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Saint Pierre de Champagne Church en Ardèche

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Eglise
Eglise romane
Ardèche

Saint Pierre de Champagne Church

    Rue Saint-Jean
    07340 Champagne
Église Saint-Pierre de Champagne
Église Saint-Pierre de Champagne
Église Saint-Pierre de Champagne
Église Saint-Pierre de Champagne
Église Saint-Pierre de Champagne
Église Saint-Pierre de Champagne
Église Saint-Pierre de Champagne
Église Saint-Pierre de Champagne
Église Saint-Pierre de Champagne
Église Saint-Pierre de Champagne
Église Saint-Pierre de Champagne
Église Saint-Pierre de Champagne
Église Saint-Pierre de Champagne
Église Saint-Pierre de Champagne
Église Saint-Pierre de Champagne
Église Saint-Pierre de Champagne
Église Saint-Pierre de Champagne
Église Saint-Pierre de Champagne
Église Saint-Pierre de Champagne
Église Saint-Pierre de Champagne
Église Saint-Pierre de Champagne
Église Saint-Pierre de Champagne
Église Saint-Pierre de Champagne
Église Saint-Pierre de Champagne
Église Saint-Pierre de Champagne
Église Saint-Pierre de Champagne
Église Saint-Pierre de Champagne
Église Saint-Pierre de Champagne
Église Saint-Pierre de Champagne
Église Saint-Pierre de Champagne
Église Saint-Pierre de Champagne
Église Saint-Pierre de Champagne
Église Saint-Pierre de Champagne
Église Saint-Pierre de Champagne
Église Saint-Pierre de Champagne
Église Saint-Pierre de Champagne
Église Saint-Pierre de Champagne
Église Saint-Pierre de Champagne
Église Saint-Pierre de Champagne
Église Saint-Pierre de Champagne
Église Saint-Pierre de Champagne
Église Saint-Pierre de Champagne
Église Saint-Pierre de Champagne
Église Saint-Pierre de Champagne
Église Saint-Pierre de Champagne
Église Saint-Pierre de Champagne
Église Saint-Pierre de Champagne
Église Saint-Pierre de Champagne
Église Saint-Pierre de Champagne
Église Saint-Pierre de Champagne
Crédit photo : Reinhardhauke - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1000
1100
1200
1300
1400
1800
1900
2000
972
Donation to Cluny
1088
Urban II Bull
1119 et 1120
Calixte II Bulls
1214
Become Priory
1328
Parish Church
1862
MH classification
1888-1894
Major restoration
1972
Discovery of a grave
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Church: ranking by list of 1862

Key figures

Urbain II - Pope (1088-1099) Confirms the Vienna authority in 1088.
Calixte II - Pope (1119-1124) Emit two bubbles in 1119 and 1120.
Guy de Bourgogne - Archbishop of Vienna, future Calixte II Awarded as possible sponsor of the twelfth.
Comtes d’Albon - Dauphinous Lords Suspected of attempted usurpation in the 12th century.
Guigues VII - Count of Vienna (early 13th) Ceded seigneurial rights in 1214.
Goudji - Contemporary Artist Created liturgical elements in 2000.

Origin and history

The church Saint-Pierre de Champagne, located in the Ardèche department in Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, is both an abbey and a parish church. Classified as a historical monument since 1862, it embodies a medieval religious heritage marked by clunisian and Viennese influences. Its bedside, equipped with an atypical stroll for the region, and its nave covered with domes on tubes – a rarity in France with only two other examples – testify to an ambitious architecture between the 11th and 12th centuries.

The origins of the church date back to a charter of 972 mentioning a donation to the abbey of Cluny, but its first clear attestation dates from 1088, when Pope Urban II confirmed his attachment to the archdiocese of Vienna. In the 12th century, Popes Calixte II and Adrien IV reiterated this affiliation, suggesting tensions with local lords, such as the Counts of Albon. The church became a priory dependent on the Abbey of Saint-Chef in 1214, before being permanently attached to the Archdiocese of Vienna in 1328, marking its transition to parish status.

The construction of the present building, attributed in various ways to the Counts of Albon or to the influence of Archbishop Guy of Burgundy (future Pope Calixte II), would date from the middle of the 12th century. It replaces an earlier 11th century church, which remains re-used capitals. The bedside, inspired by that of Saint-Chef, and the domes of the nave – covering two spans each – underline its originality. A tomb discovered in 1972 in front of the altar, dating from the second half of the 11th century, evokes a character linked to its foundation, without its identity being known.

The history of the church is marked by troubled periods: devastation by the roadmen in the 15th century, damage during the wars of Religion (partial destruction of the towers, collapse of the vaults), and decline in the 18th century due to the demographic decline of the village. Major restorations between 1888 and 1894 removed post-medieval additions to restore its Romanesque state, while preserving modern liturgical elements added in 2000, such as the altar and the ambon created by Gudji.

The church also illustrates local ecclesiastical developments: attached to successive orders (Cluny, Saint-Chef, Archdiocese of Vienna), it became parish in 1328. Its community role persists, with parish priests residing until the vocational crises of the 20th century, then a management entrusted since 1994 to interparous presbyteral teams, including regular canons of St Augustine. Today, it remains an active place of worship and a major witness to the ardèche Romanesque heritage.

External links