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Saint George Church of Châtenois dans le Bas-Rhin

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Eglise romane et gothique
Bas-Rhin

Saint George Church of Châtenois

    Rue de l'Église
    67730 Châtenois
Église Saint-Georges de Châtenois
Église Saint-Georges de Châtenois
Église Saint-Georges de Châtenois
Église Saint-Georges de Châtenois
Église Saint-Georges de Châtenois
Église Saint-Georges de Châtenois
Église Saint-Georges de Châtenois
Église Saint-Georges de Châtenois
Église Saint-Georges de Châtenois
Église Saint-Georges de Châtenois
Église Saint-Georges de Châtenois
Église Saint-Georges de Châtenois
Église Saint-Georges de Châtenois
Église Saint-Georges de Châtenois
Église Saint-Georges de Châtenois
Église Saint-Georges de Châtenois
Église Saint-Georges de Châtenois
Église Saint-Georges de Châtenois
Église Saint-Georges de Châtenois
Église Saint-Georges de Châtenois
Église Saint-Georges de Châtenois
Église Saint-Georges de Châtenois
Église Saint-Georges de Châtenois
Église Saint-Georges de Châtenois
Église Saint-Georges de Châtenois
Église Saint-Georges de Châtenois
Église Saint-Georges de Châtenois
Église Saint-Georges de Châtenois
Église Saint-Georges de Châtenois
Église Saint-Georges de Châtenois
Église Saint-Georges de Châtenois
Église Saint-Georges de Châtenois
Église Saint-Georges de Châtenois
Église Saint-Georges de Châtenois
Église Saint-Georges de Châtenois
Église Saint-Georges de Châtenois
Église Saint-Georges de Châtenois
Église Saint-Georges de Châtenois
Église Saint-Georges de Châtenois
Église Saint-Georges de Châtenois
Église Saint-Georges de Châtenois
Église Saint-Georges de Châtenois
Église Saint-Georges de Châtenois
Église Saint-Georges de Châtenois
Église Saint-Georges de Châtenois
Église Saint-Georges de Châtenois
Église Saint-Georges de Châtenois
Crédit photo : © Ralph Hammann - Wikimedia Commons - 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
XIe–XIIe siècles
Construction of Romanesque bell tower
Vers 1525–1530
Adding scauguuettes
1759–1761
Reconstruction nave and choir
1765
Installation of the Silbermann organ
1901
Ranking of the bell tower
1990
Registration of the building
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Tour-clocher : classification by decree of 22 August 1901; Hélène Rimelin's funerary monument: inscription by decree of 3 June 1932; Church (with the exception of the modern extension of the sacristy), including the ossuary and the wall of enclosure with its access gates (Box 6 100): inscription by order of 30 October 1990

Key figures

Jean-André Silbermann - Organ factor Author of the organ installed in 1765.
Martin Dorgler - Contractor-master of work Directed the reconstruction in 1759–61.
Hélène Rimelin - Local character ( funerary unit) Ranked Tomb dated 1st quarter XVIIe.

Origin and history

The Saint-Georges Church of Châtenois, located in the Bas-Rhin region of the Grand Est region, is a monument dating back to the 11th century. The present building incorporates a Romanesque tower with geminied bays, the only vestige of the medieval church destroyed in the 18th century. This bell tower, crowned in 1530 by four chestnut wood scalds, could have played a defensive role. The nave and choir, built in 1759 by local entrepreneur Martin Dorgler, house antique furniture, including an organ by Jean-André Silbermann (1765) and 16th century polychrome paintings.

The church was originally surrounded by a fortified cemetery including an ossuary and a chapel Saint-Pierre, mentioned in the 15th century but disappeared before the 18th century. The site, originally dedicated to the Virgin Mary, was rebuilt in the 12th century under the name of Saint George. Hélène Rimelin's funeral monument (1st quarter 17th century) and the mother-of-pearl procession cross (1763) bear witness to its rich heritage. Partially classified in 1901, the church was the subject of additional inscriptions in 1932 and 1990 to protect its architectural and furniture complex.

Architecturally, the building combines Romanesque (clocher) styles, late Gothic (warf vaults on the ground floor of the tower) and Baroque (nef and choir of the eighteenth century). The chestnut belfry, dated 1630, was replaced in 1922 when new bells were installed. Modern sacristy, excluded from protections, contrasts with historical structure. The church remains a significant example of the evolution of Alsatian places of worship, reflecting the defensive, liturgical and artistic needs of the community throughout the centuries.

External links