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Priory of Sainte-Gemme en Charente-Maritime

Charente-Maritime

Priory of Sainte-Gemme

    3 Rue du Prieure
    17250 Sainte-Gemme

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1100
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1074
Donation to Benedictines
Milieu du XIe siècle
Presumed Foundation
Fin XIe - XIIe siècle
Romanesque reconstruction
1568
Huguenots' rampage
1791
Sale as a national good
1862
Historical monument classification
2004-2005
Extended protection
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Ranked MH

Key figures

Guillaume VIII - Duke of Aquitaine and Count of Poitiers Founded the Benedictine priory in 1074.
Jacques de Saint-Nectaire - Superior then Abbé de La Chaise-Dieu Reformed the priory in 1483-1492.
Dom Jacques Boyer - Monk scholar of Saint-Maur Described the ruins in 1714.
Louis de La Fayette - Prior around 1460-1470 Blazon on a door.

Origin and history

The priory of Sainte-Gemme, founded in the 11th century in the forest of Baconnais, was entrusted in 1074 to the Benedictines of La Chaise-Dieu by Guillaume VIII, Duke of Aquitaine. Three monks were sent there to develop the monastery, which then benefited from a pre-Casadean chapel. Reconstructed at the end of the 11th century, it reached its peak in the 12th and 13th centuries thanks to donations and exploitation of salt marshes, sheltering up to twenty monks.

In the 14th century, the priory, led by a powerful prior (local lord and influential member of the congregation), was affected by the Hundred Years War. The claustral buildings were redesigned, and the galleries of the cloister were raised. In 1483, Jacques de Saint-Nectaire, superior and then abbot of La Chaise-Dieu, tried to impose reforms there, encountering opposition before finally being accepted.

The Wars of Religion marked a turning point: in 1568, the Huguenots seized the priory, destroying part of the church (sharp vaults, transept and bell tower felled). In the 17th century, the remaining monks walled the arch between the nave and the cross of the transept. Dom Jacques Boyer, in 1714, described places in ruins, with a partially standing cloister and an underground chapel containing tombs. The priory was finally abandoned in 1731.

Sold as a national property in 1791, the site was transformed into a habitat and workplace. In the 19th century, the church, threatened with collapse, was consolidated: added foothills, rebuilt vaults (1844, 1866), and restored western facade (1869-1870). A neo-Gothic bell tower replaced the old, while adjacent buildings became coffee, grocery or museum. Ranked in 1862, the church and the priory were protected in 2004-2005.

The Romanesque architecture of the priory is distinguished by its Latin cross church (55 m originally), its rare narthex in Saintonge, and its 12th century funeral crypt. The cloister (15.5 m x 19 m), well preserved despite the disappearance of its galleries, had stone benches and vaulted columns. The claustral buildings, renovated in the 15th century, included a vaulted capitular hall, a refectory, and prioral apartments.

The restorations of the 19th and 20th centuries, although necessary, partially altered medieval authenticity: massive foothills, redone sculptures, and enlarged bays despite the protests of the Historic Monuments. Today, the priory bears witness to both Benedictine power in Saintonge and historical vicissitudes, from religious conflicts to the Revolution.

External links