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Ruins of the Old Priory of the Wild dans l'Aveyron

Aveyron

Ruins of the Old Priory of the Wild

    642 Chemin du Prieure du Sauvage
    12510 Druelle Balsac
Ruines de lancien prieuré du Sauvage
Ruines de lancien prieuré du Sauvage
Ruines de lancien prieuré du Sauvage
Ruines de lancien prieuré du Sauvage
Ruines de lancien prieuré du Sauvage
Ruines de lancien prieuré du Sauvage
Ruines de lancien prieuré du Sauvage
Ruines de lancien prieuré du Sauvage
Ruines de lancien prieuré du Sauvage
Ruines de lancien prieuré du Sauvage
Ruines de lancien prieuré du Sauvage
Ruines de lancien prieuré du Sauvage
Ruines de lancien prieuré du Sauvage
Ruines de lancien prieuré du Sauvage
Ruines de lancien prieuré du Sauvage
Ruines de lancien prieuré du Sauvage
Ruines de lancien prieuré du Sauvage
Ruines de lancien prieuré du Sauvage
Ruines de lancien prieuré du Sauvage
Ruines de lancien prieuré du Sauvage
Ruines de lancien prieuré du Sauvage
Ruines de lancien prieuré du Sauvage
Ruines de lancien prieuré du Sauvage
Ruines de lancien prieuré du Sauvage
Ruines de lancien prieuré du Sauvage
Ruines de lancien prieuré du Sauvage
Ruines de lancien prieuré du Sauvage
Ruines de lancien prieuré du Sauvage
Ruines de lancien prieuré du Sauvage
Ruines de lancien prieuré du Sauvage
Ruines de lancien prieuré du Sauvage
Ruines de lancien prieuré du Sauvage
Ruines de lancien prieuré du Sauvage
Ruines de lancien prieuré du Sauvage
Ruines de lancien prieuré du Sauvage
Ruines de lancien prieuré du Sauvage
Ruines de lancien prieuré du Sauvage
Ruines de lancien prieuré du Sauvage
Ruines de lancien prieuré du Sauvage
Ruines de lancien prieuré du Sauvage
Ruines de lancien prieuré du Sauvage
Ruines de lancien prieuré du Sauvage
Crédit photo : Thérèse Gaigé - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1208
First written document
1271
Legacy of Hugues IV
début XIIIe siècle
Foundation of the Priory
1317
Union in Montauberou
1445
Consecration of the new church
1793
Sale as a national good
1981
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Priory of the Sauvage (ruins of the old) (Case D 322, 323): inscription by order of 29 December 1981

Key figures

Henri de Rodez - Count of Rodez and presumed founder Founded the priory with his wife Agnes.
Agnès de Rodez - Wife of Henri de Rodez Daughter of William VIII, benefactor of Chavanon.
Hugues IV - Count of Rodez Legue 100 under the priory in 1271.
Guillaume Busquelay - Excommunicated religious Illegally occupied the priory (1632-1642).
Guillaume de La Tour - Bishop of Rodez Consecrate the new church in 1445.
Dom Thibaut - Last known prior Present in 1768 before expulsion.

Origin and history

The priory of the Sauvage, affiliated with the order of Grandmont, was founded in the early 13th century, probably by Henri de Rodez and his wife Agnes, daughter of Guillaume VIII. In contrast to the grandmontain use, its church was located south of the cloister, an architectural characteristic that has now disappeared. The site, mentioned in 1208, benefited from numerous donations from the Counts of Rodez, including a legacy of 100 sous in 1271 by Hugues IV. In 1317 the priory was united at Montauberou during the reorganization imposed by John XXII, and his church, already in ruins in 1333, was rebuilt and consecrated in 1445.

In the 17th century, the priory experienced internal disturbances, notably with Guillaume Busquelay, an excommunicated religious who maintained himself there by force for a decade. In 1647, a report described an advanced state of disrepair: "the house is completely ruined ... the church is without windows and ornaments". Despite a brief recovery under the Oratorians from 1699, the site was sold as a national property in 1793 and then transformed into a farm. The buildings served as a stone quarry, and the church was demolished that same year. Only the eastern wing, sheltering the capitular hall and the pantry, remains today.

Ranked a historic monument in 1981, the priory of the Sauvage illustrates the turbulent history of the Grandmontan settlements in Rouergue. Its architecture, although partially disappeared, reveals particularities such as the door in the middle of the ceiling room, flanked by columns, or lancettes illuminating the east facade. A local legend evokes an underground link between the priory and the castle of Balsac, although no archaeological evidence attests to it. The current vestiges, drowned in dense vegetation, recall both the grandmontan monastic rigour and the political and religious upheavals that marked its decline.

Searches and backups remain limited: an attempt to restore in 1967 by the association The club of Old Manoir failed due to lack of means. Today, the site, a private property, offers a fragile testimony of medieval religious architecture in Aveyron, marked by centuries of abandonment and successive reuse. The archives also mention gifts such as that of Mascaronne de Comminges in 1291, or the presence of three religious in 1768, the last trace of conventual life before the Revolution.

External links