First quote from Azay 948 (≈ 948)
Mention of the "Azay villa"
Fin XIe - début XIIe siècle
Donation to Saint-Maixent
Donation to Saint-Maixent Fin XIe - début XIIe siècle (≈ 1225)
Azay given to Benedictine Abbey
Vers 1300
Foundation of the Priory
Foundation of the Priory Vers 1300 (≈ 1300)
Creation by the monks of Saint-Maixent
1489
Fortification of the priory
Fortification of the priory 1489 (≈ 1489)
Adaptation to defensive needs
XVIe siècle
Construction of cloister
Construction of cloister XVIe siècle (≈ 1650)
Assumption based on architectural style
1747
Certified work
Certified work 1747 (≈ 1747)
Renovated carpentry and masonry
1863
New church project
New church project 1863 (≈ 1863)
After a destructive fire
1926
Protection of remains
Protection of remains 1926 (≈ 1926)
Enrollment of cloister in MH
1993
Church protection
Church protection 1993 (≈ 1993)
Registration by ministerial decree
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Remains of the cloister, located near the church: inscription by decree of 23 December 1926; Church (Cd. AL 31): registration by order of 28 September 1993
Key figures
Moines de Saint-Maixent - Founders of the Priory
Create the priory around 1300
Origin and history
Priory Saint-Barthelemy d'Azay-le-Brûlé finds its origins in the donation of Azay to the Abbey of Saint-Maixent between the end of the 11th and the beginning of the 12th century. The "Villa d'Azay", mentioned in 948, became a Benedictine priory around 1300 under the impulse of the monks of Saint-Maixent. This religious site, initially modest, is structured around a church of the 12th-XIIIth centuries, supplemented by later chapels. Its spatial organization, in the shape of a stairway on both sides of the church, reflects a typical monastic planning, with L-shaped wings framing an inner courtyard in front of the facade.
In 1489 the priory was strengthened, testifying to the tensions of the time and the need to protect ecclesiastical property. The cloister, probably built in the 16th century, leans against the north droprot of the church and opens on the courtyard of the Prioral Logis. The convent buildings, rebuilt in the 15th, 17th and 19th centuries, housed various functions: the south of the church was occupied by a farmhouse, while a buried cellar and servitudes closed the courtyard at the back of the bedside. The works attested in 1747 (carpentry, masonry) and a fire in the 19th century, which motivated the construction of a new church in 1863, illustrate a turbulent architectural history.
The remains of the cloister, inscribed in the Historic Monuments in 1926, and the church, protected in 1993, are the most remarkable elements of the site. The plans of the 19th century reveal a direct communication between the church and the northern buildings, forming a coherent whole from the facade to the cellar. This priory, both a place of worship, a monastic dwelling and a farm (metairie), embodies the evolution of rural religious establishments between the Middle Ages and modern times, adapted to local needs and historical hazards.