Authorization of ramparts vers 1405 (≈ 1405)
Archbishop d'Arles allows the defensive enclosure.
fin XVIe - début XVIIe siècle
Major expansion
Major expansion fin XVIe - début XVIIe siècle (≈ 1725)
Nef enlarged, choir with five bands.
21 décembre 1992
Registration MH
Registration MH 21 décembre 1992 (≈ 1992)
Official protection of the building.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Church (Doc. D 405): registration by decree of 21 December 1992
Key figures
Archevêque d’Arles (non nommé) - Religious Authority
Authorizes ramparts in 1405.
Origin and history
The parish church of Saint-Blaise, located in Saint-Mitre-les-Remparts, has its origins in the 12th century as a castral chapel. This first building, oriented east-west, reflected the Romanesque architecture typical of the period. The village, for its part, seems to emerge around this religious and defensive core, without a known history before this period. The region, marked by a network of ponds (Berre, Citis, Po), provided a strategic framework for the development of a community organised around places of worship and protection.
At the beginning of the 15th century (circa 1405), Archbishop Arles authorized the construction of ramparts around the village, consolidating its defensive and urban role. This period marks a turning point in local history, with continuous growth of homes, many of which remain today. The most notable rise, however, occurred in the late 16th and early 17th centuries, when the church underwent a major transformation: the Romanesque nave was integrated as a span of an enlarged building southward, reoriented according to the classic canons. A five-sided choir and a bell tower, built near the old choir, complete this architectural metamorphosis.
The Saint-Blaise church thus illustrates two hinged periods: the Middle Ages with its castral chapel, and the modern period with its baroque enlargement. Its inscription as a Historic Monument in 1992 underlines its heritage value, both for its stylistic evolution and for its anchoring in the urban history of Saint-Mitre-les-Remparts. The communal property today makes it a central place for local memory.
The geographic context, dominated by ponds, probably influenced the region's economy and trade, while the church, first a place of seigneurial worship, became a symbol of the growing parish community. The houses preserved in the 17th century bear witness to this prosperity, linked both to fishing activities and to the affirmation of a village identity.