Foundation by Saint Gausbert XIe siècle (≈ 1150)
Construction of the monastery and Romanesque church.
XVIIe siècle
External renovation
External renovation XVIIe siècle (≈ 1750)
Modification of the church façade.
11 juillet 1942
Partial registration
Partial registration 11 juillet 1942 (≈ 1942)
Old building listed Historic Monument.
26 mars 1982
Complete classification
Complete classification 26 mars 1982 (≈ 1982)
Church, capitular room and refectory classified.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Former buildings dependent on the abbey including the presbytery adjacent to the church but except classified refectory: inscription by decree of 11 July 1942; Church; Chapter Hall (currently sacristy); building of the refectory (cad. AE 233, 236, 238): Order of 26 March 1982
Key figures
Saint Gausbert - Founder of the Abbey
Initiator of construction in the 11th century.
Origin and history
The former Notre-Dame de l'Assomption Abbey, located in Montsalvy in the Cantal, is an emblematic monument of the village, serving both as a parish church and as a parish seat. Founded in the 11th century under the impulse of Saint Gausbert, it was organized around a monastery south of the church, structured by a now extinct cloister. The latter was bounded by the capitular hall, a house to the east, and the refectory of the monks to the south. Today, only the presbytery remains, the vestige of the western house body.
The church, Romanesque style, consists of a nave flanked by two sides, a transept and three apsidioles in cul-de-four. Its exterior was thoroughly remodeled in the 17th century, while the interior houses remarkable elements such as a museum of the cantonal art and a wooden Christ. The ancient buildings, including the capitular hall and the refectory, were classified as Historic Monument in 1982, after a first partial inscription in 1942. The cloister, once closed, now presents an opening, suggesting the location of an old doorway, a traditional place of reception for pilgrims and the administration of monastic justice.
The site also illustrates the judicial functions of medieval abbeys: a prison, now destroyed, was joined to the refectory, recalling the power of religious over local justice. The excavations and written sources confirm a continuous occupation from the 11th to the 18th century, with major architectural changes in the 13th, 15th and 17th centuries. The abbey, owned by the commune, remains a key testimony of monastic history in Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, combining religious heritage, Romanesque art and traces of medieval community life.
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