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Priory of Orsan à Maisonnais dans le Cher

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Prieuré
Cher

Priory of Orsan

    Orsan
    18170 Maisonnais
Private property
Prieuré dOrsan
Prieuré dOrsan
Prieuré dOrsan
Prieuré dOrsan
Prieuré dOrsan
Prieuré dOrsan
Prieuré dOrsan
Prieuré dOrsan
Prieuré dOrsan
Crédit photo : Pierre, Jacques - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1100
1200
1500
1600
1900
2000
1107
Foundation of the Priory
1113
Church completion
1569
Destruction during the Wars of Religion
1596
Partial reconstruction
27 mars 1926
Historical monument classification
1992
Creation of gardens
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The Priory (cad. AB 22): registration by order of 27 March 1926

Key figures

Robert d’Arbrissel - Founder of the order of Fontevraud Fonda Orsan in 1107 died there in 1116.
Agnès de Châteaumeillant - First Prioress of Orsan Under the protection of Archbishop Léger.
Léger - Archbishop of Bourges Protector of the priory, buried near the heart of Robert.
Éléonore de Bourbon - Abbess of Fontevraud (22nd) The reconstruction was completed in 1596.
Louise de La Châtre - Prioress in 1559 Directed the priory before the Wars of Religion.
Patrice Taravella et Sonia Lesot - Restoration architects Purchased and renovated the site in 1990.

Origin and history

Priory Our Lady of Orsan was founded in 1107 by Robert d'Arbrissel, founder of the order of Fontevraud, near the village of Maisonnais in the Berry. Under the protection of the archbishop of Bourges Léger, he became a prosperous place thanks to the gifts of the local lords and the rigorous management of his priories. The church was completed in 1113, and the priory became a place of pilgrimage after the death of Robert of Arbrissel, whose heart was preserved in a marble mausoleum. His body rested at Fontevraud, while Léger was buried at his side.

In the 16th century, the wars of Religion ravaged the priory: in 1569, the buildings were looted and burned, forcing the nuns to flee. Despite a partial reconstruction in 1596 under the impulse of Eléonore de Bourbon, abbess of Fontevraud, the decline intensified. The fence and the large portal, added in the eighteenth century, are not enough to avoid the sale of goods as national goods during the Revolution. Transformed into a farm, the site lost its church, cloister and mill, their stones reused for rural construction.

In 1990, architects Patrice Taravella and Sonia Lesot acquired the remaining 4 buildings and the surrounding 40 hectares, then abandoned. Ranked a historic monument since 1926, the priory was restored with the help of the Bâtiments de France and regional grants. The gardens, created in 1992 and opened to the public in 1994, evoke medieval monastic gardens without being an exact reconstruction. The site, now managed by Gareth Casey and Cyrille Pearon, remains open for the visit, although the hotel section closed in 2017.

From the original architecture, there remains a house of the 16th and 18th centuries, a portico with its lantern of the dead, the capitular room, the refectory and the kitchen under the carriage door. The Bourbon Tower and the walled parlor of the priory recall its monastic past. Among the notable remains, a stone carved with the weapons of Eleonore de Bourbon, dated 1596, and the stalls of the sixteenth century, today preserved at the Abbey of Notre-Dame de Puyferrand. The priory once owned property in Vigoulant and the chapel of Herat, as well as the parish church of Maisonnais.

The Priory of Orsan illustrates the turbulent history of religious communities in Berry, between medieval prosperity, conflict-related destruction and contemporary rebirth. His role in the order of Fontevraud, marked by figures such as Agnès de Châteaumeillant (first prioress) or Louise de La Châtre (priority in 1559), makes him a rare testimony of architecture and spirituality. The gardens, inspired by monastic traditions, revived this historic place, attracting visitors and heritage lovers today.

External links