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Commandery of Épailly à Courban en Côte-d'or

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine Templier
Commanderie templière
Côte-dor

Commandery of Épailly

    D102
    21520 Courban
Commanderie dÉpailly vue aérienne
Commanderie dÉpailly
Commanderie dÉpailly
Commanderie dÉpailly
Commanderie dÉpailly
Commanderie dÉpailly
Commanderie dÉpailly
Commanderie dÉpailly
Commanderie dÉpailly
Crédit photo : Ponsignon - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
2000
vers 1200
Foundation by the Templars
1210
Afflux of donations
1213
André de Colours Commander
1308-1328
Conflict with the Grandsons
1328
Transition to Hospitallers
XVe siècle
Hospital fortifications
2010
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The housing body with the cellar, the barns and the dovecote, the vestiges of the enclosure wall and the tower, in total, the ditch, the floors (cf. AD 8, 12): registration by order of 18 May 2010 - The chapel in total (Box AD8): classification by decree of 27 September 2010

Key figures

Milon de Bar-sur-Seine - Count and Benefactor Main donor around 1210.
André de Colours - Templar Commander (1213) Head of Temple houses in France.
Hugues de Pairaud - Commander (1280-1284) Future representative of the Master of the Order.
Othon Ier de Grandson - Papal beneficiary (1308) Receives Pope Clement V.
Jean de Montagny - Hospital Commander (1328) First Commander after the dispute.
Guillaume de Bissey - Templar Brother (1307) Received in the Order in Epiilly.

Origin and history

The Commanderie of Épailly was founded around 1200 by the Templars in the north of the Côte d'Or, near the present boundary with the Aube. This rural site became a rich self-governing commission despite the proximity of the Bure bailey, thanks to abundant donations, notably those of Milon, Count of Bar-sur-Seine, around 1210. The Commanders of Épailly, such as André de Colours (1213) or Hugues de Pairaud (1280-1284), were major figures of the Order, involved in its management and meetings.

Past to the Hospitallers in 1328 after a dispute with the family of Grandson, the commandary was fortified in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. It retained its temple chapel, its vaulted cellar of the 12th century, and a 15th century tower. The Hospitallers added barns, a dovecote and a wall of enclosure, organizing the estate around a courtyard. The chapel, of imposing dimensions, was classified as a historic monument in 2010.

The site, still farmed, offers a faithful overview of its aspect under the Old Regime. The missing buildings were replaced without fragmentation of the estate, thus preserving its historical unity. His possessions included the seigneuries of Bissey-la-Côte and Beauvoir, as well as tithe rights at Dinteville. Recent work has saved the chapel, a major witness to its templar past.

The archaeological and textual sources reveal a typical organization of the commanderies: a chapel with nef sexpartite, a house rebuilt in the 19th century (on medieval cellars), and remains of fortification. Two Templar brothers, Guillaume de Bissey and Simon de Courban, were received there in 1307 under the preceptor Hugues de Villers. The dispute with Othon de Grandson (1308-1328) illustrates the post-dissolution tensions of the Order of the Temple.

Today, the prefecture of Épailly remains a remarkable example of templar and hospital architecture, where defensive, religious and agricultural elements are mixed. Its ranking and registration (2010) protect a rare medieval heritage, still active and open to study. Jean-Bernard de Vaivre and Jean-Marc Roger's research have highlighted its importance in the history of military orders in Burgundy.

External links