Église Saint-Girons
Coordinates: 43°19′12″N 0°34′46″W / 43.32000°N 0.57944°W
L'Église Saint-Girons (English: Saint-Girons Church; Béarnese Occitan: glèisa de Sent Gironç) is a Gothic-style Roman Catholic church located in the commune of Monein (formerly in Béarn) in Pyrénées-Atlantiques, Aquitaine. It was classified as a monument historique of France on 7 August 1913.[1] Its grand size made it the largest Gothic church in Béarn in the 15th century. It is most famous for its heart of oak frame which represents the Medieval architecture style.
History
Construction
In the 16th century, Monein was a growing village with over 5,000 residents, or 850 fires; (hoec vius in official Béarnese documents at the time), whereas in Pau there were only about 700 residents, as shown by the dénombrements (census for taxation purposes) in Béarn. The old Romanesque church Sant-Pée (Occitan: Sent Pèr, equivalent to Saint-Pierre) became too small for the residents, so it was decided to build a larger church next to the Lay Abbey (which no longer exists).
Monein was also a very rich village as it paid more taxes than Orthez and Oloron together, and it was one of the largest communes in Béarn because it was composed of the villages of Cuqueron and Cardesse.
Finally, the residents had religious life styles because there were 9 confraternities and 16 priests in Monein at the time.
The size of the new church should be proportional to the wealth of the village; the Église Saint-Girons of Monein is over 61 m (200 ft) long, 16 m (52.5 ft) wide and 31 m (102 ft) high. It is larger than the two cathedrals of Béarn, the Lescar Cathedral (Cathédrale Notre-Dame-de-l'Assomption de Lescar) in Lescar and the Oloron Cathedral (Cathédrale Sainte-Marie d'Oloron) in Oloron-Sainte-Marie.
Construction of the church began in 1464 and was completed in 1530. During the 70 years of construction, residents paid for the work through numerous taxes and built the church with their own hands.
Others
Queen Jeanne d'Albret of Navarre transformed the church into a Protestant church, however the church returned to Catholic under the Édit d'intégration du Béarn (Edict of Integration of Béarn), promulgated by King Louis XIII of France (who was also Louis I of Navarre at that time). The church was then refurnished and it still retains a large Baroque-style altarpiece and 17th century organs from Toulouse today.
The Église Saint-Girons was restored in the late 20th and early 21st centuries. Its heart of oak frame is now a tourist attraction.
See also
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Église Saint-Girons. |
Notes and References
Partially translated from the corresponding article in French Wikipedia.
Sources
- ↑ "Classement de l'église Saint-Girons" (in French). Base Mérimée, Minister of Culture of France. Retrieved 2009-09-12.
Bibliography
- Duval, Marie-Victoire (1991). Monein, une communauté du Béarn au Moyen Âge et sous l'Ancien Régime (in French). Monein.
- Couet-Lannes, Lucienne (2006). Visitons l'église de Monein (in French). Princi Néguer - Monein.
- Raymond, Paul (1873). Le Béarn sous Gaston PhPhœbus, Dénombrement général des maisons de la Vicomté de Béarn en 1385 (in French). Pau.