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Remonot des Combes hat cave aux Combes dans le Doubs

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Grotte
Eglise troglodyte
Doubs

Remonot des Combes hat cave

    3-7 Place de la Colombière
    25500 Les Combes
Grotte-chapelle de Remonot des Combes
Grotte-chapelle de Remonot des Combes
Grotte-chapelle de Remonot des Combes
Grotte-chapelle de Remonot des Combes
Grotte-chapelle de Remonot des Combes
Grotte-chapelle de Remonot des Combes
Grotte-chapelle de Remonot des Combes
Grotte-chapelle de Remonot des Combes
Grotte-chapelle de Remonot des Combes
Grotte-chapelle de Remonot des Combes
Grotte-chapelle de Remonot des Combes
Grotte-chapelle de Remonot des Combes
Grotte-chapelle de Remonot des Combes
Grotte-chapelle de Remonot des Combes
Grotte-chapelle de Remonot des Combes
Grotte-chapelle de Remonot des Combes
Grotte-chapelle de Remonot des Combes
Grotte-chapelle de Remonot des Combes
Grotte-chapelle de Remonot des Combes
Grotte-chapelle de Remonot des Combes
Crédit photo : Ludovic Péron - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
800
900
1200
1300
1700
1800
1900
2000
VIIIe siècle
First hermit occupations
XIIe siècle
First written entry
XVIIe siècle
Transformation into a chapel
1832
Construction nearby church
1863
Consecration of the chapel
29 décembre 2009
Registration of historical monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The cave-chapel in its entirety, with its courtyard-parvis, the cliff in which it opens, the bell tower and the plateau above up to 40 meters from the edge of the cliff (cad. AC 2, 3, 68, 70; AB 97): inscription by decree of 29 December 2009

Key figures

Information non disponible - No character named in the sources The texts do not cite any specific historical actors

Origin and history

Remonot Chapel Cave is a Catholic religious site in a natural cave near the Combes in the Doubs. Mentioned as early as the twelfth century, it has been used as a hermitage since the eighth century by monks evangelizing the Upper Doubs. This place, dedicated to the Virgin Mary, became a chapel in the seventeenth century, served by a Morteau religious resident on site. A miraculous source and a statue of the Virgin of Mercy (15th century) are venerated, attracting pilgrims especially on 15 August, the day of the Assumption.

In the 19th century, after the construction of a nearby church in 1832, the cave underwent a phase of industrial occupation before being consecrated as a chapel in 1863. Its 30-metre-long porch houses an Art Deco master altar, while a metal bridge provides access to underground galleries covered by water table. The site, partially floodable (as in 1991), was listed as a historical monument in 2009 for its whole including the cave, courtyard, cliff and isolated bell tower.

The chapel cave illustrates the superposition of religious, industrial and geological uses. Its access, facilitated by departmental road D437 and public transport (line B of the Mobidubs network), makes it both a heritage and a tourist site. Local tradition attributes miraculous virtues to its source, strengthening its spiritual attractiveness. The total development of the cave extends over 220 metres, with siphons and gours characteristic of the Jurassian karst networks.

External links