First mention of "Mon Anauza" 902 (≈ 902)
Written quotation from the site before the church.
1119
First mention of the church
First mention of the church 1119 (≈ 1119)
Documentary certificate of the priory.
1481
Union at the office of sacristan
Union at the office of sacristan 1481 (≈ 1481)
Final administrative integration.
XIIIe–XVIe siècle
Dependence at the Abbey of Lagrasse
Dependence at the Abbey of Lagrasse XIIIe–XVIe siècle (≈ 1650)
Monastic connection period.
années 1940
End of pilgrimages
End of pilgrimages années 1940 (≈ 1940)
Disappearance of local traditions.
27 septembre 1948
Historical monument classification
Historical monument classification 27 septembre 1948 (≈ 1948)
Protection of ruins by arrest.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Priory of Saint-Michel-de-Nahuze (ruines) (cad. A 551): inscription by order of 27 September 1948
Key figures
Information non disponible - No character identified
Sources do not cite any named historical actor.
Origin and history
Saint-Michel-de-Nahuze is a Benedictine priory founded in the 11th century, located on the slopes of the Alaric mountain, near Lagrasse (Aude). Its ruins, classified as a historical monument in 1948, reveal a three-span nave and Lombard architectural elements. The site was a place of pilgrimage until the 1940s, where the villagers implored the rain during the droughts, according to an oral tradition mixing prayer and chorus in Occitan.
From 902, Mons Anauza was mentioned in texts, while the church was attested from 1119. The priory, dependent on the Abbey of Lagrasse from the 13th to the 16th century, was a non-claustral priory. His provost resided in the Ilhes, a fortified house at the foot of the mountain. The sanctuary, now collapsed, consisted of a vaulted choir in a cradle and an un vaulted nave. Remains such as a Lombard strip and partial lateral walls remain.
The site attracted a local cult linked to the weather, illustrated by a legend where the pilgrims sang: "San Miquel dona nos d'aiga, barejada amb de vin" ("Saint Michel, give us water, mixed with wine"). Abandoned after the 16th century, the priory was inscribed for its remarkable elements: nave, Lombard decor, and an altar stone in white marble. There is no trace to reconstruct the presumed semicircular apse.
The excavations and written sources underline its secondary role in the local monastic network. Unlike the Abbey of Lagrasse, this priory did not house a permanent claustral community. Its decline coincides with the concentration of resources towards the major religious centres of the region, typical of the ecclesiastical recompositions of the late Middle Ages.
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