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Saint Peter's Church of Pleyber-Christ dans le Finistère

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Eglise gothique
Finistère

Saint Peter's Church of Pleyber-Christ

    Place de l'Eglise 
    29410 Pleyber-Christ
Église Saint-Pierre de Pleyber-Christ
Église Saint-Pierre de Pleyber-Christ
Église Saint-Pierre de Pleyber-Christ
Crédit photo : Henri MOREAU - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1551–1588
Construction of the nave
1666
Completion of the portal
1708
Conclusion of work
1914
Historical Monument
1999
Restoration of sandstones
2010
Restoration of the banner
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Church and Funeral Chapel (Box AC 232): Order of 27 March 1914

Key figures

Roland Doré - Sculptor Author of the group of Christ and apostles.
Jean-Louis Nicolas - Glass painter Creator of stained glass (1880).

Origin and history

Saint Peter's Church of Pleyber-Christ, located in Finistère in Brittany, is a Catholic building built between the 2nd half of the 16th century and the 3rd quarter of the 17th century, with works ending in 1708. It replaces one or more earlier buildings and owes its wealth to the golden age of the trade of linen canvas, flourishing activity in the region in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Its architecture includes a Beaumanoir-style tower and a south side porch with a carved group of Christ and the twelve apostles, work by Roland Doré. Classified as a Historic Monument in 1914, it illustrates the religious heritage of Brittany linked to parish enclosures, characteristic of the region.

Inside, the 17th century high altar, adorned with garlands, statuettes and angels, is surmounted by a dais worn by allegorical statues (the Faith, the Hope). The lateral altars, dedicated to Saint John and Notre-Dame de la Pitié, as well as those of the Rosary and Saint Joseph (1700), reflect local Baroque art. The church also houses remarkable statues (Saint Peter, Saint Roch, Saint Michael, Virgin Mothers) and decorated sandstones, highlighted during renovations in 1999. Its liturgical furniture, partially classified, includes calyxes from the sixteenth to eighteenth centuries, a cross-reliquary from 1760, and an 18th century procession banner, awarded in 2010 for its restoration.

The artistic heritage extends to the windows of 1880, made by the glass painter Jean-Louis Nicolas (Morlaix), and to precious objects such as a procession cross in vermeil of the sixteenth century. The building, owned by the municipality, is part of a parish enclosure, a sacred area typical of Brittany, combining church, cemetery and sometimes ossuary. Its construction, spread from 1551 to 1588 for the nave and until 1666 for the portal, bears witness to the architectural changes and economic influences of the period, marked by textile trade.

Ranked among the historical monuments of the Finistère, St Peter's Church embodies both a place of worship and a symbol of the past prosperity of Pleyber-Christ. Its classified furniture (factory cabinet, pulpit to preach, statues of the apostles) and decorative elements (sculpted beams, baroque altars) make it a major example of Breton religious heritage. Recent restorations have preserved this artistic and historical testimony, open to the public in the village of Pleyber-Christ.

External links