Martyr of Saint Reverian 274 (≈ 274)
Decapitation to Nevers with his companions.
fin XIe - début XIIe siècle
Construction of the Priory and Church
Construction of the Priory and Church fin XIe - début XIIe siècle (≈ 1225)
Clunisian Foundation, construction of Romanesque bedside.
1723
Destroyer fire
Destroyer fire 1723 (≈ 1723)
Nef and bell tower destroyed, summary restoration.
1833-1840
Reconstruction of the nave
Reconstruction of the nave 1833-1840 (≈ 1837)
Neo-Romanesque restoration by Paillard, MH ranking.
1840
First classification Historic Monument
First classification Historic Monument 1840 (≈ 1840)
Protection of the choir and paintings.
1887-1888
Restoration of frescoes
Restoration of frescoes 1887-1888 (≈ 1888)
Clearing of 16th century murals.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Choir and walls decorated with mural paintings: ranking by list of 1840 and by decree of 1 July 1887; The yousure supporting a 12th century bas-relief, carved stone, representing two angels, located at the upper part of the gate (Box A 253): classification by decree of 6 August 1958
Key figures
Saint Révérien - Missionary and Martyr (III s.)
Patron of the church, beheaded in 274.
Rotbertus - Sculptor novel
Author of capitals signed in the choir.
François Mouchet de Villedieu - Last Prior Sponsor (1778-1789)
Bishop of Digne, expelled to the Revolution.
Pierre Hyppolite Paillard - 19th century architect
Reconstructs the nave in neo-roman style.
Hugues de Lespinasse - Local Lord (XIVth century)
Buried in the church, funeral slab classified.
Dom Admiral et Dom Périnet - Last monks (1789)
Expelled at the Revolution, end of the priory.
Origin and history
The church of Saint-Réverian, located in the eponymous village of Bourgogne-Franche-Comté, is an ancient Romanesque priorial built between the end of the 11th and the beginning of the 12th century. Dedicated to St.Reverian, a Roman missionary beheaded in 274 with her companions near Nevers, she was directly dependent on Cluny Abbey. This Conventual Priory, endowed with extensive seigneurial rights and land wealth (land, mills, ponds), was a major religious and political centre of medieval Nivernais. Its monks, numbering twelve originally, saw their numbers decline from the 15th century, while the convent buildings fell into ruins, with the exception of the prioral home.
The church, Romanesque architecture for its bedside (deambulatory, absidioles) and neo-Romanesque for its nave rebuilt in the 19th century, suffered multiple destructions. A fire in 1723 ravaged the bell tower and the nave, resulting in a brief restoration in 1725-1726. The bell tower collapsed again in the early 19th century, requiring a complete reconstruction of the nave (1833-1840) by architect Paillard, in a style imitating the original. Ranked in 1840, the church houses artistic treasures: sculpted novel capitals (including a Rotbertus signature), frescoes of the 15th-XVIth centuries in the radiant chapels, and medieval funeral slabs.
The oldest part of the bedside illustrates the clunisian influence by its historic capitals (biblical scenes, fantastic bestiary) and its modillons. The wall paintings of the axial chapel, dedicated to the Virgin (XVI century), combine the symbols of litany (sun, moon, tower of David) and narrative scenes (Annunciation, Visitation). The northern chapel, under the name of St.Reverian, preserves a 14th century cephalophora statue. These elements, protected by 1840, bear witness to the spiritual and artistic richness of the priory, despite its decline in modern times.
At the Revolution, the priory was dissolved and his property sold as national property. The last two monks, Dom Admiral and Dom Périnet, were expelled in 1789. In the 19th century, the restoration campaigns (1887-1888) revealed the frescoes hidden under badigeons and consolidated the structure. Today, the church, a communal property, remains open to the public. His re-used Romanesque portal, adorned with Byzantine cariatides, and his funeral slabs of local lords (Hugues de Lespinasse, Marguerite de Thianges) recall his past as an aristocratic necropolis.
The Priory of Saint-Réverian, linked to noble families such as the Champallement or the Cherry (dynasty of Priors in the XVII-XVIIIth centuries), was also a place of power. His priors, often from the regional elite, had a number of ecclesiastical offices: thus François Mouchet de Villedieu, the last patron prior (1778-1789), was also bishop of Digne. The archives mention repeated looting (1343, 1360, 1423) and donations from local lords, highlighting its central role in the medieval life of Nivernais.
Announcements
Please log in to post a review