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Saint-Sixte de Saint-Sixte Church dans la Loire

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Eglise gothique
Loire

Saint-Sixte de Saint-Sixte Church

    Le Bourg Place de l'Église
    42130 Saint-Sixte
Église Saint-Sixte de Saint-Sixte
Église Saint-Sixte de Saint-Sixte
Église Saint-Sixte de Saint-Sixte
Église Saint-Sixte de Saint-Sixte
Église Saint-Sixte de Saint-Sixte
Crédit photo : Frédérique Défrade - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1900
2000
1881-1886
Initial Boulin project
4 octobre 1888
Jh. Charles Project
1890
Project modification
avril 1891
Conclusion of main work
1893
Final completion
7 janvier 1926
Registration MH
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Church: registration by decree of 7 January 1926

Key figures

Stéphane Boulin - Departmental architect Author of the first plans (1881-1886).
Jh. Charles - Architect in Roanne Designed the project selected in 1888.
Julien Gatier et Jean Sarély - Entrepreneurs Perform the work (1890-1893).
Société la Diana - Scientific Society It opposes partial destruction.

Origin and history

The church Saint-Sixte de Saint-Sixte, located in the Loire department, is a monument whose medieval origin remains partially mysterious. Built in stone (granite and sandstone), it preserves 16th century walls and supports, but its ancient history is poorly documented. The initials "I O L" engraved near the IHS on the vault key of the choir could evoke a master mason or an unknown sponsor, without formal proof.

In the last quarter of the 19th century, the church, considered too small and unhealthy, was the subject of a controversial restoration and expansion project. Between 1881 and 1886, architect Stéphane Boulin proposed plans that divided the municipality and the parish factory. In 1888, the project was entrusted to architect Jh. Charles de Roanne, whose initial plans (approved in November 1888) had to be revised in 1890 under pressure from the learned society Diana, opposed to the destruction of the eastern part.

The works, awarded in 1890 to the entrepreneurs Julien Gatier and Jean Sarély de Boën, ended in 1891, despite delays due to the collapse of the last floor of the bell tower. The latter was reconstructed in a marked neo-Gothic style (replaced bays, pinnacles, polygonal arrow), while two chapels forming a transept, a new sacristy, and slate roofs (replacing hollow tiles) were added. Inside, with three arched ships, preserves traces of the two epochs: medieval and 19th century.

The church was inscribed in the Historical Monuments by order of 7 January 1926. Its architecture thus combines ancient elements (the 16th century walls, the base of the bell tower) and late additions, reflecting the tensions between heritage preservation and modernization at the end of the 19th century.

External links