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Church of Saint-Julien de Lesbois en Mayenne

Mayenne

Church of Saint-Julien de Lesbois

    2 Rue des Sabotiers
    53120 Lesbois

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
XIIIe siècle
Initial foundations
XVe siècle
Construction of the bell tower
1858-1859
Major renovations
2 mars 1906
Religious inventory
1919
Make bells
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Saint Julien du Mans - Church Patron Religious dedication of the monument

Origin and history

The church of Saint-Julien de Lesbois, dedicated to Saint Julien du Mans, rests on 13th century foundations, rebuilt in 1858-1859. Its 15th-century bell tower peaks at 15 metres and features an Anglo-Norman style roof. The structure, in granite bellows, is reinforced by foothills added during work to raise the building by digging the interior and exterior soil. A statue of the Virgin and Child (16th century) adorns the porch, accompanied by the inscription "HIC DOMUS DEI EST". Inside, a 17th-century wooden altarpiece and 18th-century side tables testify to its rich liturgical heritage.

The 1906 inventory, marked by the intervention of the gendarmes from dawn, illustrates the religious tensions of the time. Local traditions included wedding bows in perches and ribbons to celebrate weddings, while the bride offered pins to her loved ones. The bell tower houses two bells melted in 1919 at Le Mans, as well as a bronze watchmaking mechanism. A granite wall and a steel grid, now missing, once surrounded the church before the transfer of the cemetery.

The building combines Romanesque architectural elements (archs of the porch) and subsequent additions, such as the fake organ, without keyboards but with pipes on the facade. The side walls, reinforced by foothills, reflect structural adaptations to stabilize the building. The watchmaking mechanism, visible inside, recalls the importance of churches as temporal and social landmarks in rural villages.

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