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Priory of Port-l'Abbé à Étriché en Maine-et-Loire

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Prieuré
Maine-et-Loire

Priory of Port-l'Abbé

    D859
    49330 Etriché
Private property

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
XIIe siècle (1re moitié)
Foundation of the Priory
1523
Construction of the house and chapel
1791
Sale as a national good
1918-1934
Partial stripping of interiors
1965
Classification of the façade
1997
Registration of buildings
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Façade de la Chapelle (stained in red on the plan annexed to the decree) (Box B 113): Order of 16 February 1965 - Buildings of the former priory, namely: Romanesque chapel (with the exception of the classified west façade); Renaissance home; Saint-Fort chapel, 16th century; commons surrounding the inner courtyard of the priory; ruins of the tithe barn (cad. B 111, 113): registration by order of 27 May 1997

Key figures

Rainaud de Martigné - Bishop and presumed founder Founded the Priory in the 12th century
Robert d'Arbrissel - Suspected alternative founder Associated with the foundation according to Wikipedia
Guy Le Clerc - Abbot and builder Fit building house and chapel in 1523
Anne de Bretagne - Duchess and patrons Guy Le Clerc was his chaplain

Origin and history

The priory of Port-l'Abbé is a former Augustine priory located in Etriché, in the department of Maine-et-Loire. Founded in the first half of the 12th century, it was originally attached to the abbey of La Roë. Sources diverge from its founder: Robert d'Arbrissel according to Wikipedia, or Bishop Rainaud de Martigné according to Monumentum. This disagreement illustrates the historical uncertainties surrounding its specific origins.

In 1523, Abbé Guy Le Clerc, chaplain of Anne de Bretagne, built the house and chapel, marking a major reconstruction phase in the early 16th century. The priory then underwent transformations in the 18th century before being sold as a national good in 1791. Between 1918 and 1934, some of its interiors were distraught, altering its original state.

The priory is partially protected as historical monuments: the facade of the chapel was classified in 1965, while other elements (Romanesque chapel, Renaissance residence, common) were inscribed in 1997. These protections testify to its heritage importance, despite the changes and degradations experienced over the centuries.

The site includes several remarkable elements: a Romanesque chapel (excluding a classified west façade), a Renaissance-style house, a 16th-century Saint-Fort chapel, as well as commons and ruins of a tithe barn. These remains offer an overview of the architectural evolution of the priory, from the twelfth to the eighteenth centuries.

The location of the priory, noted as "a priori satisfactory" (level 7/10), places the monument at the following address: 5082 Port l'Abbe, 49330 Stretched. This geographical precision makes it possible to identify its anchor in the Angelvin territory, in the heart of the Pays de la Loire.

Sold as a national good during the Revolution, the priory embodies the political and religious upheavals of the late eighteenth century. Its history thus reflects the changes of ecclesiastical institutions in France, from its medieval foundation to its modern secularization.

External links