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Former Dean or Presbytery aux Arques dans le Lot

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Doyenné

Former Dean or Presbytery

    D150
    46250 Les Arques
Ownership of the municipality
Doyenné des Arques
Ancien doyenné ou ancien presbytère
Crédit photo : MOSSOT - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1193
First written entry
1286
Aborted exchange with the bishop
1345
Piling during the war
1408
End of Conventual Status
1637
Destruction of ramparts
1991
Registration for historical monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Façades and roofs of the tower and the dean's house (cad. AB 89): inscription by order of 27 February 1991

Key figures

Géraud II - Father of Marcilhac First to mention the Dean (1193).
Simon de Beaulieu - Archbishop A resident of the priory at the end of the thirteenth century.
Philippe de Jean - Lord of the Junies Place the village in 1345.
Antoine d’Alamand de La Roche-Chinard - Restorative Dean Work in 1486 on the church.
Germain de Jugeals - Dean and Royal Chaplain Conflict for the seigneury (1620-1648).

Origin and history

The former dean of the Arques, mentioned as early as 1193 by Géraud II, abbot of Marcilhac, was a priory-dean dependent on this abbey, probably since 1182. Its land heritage grew by buying and donating for a century. At the end of the 13th century Archbishop Simon de Beaulieu stayed there, and in 1286 a controversial exchange with the bishop of Cahors was attempted, without apparent success. The priory, located on the border of the French and English territories, was looted in 1345 during the Hundred Years War by Philippe de Jean, lord of the Junies, ally of the English. Ruined and declared uninhabited, he did not return to conventual until 1408, after restorations initiated in 1486 by the Dean Antoine d'Alamand.

In the 16th century, the priory passed to the family of Gourdon-Penne, lords of Cénevières, before being the scene of a conflict (1620-1648) between the dean Germain de Journals – chaplain of the king – and the seigneurs of Pécharuria for the mastery of the seigneury. The revolts of the Fronde and the Croquants, as well as the destruction of the ramparts in 1637 by order of the Duke of Epernon, marked its decline. Purchased by a cahorsin merchant at the end of the 18th century, he became presbytery in 1826, then communal housing. Today, only its tower recalls the old castle of the dean. Enlisted for historical monuments in 1991, it bears witness to feudal and religious struggles in Quercy.

Architecturally, the house blends elements of the twelfth, fourteenth and sixteenth centuries, reflecting its successive reconstructions. Its history is closely linked to Marcilhac Abbey, Franco-English conflicts, and the evolution of local ecclesiastical power. The archives also mention its role in reviving the village in the 15th to 16th centuries, with the arrival of populations from the Haut-Quercy and the Cantal. The 19th century works, for its use as a presbytery, partially altered its medieval structure, but the tower retains its original defensive character.

External links