Affiliate to Cluny 1121 (≈ 1121)
Guillaume d'Auberoche gave the church to the abbey.
1215
Clunisian reconstruction
Clunisian reconstruction 1215 (≈ 1215)
Date engraved above the high altar.
1477
Return of property
Return of property 1477 (≈ 1477)
Edited by Louis XI after looting.
1555
College
College 1555 (≈ 1555)
24 canons and a provost appointed.
1923
MH classification
MH classification 1923 (≈ 1923)
Protection for historical monuments.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Église de la Rochebeaucourt : classification by decree of 28 November 1923
Key figures
Guillaume d'Auberoche - Bishop of Périgueux
Passed the church to Cluny in 1121.
Louis XI - King of France
Returned his property in 1477.
Origin and history
The church Saint-Théodore de La Rochebeaucourt, located in the Dordogne department, is a former collegiate church classified as a historical monument since 1923. His history was marked by his attachment to Cluny Abbey in 1121, when Guillaume d'Auberoche, bishop of Périgueux, granted the building and its dependencies to this powerful religious institution. The date of 1215, engraved above the high altar, attests to a major reconstruction in the thirteenth century, according to the plans of the mother abbey.
The church, originally Romanesque, was partially destroyed in the 14th and 15th centuries before its property was restored to it by an edict of Louis XI in 1477. In the 16th century, it became a collegiate church with a provost and 24 canons, as evidenced by its status in 1555. Its architecture combines Romanesque elements, such as the unique nave that was once lit by sill windows, and subsequent additions, such as a rose made up of seven small roses joined over the western gate.
The current structure retains a high square tower to the south and a panelling replacing the old vaults. Its rectangular plan and turbulent history reflect the political and religious transformations of the region, from its clunisian affiliation to its role in local life under the Ancien Régime. Medieval looting and successive reconstructions left traces in its building, now owned by the commune.
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