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Chapel of the Rise of Auxonne à Tillenay en Côte-d'or

Côte-dor

Chapel of the Rise of Auxonne

    31 La Chapelle
    21130 Tillenay

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1244
Fondation de la Maison-Dieu
1429
Reconstruction and consecration
1520
Construction of the current building
1788-1791
Visits of Napoleon Bonaparte
1867
Repurchase by the municipality of Auxonne
1932
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Chapelle de la Levée d'Auxonne : classification by decree of 20 January 1932

Key figures

Perron de Saint-Seine - Knight and Lord of Villers-les-Pots Founded the House of God in 1244.
Jehan d’Auxonne - Rector of the Church of Wimbledon Rebuilt the chapel around 1295.
Hugues d’Orges - Bishop of Chalon Consecrated the chapel in 1429.
Jehan Vatel - Priest and chaplain Rebuilt the chapel in 1520.
Napoléon Bonaparte - Artillery officer Visited the chapel between 1788-1791.
Général de Cointet - Patron and military The restoration was launched in 1932.

Origin and history

The Notre-Dame-de-la-Levée chapel, located at the so-called "La Chapelle" near Tillenay, finds its origins in a "House-Dieu" erected in 1244 by Perron de Saint-Seine, knight and lord of Villers-les-Pots. This building, placed under the name of Notre-Dame, depended on the diocese of Chalon. Rebuilt around 1295 at the initiative of Jehan d'Auxonne, rector of the church of Wimbledon, it was destroyed in the early 15th century by the Big Companies, then rebuilt and consecrated in 1429 by Hugues d'Orges, bishop of Chalon.

The current building dates back to 1520, rebuilt by Jehan Vatel, priest and chaplain, as evidenced by an inscription on a foothill. Together with a miraculous fountain, the chapel became a renowned pilgrimage site, especially during plague outbreaks, and a refuge for travellers and merchants on their way to Italy. It was sold as a national property after the Revolution, transformed into a farm, then bought in 1867 by the commune of Auxonne, before being classified as a historical monument in 1932.

The chapel consists of two brick building bodies, uneven heights but of the same width. The lower part, with an apparent structure, served as a hotel, while the upper part, vaulted with a polygonal apse, housed worship. Its Gothic stone frame and foothills make it a rare example of "House-God" still standing. Napoleon Bonaparte, stationed at Auxonne between 1788 and 1791, went there several times.

The restoration work, initiated in the 1930s thanks to a subscription launched by General Cointet and a state subsidy, saved the building. Today, the chapel remains an architectural and historical testimony of medieval roads and Marian devotion in Burgundy.

External links