Cormery Abbey


Comercy Abbey or Saint-Paul de Cormery Abbey (French: Abbaye Saint-Paul de Cormery) is a former Benedictine abbey located on the territory of the commune of Cormery in the French department of Indre-et-Loire in the Centre-Val de Loire region.

Simple monastic foundation of Ithier in 791, it is raised in the year 800 to the rank of abbey by Alcuin, and adopts the rule of Saint Benedict. It was then attached to the abbey of Saint-Martin in Tours, and remained so until the dissolution of the monastic community during the Revolution. Despite the damage caused by the Normans in the second half of the ninth century, which is difficult to quantify, the abbey developed rapidly, and around it the town of Cormery. In the middle of the Middle Ages, the abbey had many possessions in several French provinces and its boats could navigate freely on all the waterways of the kingdom; with fifty monks, it was one of the most powerful abbeys in Tours. It was affected by the Hundred Years' War, from which it nevertheless recovered, and then by the Wars of Religion, from which it never fully recovered. In spite of the intervention of the Maurists from 1662 onwards, it did not regain its lustre, its numbers diminished inexorably and it was an already weakened abbey that succumbed to the suppression of the congregations during the Revolution, in 1790. The last monks were dispersed, the buildings sold as national property were destroyed or divided up and then redesigned.

In the 21st century, however, there are still important vestiges of the Saint-Paul de Cormery abbey, scattered in an urban landscape where their original unity is sometimes difficult to identify among the recent constructions: the Saint-Paul tower (the bell tower-porch of the abbey church), a Gothic chapel in the choir, the refectory, which has been largely preserved even though it has undergone a lot of remodeling, and a portion of the gallery of the cloister are still standing. On the periphery of the monastic enclosure, the dwellings of the abbot, the prior and the sacristan remain. In stages between 1908 and 1933, all of these remains, with the exception of the sacristan's dwelling, were classified or registered as historical monuments, while the capitals of the preserved parts are listed in the general inventory of cultural heritage.

Abbaye Saint-Paul de Cormery
Vestiges of the abbey. From top to bottom:
Saint-Symphorien chapel and Saint-Paul tower;
cloister and chapter house;
refectory and abbey house.
Location within France
Monastery information
OrderBenedictine
Established791
Disestablished1790
Dedicated toSaint Paul
DioceseTours
Site
LocationCormery, France
Coordinates47°16′8.3994″N 0°50′12.8394″E

Bibliographic sources

  • Agence Bailly-Leblanc et Thalweg Paysage, « Commune de Cormery - élaboration d'une aire de mise en valeur de l'architecture et du patrimoine - diagnostic AVAP » [PDF], on the website of the State services in Indre-et-Loire.
  • Octave Bobeau, « Les églises de Cormery (Indre-et-Loire) », Bulletin archéologique du Comité des travaux historiques et scientifiques,‎ 1908, p. 344-370.
  • Jean-Jacques Bourassé, « Cartulaire de Cormery, précédé de l'histoire de l'abbaye et de la ville de Cormery, d'après les chartes », Mémoire de la Société archéologique de Touraine, Tours, t. XII,‎ 1861, p. 1-325
  • Philippe Chapu, « L'abbaye de Cormery, visite guidée », Bulletin de la société des amis du pays lochois,‎ December 1991, p. 119-138 (ISSN 1244-3816, OCLC 473577837).
  • Annick Chupin, « Cormery 1791-1820. Le dépeçage d'une abbaye millénaire », Bulletin de la Société archéologique de Touraine, t. XLIV,‎ 1995, p. 537-550 (ISSN 1153-2521).
  • Annick Chupin, « Historiens de l'abbaye de Cormery au xviie siècle : Dom Yves Gaigneron et Dom Gilbert Gérard », Bulletin de la Société archéologique de Touraine, t. XLVI,‎ 2000, p. 253-268 (ISSN 1153-2521).
  • Annick Chupin, « Alcuin et Cormery », Annales de Bretagne et des pays de l'Ouest, Presses universitaires de Rennes, t. CXII, no 3,‎ 2004, p. 103-112 (DOI 10.4000/abpo.1225).
  • Charles Lelong, « Vestiges romans de l'abbatiale de Cormery », Bulletin Monumental, t. CXXIV, no 4,‎ 1966, p. 381-387 (DOI 10.3406/bulmo.1966.4658).
  • Charles Lelong, « Encore Cormery… », Bulletin de la Société archéologique de Touraine, t. XLIV,‎ 1996, p. 785-791 (ISSN 1153-2521).
  • Frédéric Lesueur, « Cormery », in Congrès archéologique de France, CVIth session held in Tours in 1948, Paris, Société française d'archéologie, 1949, 416 p., p. 82-110.
  • Valérie Mauret-Cribellier, « L'abbaye bénédictine Saint-Paul de Cormery (Indre-et-Loire) », Bulletin de la Société archéologique de Touraine, t. XLIV,‎ 1994, p. 119-144 (ISSN 1153-2521).
  • Michel-J. Peutin, Cormery : mille ans d'histoire d'une abbaye, Truyes, Cadic, 1986, 18 p.
  • Thomas Pouyet, Cormery et son territoire : origines et transformations d’un établissement monastique dans la longue durée (8e-18e siècles) : Archéologie et Préhistoire, vol. I : Texte, Tours, Université de Tours / Région Centre-Val de Loire, 2019, 399 p.
  • Thomas Pouyet, Cormery et son territoire : origines et transformations d’un établissement monastique dans la longue durée (8e-18e siècles) : Archéologie et Préhistoire, vol. II : Corpus de preuves, Tours, Université de Tours / Région Centre-Val de Loire, 2019, 309 p.
  • Thomas Pouyet, « Cormery et son territoire : origines et transformations d’un établissement monastique dans la longue durée (viiie – xviiie siècle) », Bulletin du centre d’études médiévales d’Auxerre, no 24.2,‎ 2020 (DOI 10.4000/cem.17943).
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