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Priory Our Lady of Vausse à Châtel-Gérard dans l'Yonne

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Prieuré
Eglise romane
Yonne

Priory Our Lady of Vausse

    Forêt Saint-Jean
    89310 Châtel-Gérard
Private property
Prieuré Notre-Dame de Vausse
Prieuré Notre-Dame de Vausse
Prieuré Notre-Dame de Vausse
Prieuré Notre-Dame de Vausse
Prieuré Notre-Dame de Vausse
Prieuré Notre-Dame de Vausse
Prieuré Notre-Dame de Vausse
Prieuré Notre-Dame de Vausse
Prieuré Notre-Dame de Vausse
Prieuré Notre-Dame de Vausse
Prieuré Notre-Dame de Vausse
Prieuré Notre-Dame de Vausse
Prieuré Notre-Dame de Vausse
Prieuré Notre-Dame de Vausse
Prieuré Notre-Dame de Vausse
Prieuré Notre-Dame de Vausse
Prieuré Notre-Dame de Vausse
Crédit photo : Patrick89 - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
début XIIIe siècle
Foundation by Anseric de Montréal
1477
End of ducal protection
1491-1511
Construction of cloister
1763
Departure of the last monk
1792
Sale as a national good
1858
End of earthenware
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The church and cloister (except the western wing): inscription by decree of 11 January 1944

Key figures

Anséric de Montréal - Founder and Lord Baron Burgundy, land donor in 1200
Guy Bousson - Prior in the fifteenth century Initiated the construction of the cloister in 1491
Claude de la Magdelaine de Ragny - Commodore Prior (XVIIe) Bishop of Autun tried to reform
Joseph Dumortier - Industrial (Rvolution) Buyer and transformer in earthenware
Ernest Petit - Historician (1835-1918) Restore the priory, write his works there

Origin and history

The Priory of Notre-Dame de Vausse was founded in the early 13th century by Anseric de Montréal, Baron Bourguignon near Duke Eudes III. Located in a wild place in the forest of Châtel-Gérard, it depended on the abbey of Val des Choues and benefited from the protection of the seigneurs of Montreal and then the Dukes of Burgundy. The monks, some twenty, lived according to a rule combining Benedictine, Cistercian and Chartreuse influences. Their reputation for holiness attracted many gifts, ensuring the prosperity of the priory until the 15th century.

In the 15th century, despite the expansion work (cloister completed in 1511), the decline began with the scarcity of vocations and gifts. In the 16th century, the beginning – the appointment of priors by the king rather than by the monks – accelerated decadence. The comndatary priors, often absent, negligated management, while the fewer monks lost their rigor. A fire in the 18th century damaged the eastern wing, and in 1763 the last monk left Vausse for the mother abbey.

At the Revolution, the priory was sold as a national good and transformed into a faiencery by Joseph Dumortier in 1792. The bell tower was demolished, the church built in a workshop with an oven, and the production of earthenware (dishware, pots of pharmacy) lasted until 1858. The historian Ernest Petit, born there in 1835, then bought the site, partially restored it, and made it his work office. He wrote about a hundred works, including a complete history of the Dukes of Burgundy.

Today, the priory is preserved by the descendants of Ernest Petit and the association Vausse Animation. The buildings, centered around a 15th century square cloister and a 13th century church (33 m long), testify to its monastic architecture. The church, with a dogive vaulted nave, preserves traces of its transformations (revolutionary floor, faience oven). The site, partially classified as Historical Monument in 1944, hosts cultural visits and events.

The history of Vausse illustrates the cycles of prosperity and decline of the medieval priories, marked by political hazards (end of the Dukes of Burgundy in 1477), religious reforms (commendation), and revolutionary upheavals. Its rescue by the earthenware, then by the commitment of Ernest Petit, makes it a rare example of both religious, industrial and intellectual heritage.

External links