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Chapel of Locmaria de Ploemel dans le Morbihan

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Chapelle gothique
Clocher-mur
Morbihan

Chapel of Locmaria de Ploemel

    Locmaria
    56400 Ploemel
Chapelle de Locmaria de Ploemel
Chapelle de Locmaria de Ploemel
Chapelle de Locmaria de Ploemel
Chapelle de Locmaria de Ploemel
Chapelle de Locmaria de Ploemel
Chapelle de Locmaria de Ploemel
Chapelle de Locmaria de Ploemel
Chapelle de Locmaria de Ploemel
Chapelle de Locmaria de Ploemel
Chapelle de Locmaria de Ploemel
Chapelle de Locmaria de Ploemel
Chapelle de Locmaria de Ploemel
Chapelle de Locmaria de Ploemel
Chapelle de Locmaria de Ploemel
Crédit photo : Rosescreen - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1340
Death of Pierre de Broérec
XIVe–XVe siècles
Reconstruction by the Broerec
fin XVe siècle
Construction of the current building
1830
Demolition of the choir
3 novembre 1927
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Chapelle de Locmaria (Box D 125): inscription by order of 3 November 1927

Key figures

Pierre de Broérec - Lord and soldier Breton Funeral slab in tuffeau repatriated in 1340.
Famille Broérec - Chapel sponsors Family cellar under the old choir.

Origin and history

The chapel Notre-Dame de Pitié, located at Locmaria in Ploemel (Morbihan), has its origins in the 14th century under the impetus of the Broérec family. She installed a family vault under the choir, which had now disappeared, and laid there in 1340 the carved tombstone of Pierre de Broérec, who died in Saumur during the Hundred Years War. The latter, a member of the Breton army allied with Philippe VI de Valois, was repatriated with his tuffeau funerary slab, richly decorated.

The present building, built at the end of the 15th century, preserves only the nave of an initially larger chapel. The current bedside corresponds to the old chancel wall, whose diaphragm arch was filled. The choir, which was abolished in 1830, revealed the tombstone of Pierre de Broérec. The chapel, rectangular with three vessels, has broken arches and an apparent frame with chamfered punches. Its western portal, adorned with faces and crosses, evokes the chapel of the Loc in Saint-Avé.

Ranked a historic monument in 1927, the chapel was a private property until the Revolution, linked to the manor house of Locmaria. Its enclosure, including a cemetery disappeared in 1875, and a 17th-century fountain (Fetan ar Velean) completed the whole. The lower sides, separated by double-roll arches, and the remains of anthropomorphic supports in the bedside testify to its architectural evolution.

The nave, the only remaining element after the demolition of the choir between 1811 and 1830, still houses the funeral slab of Pierre de Broérec. The chapel, originally called Our Lady of Mercy or Mercy, was associated with a priory with a house called the Hospital, surrounded by a closed garden. Its status as a domestic chapel lasted until the 19th century, marked by partial reconstructions in the 14th–15th centuries.

Subsequent changes include the resumption of the north window in the 16th century and the addition of a modern western oculus. The monolithic fountain, excavated by a gutter feeding a circular basin, and the remains of the crypt under the old choir recall its funeral and religious use. The diaphragm arches visible on the current eastern wall underline the original separation between nave and choir.

External links