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Church of St. Martin of Marcolès dans le Cantal

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Eglise
Cantal

Church of St. Martin of Marcolès

    D66
    15220 Marcolès
Église Saint-Martin de Marcolès
Église Saint-Martin de Marcolès
Église Saint-Martin de Marcolès
Église Saint-Martin de Marcolès
Église Saint-Martin de Marcolès
Église Saint-Martin de Marcolès
Église Saint-Martin de Marcolès
Église Saint-Martin de Marcolès
Église Saint-Martin de Marcolès
Église Saint-Martin de Marcolès
Église Saint-Martin de Marcolès
Église Saint-Martin de Marcolès
Église Saint-Martin de Marcolès
Église Saint-Martin de Marcolès
Église Saint-Martin de Marcolès
Église Saint-Martin de Marcolès
Église Saint-Martin de Marcolès
Église Saint-Martin de Marcolès
Église Saint-Martin de Marcolès
Église Saint-Martin de Marcolès
Église Saint-Martin de Marcolès
Église Saint-Martin de Marcolès
Église Saint-Martin de Marcolès
Église Saint-Martin de Marcolès
Église Saint-Martin de Marcolès
Église Saint-Martin de Marcolès
Église Saint-Martin de Marcolès
Église Saint-Martin de Marcolès
Église Saint-Martin de Marcolès
Église Saint-Martin de Marcolès
Église Saint-Martin de Marcolès
Église Saint-Martin de Marcolès
Église Saint-Martin de Marcolès
Église Saint-Martin de Marcolès
Église Saint-Martin de Marcolès
Église Saint-Martin de Marcolès
Église Saint-Martin de Marcolès
Église Saint-Martin de Marcolès
Église Saint-Martin de Marcolès
Église Saint-Martin de Marcolès
Église Saint-Martin de Marcolès
Église Saint-Martin de Marcolès
Église Saint-Martin de Marcolès
Église Saint-Martin de Marcolès
Église Saint-Martin de Marcolès
Église Saint-Martin de Marcolès
Église Saint-Martin de Marcolès
Église Saint-Martin de Marcolès
Église Saint-Martin de Marcolès
Église Saint-Martin de Marcolès
Crédit photo : Pline - Sous licence Creative Commons

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
1203
First attested building
XVe siècle
Reconstruction of the church
1553
Falling of the primitive bell tower
4 juillet 1667
Discovery of relics
1856
Transfer from cemetery
19 mai 2003
Registration for Historic Monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The Church (Box AB 11): Registration by Order of 19 May 2003

Key figures

Saint Martin de Tours - Bishop and patron saint Major relics preserved in the church.
Pierre Cortez - Curé de Marcolès in 1667 Discoverer of relics in the statue.
Antoine Cazes - Local historian (17th century) Describes the reliquary statue and its cult.
François de Conquans de la Morétie - Curé in the 18th century Sponsor of the pulpit to be preached.
Roger d'Humières - Donor in 1884 *The Presentation in the Temple* (copy of Jouvenet).
Cantournet - Aurillacian sculptor (19th century) Author of the neogothic altarpiece of 1894.

Origin and history

The church Saint-Martin de Marcolès, located in the Cantal department in the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes region, is a southern Gothic building built in the 15th century. It rises on the foundations of a fortified priory attested as early as 1203, linked to the abbey of Saint-Géraud. The reconstruction in the 15th century was motivated by the old state of the old church, damaged by the Hundred Years War, and the need for a place of worship more suited to the community. The current building consists of a nave with five spans, a square choir surmounted by a tower-clocher, and an interior decor combining Gothic sculptures, 19th century paintings and wooden furniture.

The church houses exceptional relics of Saint Martin de Tours, discovered in 1667 in a 14th century reliquary statue hidden in the high altar. These relics, among the most important after the destruction of the Towers shawl in 1562, made Marcolès a major pilgrimage site. The statue, representing a bishop in papal clothing, was venerated and carried in procession during public calamities. A canonical investigation confirmed its authenticity, revealing bones accompanied by a scroll bearing the inscription HAC SUNT RELIQUAE BEATI MARTINI.

The interior of the church is distinguished by its southern Gothic style, without transept, with a nave divided into five spans and eight side chapels added by wealthy families at the end of the 15th century. These chapels, with varying styles, give the building a characteristic swollen shape. The choir, covered with dogive vaults, communicates with the nave by a triumphal arch decorated with floral motifs and a curtain painted in trompe-l'oeil. Among the chapels, that of Saint-Martin houses a neogothic altarpiece of 1894, designed to accommodate the relics after their extraction from the statue.

The church's furniture and works of art include 16th-century polychrome stone statues, such as Saint Anne Trinitarian or Saint James Reading, as well as a Renaissance sculpture panel classified as a historical monument. The eighteenth-century pulpit of preaching presents a polygonal tank and a coat of arms symbolizing high ecclesiastical justice. The church was listed as historical monuments in 2003, while several of its elements (status, retable, reliquary) were classified or registered between 1935 and 1999.

The exterior appearance of the church evolved over the centuries, marked by the suppression of the primitive bell tower before 1553, its enhancement after the Revolution, and the addition of a stone portal of Volvic in 1856. The bell tower, lowered during the Revolution for ideological reasons, was later restored and equipped with a clock. The adjacent cemetery, transferred in 1856, freed space around the building. The granite walls, covered with lauzes, and the chapels with disparate roofs testify to these transformations.

St. Martin's cult at Marcoles was accompanied by popular practices, such as the bath of ricket children in Saint Martin's fountain, a tradition attested since 1667. These children, called martinaires, found, according to local beliefs, the ability to walk after this immersion. The legend of Saint Martin, an evangelizer slaughtering a sacred pine, is represented in a mural painting of the chapel dedicated to him, illustrating his role in the Christianization of the region.

External links