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Saint John Baptist Church of Mézin dans le Lot-et-Garonne

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Eglise
Eglise romane
Lot-et-Garonne

Saint John Baptist Church of Mézin

    4-10 Place Armand Fallières
    47170 Mézin
Église Saint-Jean-Baptiste de Mézin
Église Saint-Jean-Baptiste de Mézin
Église Saint-Jean-Baptiste de Mézin
Église Saint-Jean-Baptiste de Mézin
Église Saint-Jean-Baptiste de Mézin
Église Saint-Jean-Baptiste de Mézin
Église Saint-Jean-Baptiste de Mézin
Église Saint-Jean-Baptiste de Mézin
Église Saint-Jean-Baptiste de Mézin
Église Saint-Jean-Baptiste de Mézin
Église Saint-Jean-Baptiste de Mézin
Église Saint-Jean-Baptiste de Mézin
Église Saint-Jean-Baptiste de Mézin
Église Saint-Jean-Baptiste de Mézin
Église Saint-Jean-Baptiste de Mézin
Église Saint-Jean-Baptiste de Mézin
Église Saint-Jean-Baptiste de Mézin
Église Saint-Jean-Baptiste de Mézin
Église Saint-Jean-Baptiste de Mézin
Église Saint-Jean-Baptiste de Mézin
Église Saint-Jean-Baptiste de Mézin
Église Saint-Jean-Baptiste de Mézin
Église Saint-Jean-Baptiste de Mézin
Église Saint-Jean-Baptiste de Mézin
Église Saint-Jean-Baptiste de Mézin
Église Saint-Jean-Baptiste de Mézin
Église Saint-Jean-Baptiste de Mézin
Église Saint-Jean-Baptiste de Mézin
Église Saint-Jean-Baptiste de Mézin
Crédit photo : JC Allin - 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
1077
First written entry
fin XIe - début XIIe siècle
Construction of the choir and transept
XIIIe siècle (2e moitié)
Construction campaign for the nave
milieu XIVe siècle
Completion of the nave and facade
1607
Sale of the seigneury
1840
Historical monument classification
1868-1880
Major restoration
1924
Fire from the bell tower
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Church: ranking by list of 1840

Key figures

Abbé Barrère - Local historian Evoked priory foundation in the eighth century.
Coëque-Verdier - Diocesan architect Directea restoration of 1868.
Teulère - Architect Aceva chorus work around 1880.
Payen - Work Supervisor Sculptures completed in 1880.
Poutaraud - Restaurant restaurant Reconstructed vault after 1924.

Origin and history

The church of Saint-Jean-Baptiste de Mézin, located in the Lot-et-Garonne department in Nouvelle-Aquitaine, is a Catholic religious building whose origins date back to at least the eleventh century. Its architecture combines Romanesque elements, visible in the apse and arched apsidioles in cul-de-four, with Gothic additions such as the nave of the 13th-XIVth century, vaulted with warheads and decorated with carved capitals. The facade, flanked by two symmetrical round towers, and the north gate, topped by twelve niches housing the statues of the apostles, bear witness to its rich artistic and religious past.

The construction of the choir and transept probably began at the end of the 11th century, under the influence of the Saint-Sever yard, while the nave was built in two distinct fields: the first in the 13th century (up to the 3rd span), the second in the middle of the 14th century for the last span and the western facade. The church was originally linked to a Benedictine priory founded in the eighth century, mentioned in a papal bubble of 1077 as Cluny's addiction. This priory, whose convent buildings were destroyed after the Wars of Religion and a fire in 1837, shared with the city the seigneury of Mezin until 1607.

Ranked a historic monument in 1840, the church underwent several major restorations. In 1868 the architect Coëque-Verdier rebuilt the abside and the south arm of the transept, while Teulère completed the chorus and strengthened the foothills of the nave to stabilize the vaults. A fire in the bell tower in 1924 damaged the cross, requiring further intervention. These restorations, combined with the traces of the medieval countryside (the 14th century vaults, fantastic capitals of the gate), make this monument a complex testimony of the religious and architectural history of the South-West.

The site also preserves remains of its convent past, such as the sacristy formerly communicating with the Benedictine convent. The capitals, influenced by the art of Saint-Sever, and the niches of the northern gate – emptied of their statues during the Wars of Religion – recall the historical upheavals that marked Mezin. Today owned by the municipality, the church remains a place of worship and heritage, open to the visit in the historic center of the city.

External links