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Notre-Dame de la Rominguière de Coursan Church dans l'Aude

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Eglise
Eglise gothique
Aude

Notre-Dame de la Rominguière de Coursan Church

    Le Bourg
    11110 Coursan
Église Notre-Dame de la Rominguière de Coursan
Église Notre-Dame de la Rominguière de Coursan
Église Notre-Dame de la Rominguière de Coursan
Église Notre-Dame de la Rominguière de Coursan
Église Notre-Dame de la Rominguière de Coursan
Église Notre-Dame de la Rominguière de Coursan
Église Notre-Dame de la Rominguière de Coursan
Église Notre-Dame de la Rominguière de Coursan
Église Notre-Dame de la Rominguière de Coursan
Église Notre-Dame de la Rominguière de Coursan
Église Notre-Dame de la Rominguière de Coursan
Église Notre-Dame de la Rominguière de Coursan
Église Notre-Dame de la Rominguière de Coursan
Église Notre-Dame de la Rominguière de Coursan
Église Notre-Dame de la Rominguière de Coursan
Crédit photo : Rauenstein - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1200
1300
1400
1500
1800
1900
2000
1237
Mention of fortifications
milieu du XIVe siècle
Reconstruction of the church
1868
Repair of coverage
1870
Transformation of the nave
1873-1877
Addition of chapels and porch
13 avril 1948
Registration of the bell tower
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Clocher : registration by order of 13 April 1948

Key figures

Information non disponible - No character mentioned The source text does not mention any specific historical actors.

Origin and history

The Church of Notre-Dame de la Rominguière de Coursan, located in the Aude department in the Occitan region, is a religious building whose origins date back to the fourteenth century. Its current structure also incorporates major transformations carried out in the 19th century. The bell tower, particularly massive and with a barlong plan, is 25 metres high and is characteristic of the fortified churches of the region. It was listed as historic monuments on 13 April 1948, highlighting its heritage importance.

The nave of the church, composed of four spans, is covered with a false arch of warheads and illuminated by four roses. The narrower and lower pentagonal apse is arched with warheads and pierced with three windows decorated with trilobed lancettes and geometric fillings. The bedside, topped by a parapet, is supported by foothills with two roofs in a building. The bell tower, located south of the bedside, has two floors of geminous bays bounded by ground bandages. Its ground floor is vaulted with chamfered warheads, with a key to a hardened vault accompanied by a carved head.

The church, located at the eastern end of the old town of Coursan, near the Aude, played a defensive role, as evidenced by the imposing shape of its bell tower. Texts mention the presence of fortifications in Coursan as early as 1237, and the church, rebuilt around the mid-14th century, was integrated into this defensive system. The main known transformations date from the 19th century: in 1868, repair of the cover; in 1870, demolition of the west gable wall and laying of a brick vault on the nave; Between 1873 and 1876, construction of six chapels and a porch; and in 1884 and 1896, repairs to the cutlery and floors of the bell tower.

The 19th century works respected the bell tower and adjacent parts of the sanctuary. The tower, made of apparatus stone, consists of four unequal floors separated by chamfer and listel bands. The upper floors are illuminated by bays, with a particular layout on the east side. An entrance door at the base of the bell tower provides access to both the bell tower and the sanctuary. The choir windows were restored in 1874, and the vault of the choir was redone with new caps. In 1877, after the demolition of the southern wall, six side chapels and a southern porch were added between the foothills.

The church of Notre-Dame de la Rominguière is now owned by the commune of Coursan. Its bell tower, a protected element, remains an architectural testimony of the 14th and 19th centuries, reflecting both its initial religious role and its integration into the medieval defensive system of the city. The 19th century transformations made it possible to adapt the building to the liturgical and aesthetic needs of the time, while preserving its most significant historical characteristics.

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