Foundation of the Priory 1049 (≈ 1049)
By the monks of Charroux near the castle.
XVIe siècle
Period of frescoes
Period of frescoes XVIe siècle (≈ 1650)
Painted decor and dated Gothic window.
1762
Transformation into a house
Transformation into a house 1762 (≈ 1762)
Loss of original religious function.
1990
Acquisition by the department
Acquisition by the department 1990 (≈ 1990)
Discover frescoes during works.
22 novembre 1993
Protection of frescoes
Protection of frescoes 22 novembre 1993 (≈ 1993)
Registration for Historical Monuments.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Sixteenth century Fresque and the wall supporting it on the first floor of the former priory (Box AI 61): inscription by decree of 22 November 1993
Key figures
Dr Marquet - Local historian
Mentioned frescoes from 1900.
Moines de l'abbaye de Charroux - Founders of the Priory
Monastic origin in 1049.
Origin and history
The priory of Saint-Sauveur de Rochechouart, founded in 1049 by the monks of Charroux Abbey, was originally located near the Château de Rochechouart, on the territory of the parish of Biénac. This monastic site, now almost entirely extinct, remains only by a house transformed in the eighteenth century, located in Place des Halles. In 1990, however, its banal façade revealed a granite window with Gothic moldings, indicating an ancient origin. The works to install the court of instance allowed to rediscover frescoes of the sixteenth century, mentioned from the 1900s by Dr Marquet.
The frescoes revealed represent a bust of man in costume of the time of Louis XII or Francis I, accompanied by musical ranges and text. These decorations, comparable to those of the Château de Rochechouart, were protected in 1993 by a registration order under the Historical Monuments. Although the house lost its religious function after 1762, these paintings, now preserved under protection, testify to the artistic and historical importance of the priory, linked to both monastic life and the local court.
The building, which has been owned by the Haute-Vienne department since 1990, now houses the district court. Its painted decor, although not accessible to the public, remains a rare example of secular and religious art of the Renaissance in Limousin. The fresco and the wall that supports it, classified in 1993, are the only protected elements of this former priory, symbol of the medieval and reborn heritage of Rochechouart.
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