First written entry 1099 (≈ 1099)
Charter citing *Ecclesia S. Agathe apud Varequas*.
fin XIe - XIIe siècle
Construction of church
Construction of church fin XIe - XIIe siècle (≈ 1295)
Main campaign in Romanesque style.
1643
Recast of the vault
Recast of the vault 1643 (≈ 1643)
Rebuilt cradle vault.
1876
Addition of the neo-Roman portal
Addition of the neo-Roman portal 1876 (≈ 1876)
Neo-Roman style southern portal.
22 juillet 1963
Partial classification
Partial classification 22 juillet 1963 (≈ 1963)
Southern horse and wall protected.
2005-2009
Recent restorations
Recent restorations 2005-2009 (≈ 2007)
Work on church and court.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Exterior of the apse and southern wall of the nave (Box A 99): inscription by decree of 22 July 1963
Key figures
Information non disponible - No character cited
The source text does not mention any named historical actor.
Origin and history
The Sainte-Agathe church of Valergues, located in the Hérault in Occitanie, is a Romanesque building built between the late 11th and 12th centuries. Mentioned in 1099 under the name Ecclesia S. Agathe apud Varequas, it belonged to a priory-curer dependent on the archprier of Baillargues. Valergues, then royal seigneury, housed this place of worship linked to the monastery of Psalmody, before his attachment to the singing of the Cathedral chapter of Alès in 1694. Its architecture, marked by a Lombard bedside and a unique nave vaulted in a cradle, reflects a homogeneous construction campaign, despite a visible recovery on the apse.
The exterior decor, typically Lombardy, adorns the apse and the lateral walls of the nave, with bands of lesenes and arcatures. The apsidial window, surrounded by a twisted cord, has a rare wisigothic motif: a solar wheel ensnaring a marguerite, taken from the gable wall. The richly decorated southern facade features high windows topped by arches and busy chiseled columns. The neo-roman portal, added in 1876, contrasts with the Romanesque origin of the southern gate, with a back-tower in full hanger.
Partially classified as historical monuments in 1963 (chew and southern wall), the church benefited from restorations in 2005, 2007 and 2009. Its semicircular apse, its modern lateral chapel to the north, and its vault redone in 1643 bear witness to a complex architectural history. The materials, such as the cut stone assembled in opus monspeliensis, and the tiles covering the apse, underline its anchoring in regional constructive traditions.
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