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GrandSelve Abbey à Bouillac dans le Tarn-et-Garonne

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Abbaye
Tarn-et-Garonne

GrandSelve Abbey

    Le Bourg  
    82600 Bouillac
Abbaye de GrandSelve
Abbaye de GrandSelve
Abbaye de GrandSelve
Abbaye de GrandSelve

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1100
1200
1300
1700
1800
1900
2000
1114
Foundation by Géraud de Salles
1144
Connection to Cîteaux
1253
Church Consecration
1279-1290
Bastide Foundation
1791
Abandonment and sale
1793-1815
Progressive Demolition
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Géraud de Salles - Founder of Grandselve Ermite, initiated the monastery in 1114.
Saint Bernard - Influential Cistercian Figure Receives the abbey in 1145 at Clairvaux.
Bertrand I - First Cistercian Abbé Consecrated the Abbey at Cîteaux in 1145.
Philippe le Hardi - Royal Protector Supports the foundation of the bastides.
Eustache de Beaumarchès - Sénéchal de Toulouse Represent the king for the sides.
Mireille Mousnier - Modern historian Author of a major study on Grandselve (2006).

Origin and history

The Abbey of Grandselve, or Grandis Silva, was founded in 1114 by Géraud de Salles under the Benedictine rule, before joining the Order of Cîteaux in 1144. Located in Gascogne, near Verdun-sur-Garonne, it depended on the diocese of Toulouse and became a major spiritual and economic centre of Midi. Its church, 100 meters long, was consecrated in 1253 after decades of construction. The abbey controlled a vast estate of 20,000 hectares, operating mills, tiles, vineyards, and possessing property in Toulouse, Paris, and Bordeaux, where it shipped 300 barrels of wine per year.

Grandselve founded several abbey girls, including Fontfroide (1144) and Santes Creus (1152), and participated in the creation of the bastides of Beaumont-de-Lomagne (1279) and Granada (1290). Protected by figures such as Richard Coeur de Lion or Philippe le Hardi, it declined from the 14th century, victim of wars (Cent Years, English companies) and the regime of commende. In 1791 the monks gave up, and the buildings were sold as national property before being demolished between 1793 and 1815.

Today, only the portery of the eighteenth century remains, from the capitals to the Ingres-Bourdelle Museum (Montauban), and seven reliquaries preserved in the church of Bouillac. The remains bear witness to its past influence, while local archives and studies (such as those of Mireille Mousnier) perpetuate its memory. The abbey illustrates the Cistercian influence in Occitania, mixing spiritual power, agricultural innovations, and urbanist role via the bastids.

External links