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Lure Abbey en Haute-Saône

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Abbaye
Haute-Saône

Lure Abbey

    Square Charles-de-Gaulle
    70200 Lure
Private property; property of the department; owned by a private company
Abbaye de Lure
Abbaye de Lure
Abbaye de Lure
Abbaye de Lure
Abbaye de Lure
Abbaye de Lure
Abbaye de Lure
Abbaye de Lure
Abbaye de Lure
Abbaye de Lure
Abbaye de Lure
Abbaye de Lure
Abbaye de Lure
Abbaye de Lure
Abbaye de Lure
Abbaye de Lure
Abbaye de Lure
Abbaye de Lure
Abbaye de Lure
Crédit photo : A.BourgeoisP - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
600
700
800
900
1000
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
611
Foundation by Saint Desle
967
Reconstruction by Baudran
1556
Union with Murbach
1679
Annex to the Franche-Comté
1764
Secularization
XVIe et XVIIIe siècles
Construction campaigns
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The vaulted room and the access door (currently walled) located on the ground floor of a building located 14 rue Kléber (Box AV 78): inscription by order of 29 October 1968 - The following parts (currently sub-prefecture and annex of the hospital) located square Charles-de-Gaulle: facades and roofs; the wrought iron ramp of the interior staircase and the living room with its woodwork decoration (currently office of the sub-prefect) (Box AV 75, 76): inscription by order of 6 June 1977 - The floor of the old church; building housing the vaulted room already registered (the so-called house of Mr Thurn the elder); buildings, facades and roofs, and the whole of the park, as well as its built elements of the current Scheurer property (formerly known as Monsieur de Girardy's house); facades and roofs of the canonial house called Monsieur de Laubespin, in the north, as well as of the adjoining canonial house, and that their parks with their fences (cad. AV 130 to 132, 78, 151, 152, 80, 84 to 88, 153, 79, 18, 22 to 28): registration by order of 7 December 1998

Key figures

Saint Desle - Merovingian Founder Disciple of St. Colomban.
Abbé Baudran (ou Beltramme) - Rebuilder in the 10th century Restore the abbey under Otton.
Clotaire II - King of Burgundy Dona land to Saint Desle.
Otton le Grand - German Emperor Granted imperial privileges.
Charles Quint - Emperor of the Holy Empire Authorised the monetary strike.
Louis XIV - King of France Integrated the abbey to the Franche-Comté.

Origin and history

The abbey of Lure, located in Lure (Haute-Saône), was founded in the 7th century by Saint Desle, disciple of Saint Colomban. Located near the pond of la Font, she received royal gifts such as those of Clotaire II, who offered her land after an accidental encounter. The abbey became an influential place, attracting donations from local nobles and enriching itself with privileges such as autonomy under the Holy Empire.

In the 9th century, the abbey was reformed under the rule of Saint-Benoît and suffered from Hungarian invasions before being restored in the 10th century by Abbé Baudran, under the protection of Otto the Great. He granted him princely rights, including the right to beat money, and placed it under the direct sovereignty of the Holy See. The abbots became princes of the Empire, with extensive rights such as monetary strike or justice.

In 1556, the abbey joined Murbach, strengthening its influence. Despite the destruction of the Thirty Years' War and its annexation to the Franche-Comté in 1679, it retained certain privileges until its secularization in 1764. Transformed into a noble chapter, it housed six canons before the Revolution. Today, its 17th and 18th century buildings house the sub-prefecture, and only a few elements remain, such as canonical houses and a botanical garden.

The abbey church, destroyed, saw its stones re-used. The Abbey Palace, listed as a Historic Monument, bears witness to its prestigious past. The abbey played a major economic role, exploiting coal mines in Champagney before their nationalization. Its history reflects tensions between local, imperial and royal authorities, as well as the evolution of monastic structures in Europe.

Among the notable figures, Saint Desle, founder Merovingian, and Abbé Baudran, reconstructor in the tenth century, stand out. Charles Quint authorized the minting of money in the 16th century, while Louis XIV definitively joined the abbey in the Kingdom of France. These stages illustrate its political and religious importance throughout the centuries.

External links