Valmont Abbey

Valmont Abbey
Abbaye de Valmont, Sainte-Marie de Valmont or abbaye Sainte-Marie

The abbey chapel
Location within France
Monastery information
Order Benedictine
Established 1169
Mother house Roman Catholic
People
Founder(s) Nicolas d'Estouteville
Architecture
Style Renaissance
Completed date 1782
Site
Location Valmont, Seine-Maritime, France
Coordinates 49°44′40″N 0°30′55″E / 49.74444°N 0.51528°E / 49.74444; 0.51528Coordinates: 49°44′40″N 0°30′55″E / 49.74444°N 0.51528°E / 49.74444; 0.51528

Valmont Abbey (Abbaye de Valmont, Sainte-Marie de Valmont or abbaye Sainte-Marie) is a Benedictine abbey in Valmont, Seine-Maritime, France. Its chapel and surviving ruins of other parts of the abbey were classed as historical monuments in 1951 and the facades and roofs of all the abbey buildings were made historic monuments in 1965.[1]

History

Statue of Nicolas d'Estouteville, founder of the Abbey

The Abbey was founded in 1169 by Nicolas d'Estouteville with Benedictines detached from Hambye Abbey. It never had more than 25 monks and was destroyed and rebuilt several times with the abbey church only truly completed in the 16th century – Countess Marie II of Saint-Pol is buried in it.

The abbey buildings were built from 1678 to 1782 under Louis de La Fayette (1634–1729), commendatory abbot, who tried to introduce the Saint Maur reforms to the abbey in 1680. It was finally reformed in 1754 by the Maurists and was rebuilt during the second half of the 18th century, until the French Revolution when it was dissolved – its monks were dispersed in 1789 and its buildings sold off to private owners in 1791.

In the 19th century the painter Eugène Delacroix often holidayed at his family estate at Valmont and the abbey ruins inspired his drawing Ruines de l'abbaye de Valmont, now in The Louvre. The abbey became a monastic site again in 1994, re-founded by Benedictines from Notre-Dame-du-Pré at Lisieux and re-dedicated in 2004.

Architecture

The axial chapel of the abbey (from the 16th century) dedicated to the Virgin is the only surviving part of the main church as the nave collapsed in 1730. It is the artistic marvel of the site entirely in Renaissance style. The most well-known is the Chapel of Six O'clock which refers to the time when the monks heard the first office of the day. There are tombs and recumbent tombstones (from the 15th and 16th centuries) of the Lords of Estouteville and their wives. The vault is harmonious and well-designed: the very prominent ribs abut against a circular keystone recessed in the dome. Stained glass dating to 1552 depicts the life of the Virgin and, above the altar, an Annunciation attributed to Germain Pilon.

Of the abbey itself, there remains only the ruins of the choir built in 1520. Consisting of four straight rows, it ends in a five-sided rounded end leading to an Ambulatory which opens in to the Chapel of Six O'clock. Large semicircular arches rest on cylindrical columns and are surmounted by a gallery of ionic columns forming the triforium. The whole is in very pure Renaissance style. This elegant architectural layout was designed by Jehan Ribaud, former abbot of Bec Abbey, who headed Valmont in 1517. It restored the abbey to the fashionable style and may have been used at the Abbey by Italian workers who worked at the time at the Chateau of Gaillon and Fécamp Abbey.

The Departmental Museum of Antiquities at Rouen conserves the 16th century stained glass from the Abbey.[2]

Sources

General View of the Abbey

See also

References

  1. French Ministry of Culture Notice PA00101075 Valmont Abbey (French)
  2. The Stained Glass of the Museum of Antiquities, Rouen, Conseil général de la Seine-Maritime, Michel Hérold, 1999, 33 pages, ISBN 2-902093-32-2, p. 12-13 (French)
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, May 27, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.