Initial construction Fin XIe - Début XIIe siècle (≈ 1225)
Nef, span under bell tower and built sanctuary.
1272
Episcopal Donation
Episcopal Donation 1272 (≈ 1272)
Amouric de Serres ceded the church to the chapter.
Fin XVIe siècle
Major repairs
Major repairs Fin XVIe siècle (≈ 1695)
High parts and remodeled bell tower.
XIXe siècle
Point repairs
Point repairs XIXe siècle (≈ 1865)
Maintenance and partial restoration.
21 novembre 1973
Official protection
Official protection 21 novembre 1973 (≈ 1973)
Registration as a Historic Monument.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Church (cad. A 447): registration by decree of 21 November 1973
Key figures
Aimeric de Serres - Bishop of Limoges
Give the church to the chapter in 1272.
Origin and history
The church of Roziers-Saint-Georges, classified as a Historical Monument, has its origins between the late 11th and early 12th centuries. The building consists of a single nave covered with a ceiling in panelling, followed by a span under a vaulted bell tower of warheads, and ends with a flat vaulted bedside in the middle of a hanger. A sacristy, adjacent to the northern wall of the sanctuary, completes the whole. The steeple span and sanctuary could go back to a period before the nave, suggesting a progressive construction.
In 1272, Amouric de Serres, then bishop of Limoges, gave the church to the deans and chapter of the cathedral of Limoges. This donation marks a turning point in the history of the building, now linked to the regional ecclesiastical administration. The upper parts, as well as the bell tower, underwent major repairs at the end of the sixteenth century, while ad hoc repairs took place in the nineteenth century.
The church's architecture reflects Romanesque influences, including its flat bedside and arches in the middle of the wall. The full arch between the nave and the span under the bell tower highlights the transition between liturgical spaces. Despite subsequent modifications, the building retains original structural elements, reflecting its evolution over centuries.
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