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Ivry-la-Battle Abbey à Ivry-la-Bataille dans l'Eure

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Abbaye
Eure

Ivry-la-Battle Abbey

    1-4 Rue de l'Abbaye
    27540 Ivry-la-Bataille
Abbaye dIvry-la-Bataille
Abbaye dIvry-la-Bataille
Crédit photo : Gregofhuest - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1100
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
vers 1071
Foundation of the Abbey
1087
Fire of the Abbey
1563
Calvinist pickling
1668
Reform by Saint-Maur
1791
Revolutionary suppression
30 janvier 1932
Partial MH classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Portal with statue and adjoining Romanesque arcade: classification by decree of 30 January 1932

Key figures

Roger d'Ivry - Founder and Count Anglo-Norman Close to William the Conqueror, initiator of the abbey.
Philibert Delorme - Abbé (1548–1560) Positioned during the looting of 1563.
Philippe de Vendôme - Abbey (from 1668) Supervises reform and reconstruction in Mauritius.
Gustave de Reiset - Collector and donor Offered an engraving of the original plan to the town hall.

Origin and history

The Abbey of Notre-Dame d'Ivry, founded around 1071 by Roger d'Ivry, Count Anglo-Norman and close to William the Conqueror, was a Benedictine monastery located away from the enclosed city of Ivry-la-Battle. From the family of the lords of Ivry, Roger d'Ivry made it a place of power, marked by family arms: of gold to three gules. The abbey was burned in 1087, then looted in 1563 by the Calvinists during the Wars of Religion, losing its abbey church under the abbatiate of Philibert Delorme.

In the 17th century, the abbey was reformed by the congregation of Saint-Maur, which engaged major reconstructions from 1668 under the Abbé Commendataire Philippe de Vendôme. Like other Norman monasteries, it benefited from work aimed at restoring monastic discipline and architectural heritage. However, its decline accelerated with the Revolution: the abbey was abolished in 1791 and sold as a national property, marking the end of its religious role.

After 1791, the site was converted into a cotton mill in 1805, before a fire ravaged the site in 1869. Today, only the 12th century portal — decorated with a column statue similar to Chartres — and a Romanesque arcade, classified as historical monuments in 1932 remain. The remains bear witness to its prestigious past, while substructions and foothills are still visible in neighbouring properties. The abbey's works of art, like wooden statues and paintings, were transferred to Saint Martin's church in Ivry after the Revolution.

The iconography of the abbey is documented by the Monasticon Gallicanum (plank XXII, 1687) and an engraving of the original plan, offered to the town hall by Gustave de Reiset. These sources, combined with local archives, allow to trace partially its history, from its medieval foundation to its progressive disappearance. The weapons of the lords of Ivry, always associated with the monument, recall its link with the Norman aristocracy of the 11th and 12th centuries.

External links