Origin and history
The church Sainte-Barbe-et-Saint-Sébastien de Chambolle-Musigny, located in the Côte-d'Or department in Burgundy-Franche-Comté, was built between 1500 and 1506 under the impulse of Jean Moisson, ancestor of the family of the Count of Vogüé. This noble local, the central figure of its creation, was a lasting mark of the religious heritage of the commune. The building, from plan to Latin cross, combines stone and stone, with a two-span nave and a choir pierced with broken arched bays. Its bell tower, positioned on the north transept, is distinguished by a dome with an imperial rare in the area, while its portal, framed by pilasters, has a square door surmounted by a sketched triangular pediment.
The murals of the choir, performed in 1539 and rediscovered in 1895 during works, constitute one of the treasures of the church. Commanded by John Moisson, they represent a procession of saints and biblical figures, dressed in the Roman or Oriental style, organized according to the liturgical order. Among the scenes figurated are angels, virgins, confessors, St.Michel dominating the twelve apostles, as well as John Moisson and his family alongside the Virgin and John the Baptist. A Latin inscription ("Regem virginu domini venite adoremus... 1539") confirms their dating. These paintings, made on a complex coating (sable, crushed brick, lime, plaster and animal hair), were restored in 1901 by Louis Joseph Yperman, restorer of the Historic Monuments.
The church enjoyed double protection in respect of historical monuments: the choir, the murals, the glass windows and two tombstones were classified by decree of 21 November 1896, while the rest of the building was inscribed on 10 November 1928. Other notable features include a sundial on the southern façade in 1885, a 16th-century window representing the Annunciation, the Nativity and Calvary, and a funeral slab by Jean Moisson and his wife Isabeau. The bronze bell of 1556, still in place in the bell tower, and several statues complete this protected furniture. Today integrated into the Gevrey-Chambertin parish - Gilly-les-Cîteaux - The Etang-Vergy (Diocese of Dijon), the church remains a major testimony of Burgundy religious art of the Renaissance.
The architecture of the church reveals various influences, as evidenced by its dome to the imperial, unusual in Burgundy, or its bays in broken arch mixed with oculi in the transept. The choice of materials — coated bellows, cut stone corner chains — and the presence of foothills underline a careful construction, adapted to local constraints. Inside, the nave and the choir, both with two spans, create a spatial harmony reinforced by filtering light through the old windows. The outer oratory, with its sculpture of Christ, and the sundial add to the symbolic richness of the place, reflecting both the piety and the artisanal know-how of the time.
The murals of the choir, besides their artistic value, offer an overview of the religious and social practices of the sixteenth century in Burgundy. The representation of Jean Moisson and his family alongside saints underlines the role of local elites in religious patronage, while the costumes "to the Roman" or "Oriental" characters reveal the influence of Italian or Byzantine models, disseminated by engravings and cultural exchanges. The rediscovery of these frescoes in 1895, followed by their restoration, illustrates the growing interest in the preservation of heritage at the end of the 19th century, a period marked by the creation of the inventory of historic monuments (1840) and the first laws of protection (1887, 1913).
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