Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Priory of Saint-Marcel-lès-Sauzet dans la Drôme

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Prieuré
Eglise romane
Drôme

Priory of Saint-Marcel-lès-Sauzet

    Le Village
    26740 Saint-Marcel-lès-Sauzet
Prieuré de Saint-Marcel-lès-Sauzet
Prieuré de Saint-Marcel-lès-Sauzet
Prieuré de Saint-Marcel-lès-Sauzet
Prieuré de Saint-Marcel-lès-Sauzet
Prieuré de Saint-Marcel-lès-Sauzet
Prieuré de Saint-Marcel-lès-Sauzet
Prieuré de Saint-Marcel-lès-Sauzet
Prieuré de Saint-Marcel-lès-Sauzet
Prieuré de Saint-Marcel-lès-Sauzet
Prieuré de Saint-Marcel-lès-Sauzet
Prieuré de Saint-Marcel-lès-Sauzet
Prieuré de Saint-Marcel-lès-Sauzet
Prieuré de Saint-Marcel-lès-Sauzet
Prieuré de Saint-Marcel-lès-Sauzet
Prieuré de Saint-Marcel-lès-Sauzet
Prieuré de Saint-Marcel-lès-Sauzet
Prieuré de Saint-Marcel-lès-Sauzet
Prieuré de Saint-Marcel-lès-Sauzet
Prieuré de Saint-Marcel-lès-Sauzet
Prieuré de Saint-Marcel-lès-Sauzet
Prieuré de Saint-Marcel-lès-Sauzet
Crédit photo : Remi Mathis - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1000
1100
1200
1300
1700
1800
1900
2000
2100
985
Initial Foundation
avant 1037
Connecting to Cluny
1165
Challenged transition to canons
XIIe siècle (2e moitié)
Construction of church
1293
State of degradation reported
1791
Sale of ecclesiastical property
1846
Historical monument classification
1862
Restoration by the Marists
1877
Discovery of an 8th century altar
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
fin XXe siècle
Destruction of the South Gallery

Heritage classified

Church: ranking by list of 1846

Key figures

Lambert - Initial donor (985) Offer land with Falectrude.
Falectrude (Falectrudis) - Donor (985) Wife of Lambert, co-founder.
Ademar (ou Aimar) - Count, son of Lambert Confirm the donation before 1037.
Audoin et Durand - Benedictine monks (985) Recipients of the original donation.
Jacques d'Amboise - Abbot of Cluny and Prior (1491) Directs the priory to the Renaissance.

Origin and history

The priory of Saint-Marcel-lès-Sauzet came into being in 985 when Lambert and his wife Falectrude offered land to Benedictine monks Audoin and Durand to rebuild a monastery on the site then called Salciaco. Their son, Count Ademar (or Aimar), confirmed this donation before 1037 and linked the monastery to the Clunisian order. Several local properties, such as the priories of Saint John d'Autichamp or Saint Stephen d'Espeluche, are gradually associated with him. The present church, built in the second half of the 12th century, reflects this clunisian influence, although later sources evoke a possible transition to regular canons in 1165, a hypothesis contradicted by the reports of 1293 indicating the degraded state of the buildings (cloister, dormitory, bell tower).

In the 13th century, the priory had six monks and adopted a Provence Romanesque architecture tinted with innovations, like an octagonal dome decorated with the symbols of the evangelists. The site went through periods of decline, especially after the Revolution: in 1791 its property was sold as ecclesiastical property, but the chapel became parish church. In the 19th century, the Marists bought the buildings in 1862 and restored the church, while in 1877 the discovery of a 8th century Christian altar during excavations attested to a long earlier religious occupation. Ranked as a historical monument in 1846, however, the priory lost its southern gallery of the cloister (XVIIth–XVIIIth centuries) at the end of the 20th century, when it was converted into housing.

The architecture of the priory, remarkable for its homogeneity, dates mainly from the beginning of the thirteenth century. The nave, vaulted in a broken cradle and flanked by low sides, leads to a transept surmounted by an octagonal dome, supporting a reduced bell tower in the eighteenth century. The western portal, typical of the 13th century, and the committed columns mark a break with the traditional Roman canons, illustrating the transition to Gothic. Despite subsequent changes (partial destruction of the cloister, roof of the bell tower), the church retains Romanesque elements, such as the division of columns and pilasters into thirds, while integrating structural innovations for the period.

External links