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Terror Bell of the Sagnes à Saint-Julien-du-Tournel en Lozère

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Clocher de tourmente
Lozère

Terror Bell of the Sagnes

    Hameau des Sagnes
    48190 Saint-Julien-du-Tournel
Clocher de tourmente des Sagnes
Clocher de tourmente des Sagnes
Clocher de tourmente des Sagnes
Clocher de tourmente des Sagnes
Clocher de tourmente des Sagnes
Clocher de tourmente des Sagnes
Clocher de tourmente des Sagnes
Crédit photo : Ancalagon - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1900
2000
1856
Date engraved on the sommital stone
XIXe siècle
Construction of the bell tower
17 juillet 1992
Registration for historical monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Clocher de tormente des Sagnes, in the hamlet of Sagnes (see communal public domain; registration by order of 17 July 1992

Key figures

Fayet de Mende - Bell founder Produced the 19th-century cast iron bell.

Origin and history

The tower of torment of the Sagnes is an emblematic building located in the hamlet of the Sagnes, on the town of Saint-Julien-du-Tournel, in Lozère. Built in the 19th century, it is distinguished by its truncated pyramidal structure, surmounted by a stone slab engraved with a chronogram. A cast iron bell, decorated with reliefs and inscriptions, is supported by an element of ironwork, while its yoke is made of stone. This type of bell tower, unique to the surroundings of Mount Lozère, was used for a variety of purposes: angelic, glass, school alerts, storm prevention, or guidance for people lost in fog.

These bell towers, often erected in hamlets without churches, were sound and social landmarks. Their architecture, close to the single bay bell towers, rests on a tapered rectangular base upwards. Some have a niche housing a religious statue or a small lodge for the sounder. The bell tower of the Sagnes, inscribed in historical monuments since 1992, illustrates this 19th century local tradition, with a bell founded by Fayet de Mende and a sommital stone dated 1856.

Their role has now been reduced to ice and fire alarms, but they remain evidence of community life and the rural construction techniques of the time. These buildings, often surmounted by an iron or stone cross, reflect the ingenuity of mountain populations to adapt to the geographical and climatic constraints of the region.

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