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Farm Saint-Gilles de Wintzenheim dans le Haut-Rhin

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine rural
Ferme
Haut-Rhin

Farm Saint-Gilles de Wintzenheim

    Route des 5 Châteaux (Saint-Gilles)
    68920 Wintzenheim
Crédit photo : éditeur : Jacques Rothmuller - 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
1700
1800
1900
2000
XIIe siècle
Origins of the priory
1325
Expansion of the chapel
1575
Acquisition by Colmar
1714
Transfer to the Grand Chapter
1777
Restoration and modifications
1793
Sale as a national good
1815
De-acralization and division
2002
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Facades and roofs (see plan attached to the file); Baluster staircase in the east wing; Former chapel Saint-Gilles with murals on the ground floor of the north wing (Box 82 1): inscription by order of 5 April 2002

Key figures

Louis XIV - King of France Confeded the church to the Grand Chapter in 1714.
Jean Jacques Hanhart - Colmarian trader Buyer in 1815, disacralized the chapel.

Origin and history

The Saint-Gilles farm in Wintzenheim was built in the 12th century, with the construction of a building in the Saint-Gilles valley. In 1325, a chapel decorated with murals was mentioned during expansion work, including a new choir. This secondary priory then depended on the priory Saint-Pierre de Colmar, himself linked to the Clunisian abbey of Payerne in Switzerland. The chapel, dedicated to Saint Gilles, was a place of devotion before the Reformation transformed its use.

In 1575, the town of Colmar acquired the estate after the introduction of the Reformation, converting it into a farm until 1714. That year, Louis XIV entrusted the church, then abandoned, to the Grand Chapter of Strasbourg Cathedral. A statue of Saint Gilles, inspired by a medieval work, was installed after a church reconciliation in 1713. The murals, restored in 1777, were hidden under plaster during the Revolution.

Sold as a national property in 1793, the property was bought by Colmar before being sold in 1815 to a merchant, Jean Jacques Hanhart. The latter disacralized the chapel, dividing it into two levels to create a dwelling, and adding a lantern. Since then, the site, classified as a historical monument in 2002, has preserved its U-shaped plan with remains of the chapel, 14th century murals, and architectural elements of the 19th and 18th centuries.

The building thus illustrates a transition between religious and agricultural use, marked by major transformations in the 18th and 19th centuries. The murals, rediscovered after being hidden, testify to his past as a clunisian priory. Today, the farm remains an example of architectural and historical adaptation, mixing medieval heritage and post-revolutionary changes.

External links