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Former Abbey of Notre-Dame de Valsery à Coeuvres et Valsery dans l'Aisne

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Abbaye
Aisne

Former Abbey of Notre-Dame de Valsery

    4 Valsery
    02600 Coeuvres et Valsery
Abbaye Notre-Dame de Valsery
Ancienne abbaye Notre-Dame de Valsery
Ancienne abbaye Notre-Dame de Valsery
Crédit photo : C. FRANQUELIN - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1100
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1124
Foundation of the Abbey
1153
Final installation in Valsery
1226
Consecration by the Bishop of Soissons
1359 et 1414
Destruction during the Hundred Years War
1567
Sacking during the Wars of Religion
1790-1793
Abolition and revolutionary destruction
1804
Buy ruins by Charles Estave
1986
Historical Monument
1996
Establishment of the restaurant association
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Abbaye de Valsery (vestiges of the old) , including the enclosure wall and the cooler (cad. 1957 AK 15): classification by order of 21 August 1986

Key figures

Jacques de Bazoches - Bishop of Soissons Consecrate the abbey around 1226.
Louis IX - King of France Present for consecration in 1226.
Blanche de Castille - Queen Mother Presented for consecration in 1226.
Marguerite d’Anjou - Wife of Charles de Valois He was buried in the Abbey in 1299.
Jean Leroux - Lord of Saint-Pierre-Aigle Donor of the site in 1153.
Charles Estave - Baron and Mayor of Valsery Buyer of the ruins in 1804.

Origin and history

The Abbey of Notre-Dame de Valsery was founded in 1124 by regular canons of the order of Premontré, near the forest of Retz. Permanently installed on its current site in 1153 thanks to the donations of Jean Leroux, seigneur of Saint-Pierre-Aigle, it became one of the first pre-demonstrated foundations of France. Consecrated around 1226 by the bishop of Soissons Jacques de Bazoches in the presence of Louis IX and Blanche de Castille, it housed prestigious burials, such as those of Marguerite d'Anjou (wife of Charles de Valois) and their daughter Catherine, who died in 1299-1300. The abbey, richly endowed in its early days, suffered the ravages of the Hundred Years' War (fires by the English in 1359 and the Bourguignons in 1414) and the wars of Religion (sacring in 1567 by the Huguenots).

In the 18th century, the abbey underwent partial reconstruction, with a 12th century capitular hall integrated into a modern house body. Deleted from the Revolution (1790), it was sold as national property, and its church and cloister were destroyed in 1793. The ruins were acquired in 1804 by Baron Charles Estave, who had a castle built there, himself destroyed during the bombings of 1918. The current remains include the walls of the canon dormitories, the capitular room (with its illuminations and polychromies), as well as a cooler and a wall of enclosure classified Historic Monuments since 1986.

Since 1996, an association has been working on the restoration of the site, organizing volunteer projects and visits. Archaeological excavations have helped to locate the locations of the abbey church and cloister, buried under two metres of debris. In 2021, a publication synthesized historical and archaeological research, highlighting the abbey's rural heritage. Restoration campaigns continue, as evidenced by a new phase planned for the summer of 2025.

External links