Benedictine Foundation 999 (≈ 999)
Arrival of the monks of Cluny, beginning of the constructions.
1048-1299
Construction of church
Construction of church 1048-1299 (≈ 1174)
Major period of religious construction.
vers 1385
Fortifications erected
Fortifications erected vers 1385 (≈ 1385)
Ten towers and walls added.
XVIe siècle
War graffiti
War graffiti XVIe siècle (≈ 1650)
Fusal representations discovered in situ.
1800-1815
Adding a bakery
Adding a bakery 1800-1815 (≈ 1808)
Disappeared today, with the creation of an alley.
2005
Historical Monument
Historical Monument 2005 (≈ 2005)
Protection of the priory, rampart and tower.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Key figures
Information non disponible - No character named
The source text does not mention any specific historical actors.
Origin and history
The priory of Pouilly-lès-Feurs was founded in 999 by Benedictine monks of Cluny, adopting an architectural arrangement similar to that of their mother abbey: a building organized around a square courtyard, with a Gallo-Roman well in its centre. The constructions lasted several centuries, with major phases between 999 and 1050 for the initial priory, then between 1048 and 1299 for the church. Other elements, such as the stable, the wheat attic, or the prison and courtroom, were added between the twelfth and fourteenth centuries.
Between 1385 and the reign of Louis XIII, the priory was girded with imposing fortifications, made up of ten towers and high walls, partially alaid later. The French Revolution marked a turning point: the building, sold in three lots, lost its unit. Graffiti discovered on the walls, dating from the wars of Religion (XVI century), testify to its turbulent occupation, with representations of human figures, animals and castles.
The transformations continued until the early 19th century, with the addition of a bakery (now gone) and an alley between the church and the priory. Ranked Historic Monument in 2005, the site preserves traces of its medieval and Renaissance past, mixing religious, military and agricultural heritage. The priory, the rampart and an adjoining tower are now protected, shared between communal and private property.