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Targnat Cross à Saint-Beauzire dans le Puy-de-Dôme

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Croix
Puy-de-Dôme

Targnat Cross

    Targnat C.D. 78, C.V.O. 6
    63360 Saint-Beauzire
Crédit photo : Sylenius - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
XVIe siècle (ou début XVIIe)
Initial construction
1800–1899
Restoration and replacement
29 décembre 1978
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Road crossing: by order of 29 December 1978

Key figures

Information non disponible - Anonymous donor Suspected member of a sect or brotherhood.

Origin and history

The Cross of Targnat, located in Saint-Beauzire in Puy-de-Dôme, is a cross of road dating back to the 16th century, even the beginning of the 17th century. This historic monument is distinguished by its complex architectural structure: a cubic pedestal surmounted by an octagonal base, decorated with prismatic mouldings. The barrel, cylindrical and fitted with foothills, supports a cross with arms finished with stylized plant motifs and an openwork nimbe surrounding religious sculptures, including a Christ on the cross and a Pietà. A hermetic inscription on an ecu suggests a link with a brotherhood of merchants or a sect, although its exact meaning remains enigmatic.

The cross was reportedly destroyed during the French Revolution, then restored and replaced in the 19th century. His iconography and symbols, such as the reverse figures of the ecu, reflect mystical or professional influences peculiar to his time. Classified as a Historical Monument in 1978, it now belongs to the municipality of Saint-Beauzire and bears witness to local religious and artisanal practices between Renaissance and modern times.

The unique character of the Targnat Cross also resides in its state of conservation and its sculptural details, such as the central flower with flat petals or the polylobed nimbe. These artistic elements, combined with its turbulent history, make it a remarkable example of the rural religious heritage of Auvergne. Its current location, close to Route 78, recalls its original role as a spiritual and cultural landmark for travellers and residents.

The road crosses, like Targnat's, served both as geographical markers and as support for devotion. Their erection was often financed by local donors, sometimes members of brotherhoods or merchant guilds, as suggested by the mysterious shield of this monument. These structures played a social role by uniting communities around shared symbols, while displaying the status or beliefs of their patrons.

The period of construction of the cross, in the 16th-17th centuries, corresponds to an era of profound changes in Auvergne: the development of trade, the growing influence of humanist and reformed ideas, but also the persistence of medieval traditions. Allegorical or hermetic sculptures, such as those present here, could reflect tensions between official faith and esoteric practices, common in the artisanal or merchant circles of the time.

External links