Origin and history
The Notre-Dame-de-Valvert church, located 200 metres south of the village of Allos on a hillside at 1400 m above sea level, is a Romanesque orientated building built between the second half of the 9th century and the first half of the 10th century. Built in the middle of a grey marnous limestone apparatus, it consists of a unique nave of three vaulted spans in a full-circle cradle, a lower chorus span covered with a broken cradle, and an apse in a vaulted hemicycle in a cul-de-four. The sculpted capitals, the double arches and the bays in the middle illustrate Alpine Romanesque art. Ranked a Historic Monument in 1846, it underwent major restorations at the end of the 19th century, notably by the architects Révoil and Jacob, who rebuilt the foothills, vaults and the bell tower arcade.
The history of the church is marked by repeated damage: collapse of the bell tower in 1697 during the Savoyard invasions, fire of the town in 1747, and structural degradation reported in 1891. The repairs, such as that of the vault of the choir in 1697 by master mason Joseph Classe, or the construction of a sacristy in 1727 on the foundations of the old bell tower, testify to its local importance. In the 17th century, it was the parish church of Allos, mentioned as early as 1300 in the diocese of Senez. The murals, now missing, and liturgical furniture (retables, statues, windows) reflect its spiritual and artistic role.
The movable heritage includes remarkable elements such as a chair to preach, statues (Vierge to the Child, Christ on the Cross), paintings (the Coronation of the Virgin, the Donation of the Rosary), and a bell dedicated to Saint John the Baptist. The nave, illuminated by bays in the middle, and abside decorated with fine mouldings, preserve traces of ochre badigeon. On the outside, the west façade, with a crawling cornice gable and a six-degree front door, as well as the arched bell tower, characterize its current appearance. The larch shingles, typical of the Alps, cover the roof.
The restorations of the 19th century, though radical, preserved medieval elements such as hooked capitals, ground cords and double roller triumphal arch. The church, a communal property, remains a major witness to Provencal Romanesque art, despite the disappearance of some original elements (paintings, awnings in frame). Its early ranking in 1846 underscores its heritage value, reinforced by its mountainous isolation and its link to local religious history.
The sacristy, adjacent to the north wall, dates from the 18th century and replaces the destroyed old bell tower. Inside, a wooden stand in the first span and a flat floor complete the layout. The exterior foothills, rebuilt in 1894-1896, stabilize the structure, while crows and cords in quarter-round remind medieval techniques. The loculus of the eastern gable, walled before 1723, and traces of the awning disappeared in 1712, evoke its successive transformations.
Today, Notre-Dame-de-Valvert attracts its Romanesque-Alpine architecture, liturgical furniture and mountainous surroundings. Its history, marked by conflicts (wars of Savoy), disasters (fires) and restorations, illustrates the resilience of Provençal religious heritage. The glass windows, retables and statues, protected by the Historical Monuments, make it a place of memory and devotion that is always active in the d'Allos community.
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