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Saint Pierre de Lasson Church dans le Calvados

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Eglise gothique
Calvados

Saint Pierre de Lasson Church

    Rue Crois Mare
    14740 Lasson
Église Saint-Pierre de Lasson
Église Saint-Pierre de Lasson
Église Saint-Pierre de Lasson
Église Saint-Pierre de Lasson
Église Saint-Pierre de Lasson
Église Saint-Pierre de Lasson
Église Saint-Pierre de Lasson
Église Saint-Pierre de Lasson
Église Saint-Pierre de Lasson
Église Saint-Pierre de Lasson
Église Saint-Pierre de Lasson
Église Saint-Pierre de Lasson
Église Saint-Pierre de Lasson
Église Saint-Pierre de Lasson
Église Saint-Pierre de Lasson
Église Saint-Pierre de Lasson
Église Saint-Pierre de Lasson
Église Saint-Pierre de Lasson
Église Saint-Pierre de Lasson
Église Saint-Pierre de Lasson
Église Saint-Pierre de Lasson
Église Saint-Pierre de Lasson
Église Saint-Pierre de Lasson
Église Saint-Pierre de Lasson
Église Saint-Pierre de Lasson
Église Saint-Pierre de Lasson
Église Saint-Pierre de Lasson
Église Saint-Pierre de Lasson
Église Saint-Pierre de Lasson
Église Saint-Pierre de Lasson
Église Saint-Pierre de Lasson
Église Saint-Pierre de Lasson
Église Saint-Pierre de Lasson
Église Saint-Pierre de Lasson
Église Saint-Pierre de Lasson
Église Saint-Pierre de Lasson
Église Saint-Pierre de Lasson
Église Saint-Pierre de Lasson
Église Saint-Pierre de Lasson
Église Saint-Pierre de Lasson
Église Saint-Pierre de Lasson
Église Saint-Pierre de Lasson
Église Saint-Pierre de Lasson
Crédit photo : Pescure - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
XIVe siècle
Initial construction
début XVIe siècle
Construction of the bell tower
1927
Protection of the bell tower
7 avril 1980
Lightning on the tower
1999-2001
Searches and catering
décembre 2000
Classification of the statue
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The bell tower: inscription by decree of 16 May 1927

Key figures

Gilles Chapelle - Abbot and builder Reconstructs the church and erects the bell tower.
Famille de Croismare - Local Lords Funeral liter in the church.

Origin and history

The Saint-Pierre de Lasson church, located in Calvados in Normandy, is a Catholic building dating back to the 14th century. Its modest country architecture, without transept, reveals preromanous traces like a wall in opus spicatum (fish ridges) on the north side, while the choir, largely redesigned, and the nave bear the marks of multiple transformations over the centuries. The tower, backed by the south wall, was built in the early 16th century by Abbé Gilles Chapelle, as evidenced by an epitaph engraved inside.

The tower suffered major damage in 1980 when lightning destroyed its arrow, later rebuilt in a less elegant style. Between 1999 and 2001, excavations financed by a local donor uncovered graves under the pavement, a funeral liter of the Crosmare family (teachers of the place), and a polychrome statue of 15th-century St. Peter, classified as a historical monument in 2000. This statue, probably buried during the wars of Religion or Revolution, is now exposed in the tower.

The bell tower, the only protected element since 1927, houses a 16th century stone pulpit similar to those of nearby churches. The stained glass windows, mostly modern (XX century), illustrate holy figures such as the parish priest of Ars or Saint John Eudes. Recent work has also revealed structural changes, such as obstructing a north door after a westward expansion to accommodate a stand. The building, a communal property, remains a testament to the architectural and cultural evolutions of rural Normandy.

Among the notable discoveries, a 17th-century child virgin, originally placed near the outside , was moved into the nave. The stained glass windows of the choir, restored during the renovations, date back to 1947 and between the two wars, while a window of 2002 represents St Peter receiving the keys to Christ. These elements reflect both local piety and the successive adaptations of the building to liturgical and community needs.

External links