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Priory of Ambialet dans le Tarn

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Prieuré
Eglise romane
Tarn

Priory of Ambialet

    Le Bourg
    81430 Ambialet
Ownership of the municipality
Prieuré dAmbialet
Prieuré dAmbialet
Prieuré dAmbialet
Prieuré dAmbialet
Prieuré dAmbialet
Prieuré dAmbialet
Prieuré dAmbialet
Prieuré dAmbialet
Prieuré dAmbialet
Prieuré dAmbialet
Prieuré dAmbialet
Prieuré dAmbialet
Prieuré dAmbialet
Prieuré dAmbialet
Prieuré dAmbialet
Prieuré dAmbialet
Prieuré dAmbialet
Prieuré dAmbialet
Prieuré dAmbialet
Prieuré dAmbialet
Prieuré dAmbialet
Prieuré dAmbialet
Prieuré dAmbialet
Prieuré dAmbialet
Prieuré dAmbialet
Prieuré dAmbialet
Prieuré dAmbialet
Prieuré dAmbialet
Prieuré dAmbialet
Prieuré dAmbialet
Crédit photo : ByacC - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1100
1200
1300
1400
1500
1800
1900
2000
1057
Donation to Benedictines
1079 et 1135
Pontifical confirmations
1150
Trencavel withdrawal
1453
Passage under Montpellier
1865
Franciscan restaurant
12 juillet 1886
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Chapel: by order of 12 July 1886

Key figures

Frotaire II - Bishop of Nîmes Donor of the mountain in 1057.
Raymond-Bernard Trencavel - Viscount d'Albi Co-founder of the Priory with Frotere II.
Raimond Ier Trencavel - Viscount of Albi (XII century) Renounced albergue in 1150.
Grégoire VII - Pope (1073–1085) Confirm possessions in 1079.
Innocent II - Pope (1130–1143) Renewed confirmation in 1135.

Origin and history

The Priory Notre-Dame de l'Oder is erected at the top of a rocky ridge in Ambialet, on a spectacular natural site where the Tarn forms a loop. This steep relief, difficult to reach, offered a strategic position for a religious and defensive building. The monastery was founded under the authority of the Viscounts of Albi, before being ceded in 1057 to the Benedictines of the Saint-Victor Abbey of Marseilles, with the local parish church. This donation is confirmed by Popes Gregory VII (1079) and Innocent II (1135), sealing its attachment to the Victorian order.

In 1057, Froutaire II, bishop of Nîmes, and his nephew Raymond-Bernard Trencavel, Viscount of Albi, gave up the "Mont de la Voute" and his church "dantic foundation" to Benedictines. This gesture is part of the policy of religious and territorial control of the Trencavel, a powerful family in Occitanie. In 1150, Raimond I. Trencavel renounced his right to d'albergue (seigneurial accommodation) in the priory, marking a gradual weakening of the secular influence on the site. After the Crusade des Albigeois and the attachment of the Viscount to the crown of France, the monastery declined.

Abandoned during the Wars of Religion (16th century), the priory fell into ruins and its revenues were managed by the chapter of Montpellier. At the time of the Revolution, its remains were found in the municipality of Ambialet. In 1865 the Franciscans restored the chapel and the refectory, the only remaining elements. They render him his Romanesque appearance stripped, with narrow openings evoking murderers and a cradle vault. The bell tower, initially a crenellated tower, was replaced in the 19th century by a covered structure.

The chapel, built of shale stone, features a four-column Romanesque porch and a cul-de-four apse. Its architecture combines monastic sobriety and defensive aspects, reflecting its tormented history. Close by, a legendary tree, called the "crusades" by a local knight, adds a mythical dimension to the site. Ranked a historic monument in 1886, the priory today bears witness to Benedictine influence in Albigeois and the ecclesiastical restorations of the Second Empire.

External links