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During
the 11th century, a Breton priest and theologian, Robert d'Abrissel,
decided to live as a hermit in the forest of Craon. Little by little,
however, many believers gathered around him. This led him to found
the abbey of La Roë on the limits of Brittany, Normandy and
Anjou. Pope Urban II, curious about this character, went to the
abbey in 1096 to hear the priest. He was won over by d'Abrissel's
eloquence; he appointed him an "apostolic preacher" and
ordered him to preach in the West of France.
Robert
d'Abrissel left his community in 1098 and took to the road. He was
soon followed by a large group of disciples of both sexes. He stopped
in Fontevraud in 1101 and founded a new abbey, unique in its kind
as it welcomed, in five different buildings, various communities.
The priory of Sainte Marie accommodated the choir nuns and the contemplatives;
the priory of La Madeleine lodged the penitent sinners who would
later be called the lay sisters; the priory of Saint Benoît
was used as an infirmary for the crippled and the sick; the priory
of Saint Lazare received lepers and after the eradication of leprosy,
it lodged convalescent nuns; and the priory of Saint Jean de l'Habit
was reserved for men - the priest monks and the lay brothers.
Each one of these monasteries led an autonomous life and had its
own cloister, church, refectory, dormitories and ovens. Robert d'Abrissel
was the "Magister", the master, of this double Order to
which he appointed as leader, an abbess he had recruited among the
widows.
From
the very foundation of Fontevraud, the family of Anjou had shown
itself to be generous towards the burgeoning Order. Henry II and
his wife Eleanor of Aquitaine were also generous donators and watchful
protectors and two of their children, John the Landless and Joan
of England, were partly brought up there. Henry II had wished to
be buried in the Abbey of Grandmont but he died in July 1189 in
Chinon. Because of the heat, his family decided not to carry his
body to Grandmont but to the abbey of Fontevraud, that was also
dear to the King and not as far as Grandmont. And this is how it
came to be that Henry of Plantagenet was buried in Fontevraud. Soon
his son, Richard Lionheart, his daughter Joan of England and his
wife Eleanor of Aquitaine, who died in 1204, joined him. Other members
of the Royal family are also buried in Henry II's necropolis. Four
magnificent recumbent polychrome statues are still preserved in
the abbey-church: three are made of stone and one of wood.
The
new Order soon saw success and wealth, partly thanks to the abbesses
who usually came from the aristocracy and who provided Fontevraud
with donations and protection. These women succeeded one another
through the centuries: Marie of Brittany, during the 15th century,
Renée and Louise of Bourbon during the 16th century and Jeanne-Baptiste
of Bourbon, daughter of King Henry IV and Gabrielle de Rochechouart
of Mortemart and sister of Madame de Montespan during the 17th century.
All of them helped make the abbey of Fontevraud a renowned cultural
and spiritual centre. King Louis XV had his four last daughters
brought up there. The abbey lodged up to 800 monks and nuns and
153 priories in France, England and Spain depended on the Fontevrist
Order. As it was a Royal abbey, Fontevraud depended, on the worldly
level, on the King of France and his council and on the spiritual
level, it depended on the Pope and his curia.
During
the French Revolution, the Order was abolished and the monks' priory
was destroyed in 1793. In 1804, Napoleon transformed the monastery
into a prison that could hold up to 1750 prisoners, once the partitions
and separations were removed.
The abbey was given back to the Ministry of Culture in 1963 and
soon became the headquarters for the Cultural Centre of Western
France whose mission it is to organise events linked to the building.
French historical
buildings website : a description of the abbey and useful information
about visits and workshops.
Fontevraud
: a visit of the abbey and a biography of the historical figures
linked to Fontevraud.
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© 2000 Editions Montparnasse. All rights reserved
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Fontevraud
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