Chapel door/sacristy Fin du XIe siècle (≈ 1195)
The oldest architectural element preserved.
XIIe siècle
Construction begins
Construction begins XIIe siècle (≈ 1250)
Period of the first monastic foundations.
XIIIe, XVe et XVIe siècles
Major extensions
Major extensions XIIIe, XVe et XVIe siècles (≈ 1650)
Expansions of the convent buildings and church.
5 décembre 1984
Historic Monument Protection
Historic Monument Protection 5 décembre 1984 (≈ 1984)
Registration of facades, roofs and remains.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Origin and history
The Priory of Saints-Corneille-et-Cyprien de Cornilly, located in Contres (Loir-et-Cher), is a monastic complex whose first constructions date back to the 12th century, with major additions in the 13th, 15th and 16th centuries. The site is organized around a closed central courtyard, where a well and barn remain. In the west, the monks' house, flanked by a two-storey wooden cloister (with only a few arcades left), housed on the ground floor the refectory, kitchen and chapter room, while the floor was reserved for the religious cells. A dovecote marks the southwest corner of the courtyard.
The church, joined to an old chapel or sacristy with a late 11th century gate, forms the northeast corner of the courtyard. A 16th-century building, adjacent to the church and the monks' house, occupies the northwest corner. The ensemble, partially protected since 1984, illustrates the architectural evolution of a medieval priory, mixing religious, agricultural (grange, pigeon) and community functions (cloister, refectory).
The facades and roofs of the convent buildings surrounding the former cloister area, as well as the remaining parts of the church, were inscribed in the Historical Monuments by order of 5 December 1984. The site, although partially altered, preserves characteristic elements of rural abbeys, such as the central well or arches of the cloister, testimonies of monastic life between the Middle Ages and Renaissance.