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Saint-Denis Church of Serans dans l'Oise

Patrimoine classé
Clocher en bâtière
Architecture gothique flamboyant
Eglise romane et gothique
Oise

Saint-Denis Church of Serans

    Le Bourg
    60240 Serans
Église Saint-Denis de Serans
Église Saint-Denis de Serans
Église Saint-Denis de Serans
Église Saint-Denis de Serans
Église Saint-Denis de Serans
Église Saint-Denis de Serans
Église Saint-Denis de Serans
Église Saint-Denis de Serans
Église Saint-Denis de Serans
Église Saint-Denis de Serans
Église Saint-Denis de Serans
Église Saint-Denis de Serans
Église Saint-Denis de Serans
Église Saint-Denis de Serans
Église Saint-Denis de Serans
Église Saint-Denis de Serans
Église Saint-Denis de Serans
Église Saint-Denis de Serans
Église Saint-Denis de Serans
Église Saint-Denis de Serans
Église Saint-Denis de Serans
Église Saint-Denis de Serans
Église Saint-Denis de Serans
Église Saint-Denis de Serans
Église Saint-Denis de Serans
Église Saint-Denis de Serans
Église Saint-Denis de Serans
Église Saint-Denis de Serans
Église Saint-Denis de Serans
Église Saint-Denis de Serans
Église Saint-Denis de Serans
Église Saint-Denis de Serans
Église Saint-Denis de Serans
Église Saint-Denis de Serans
Église Saint-Denis de Serans
Église Saint-Denis de Serans
Église Saint-Denis de Serans
Église Saint-Denis de Serans
Église Saint-Denis de Serans
Église Saint-Denis de Serans
Église Saint-Denis de Serans
Église Saint-Denis de Serans
Église Saint-Denis de Serans
Église Saint-Denis de Serans
Église Saint-Denis de Serans
Église Saint-Denis de Serans
Église Saint-Denis de Serans
Église Saint-Denis de Serans
Église Saint-Denis de Serans
Église Saint-Denis de Serans
Crédit photo : Original uploader was Bianco Dorian - 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
Première moitié du XIIe siècle
Construction of Romanesque bell tower
Milieu du XIIe siècle
Choir warhead vault
Début du XIIIe siècle
Extension of the choir and crusions
1540
Completion of the western facade
Second quart du XVIe siècle
Construction of the flamboyant nave
7 mars 1908
Historical monument classification
1940 et 1944
Damage during the Second World War
2018
End of Sunday Masses
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Church: by order of 7 March 1908

Key figures

Nicolas Le Viconte - Parishian and donor Mentioned on the bell of 1561.
Anthyme de La Rocque - Chief Architect of Historic Monuments Author of a report in 1908 on the state of the church.
Dominique Vermand - History of architecture Studyed the Romanesque vaults of the Oise.
Bernard Duhamel - Author and specialist of Vexin Reported the Negothic restorations of the 19th century.

Origin and history

The church Saint-Denis de Serans, located in the Oise department in the Hauts-de-France region, is a religious building dating back to the 12th century. The oldest part is its building bell tower, Romanesque style, dated to the first half of the 12th century. This bell tower, with its vaulted cradle base, is a rare vestige of this period, although its current vault may date from a later reconstruction, probably in the seventeenth or eighteenth centuries. The Romanesque choir was partially reworked before the middle of the 12th century, with the addition of a vaulted bay, characteristic of the first Gothic experiments in the region.

At the beginning of the 13th century, the church was enlarged with the addition of a second span of the choir, as well as southern and northern crusillons and side chapels. These changes reflect the evolution towards the Gothic style, although the northern chapels were entirely rebuilt in the sixteenth century, probably due to the damage caused by the Hundred Years' War. The present nave, narrow and high, was built in the second quarter of the 16th century in a flamboyant Gothic style, with renaissant influences visible in decorative details such as the dais of statue niches or vault keys.

The western façade, completed around 1540, is a masterpiece of the flamboyant, adorned with exuberant sculptures and statue niches, although parts, such as the tympanum, were later redone. The church was classified as a historic monument in 1908, but suffered damage during the bombings of 1940 and 1944, requiring repairs until 1958. Today, it depends on the parish of Saint-François du Vexin, although Sunday Masses were suspended in 2018.

The interior of the church reveals a nave with slender proportions, illuminated by high windows, a rarity for rural churches of that time. The low-sides, vaulted dogives, have preserved flamboyant networks, while the capitals and lamp asses combine Gothic and reborn motifs. The furniture includes a bronze bell of 1561 classified, a 19th century neo-Renaissance altarpiece, and baroque elements such as the tabernacles of the side chapels. Despite sometimes controversial restorations, especially in the 19th century, the church retained a remarkable stylistic unit.

The bell tower, though rustic, has Romanesque berries in the middle of the hanger with capitals carved from flat leaves or volutes. The eastern parts, such as the bedside and chapels, show traces of covers and restorations, including neogothic windows added in the 19th century. The exterior, with its bows and decorated foothills, reflects the evolution of architectural techniques between the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. The church, although partially masked by adjacent buildings, remains a significant example of the rural religious heritage of the French Vexin.

External links