marked a violent turning point: on the night of December 22-23, 1702, insurgents burned the door and the stands without damaging the structure. The episcopal reports of 1723 describe an "old and very solid" building, but indicate missing stained glass windows and a long cracked bell. In the 18th century, a presbytery was finally built (1756), and the priory was attached in 1740 to the mense of the seminary of Alès, offering the inhabitants a free place for a child.

The French Revolution saves the church, although declared national: its small size (200 places) saves it from a transformation into a temple of Reason. Sold partially (presbytery and garden in 1809), it remains a branch of Saint-Hippolyte-du-Fort, with an occasional cult. In the 19th century, the Caylus and Bourgoing families financed a bell (1843) and liturgical objects, feeding a local legend of buying the building. Ranked a historic monument in 1961, it was restored in 2012–2013 under the direction of DRAC, with a solemn reopening on May 31, 2013.

External links