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Keywords

mermaid
Stephen II
Étienne II
Guillaume Fièrebrace
Guillaume IV
Saint-Victor et Sainte-Couronne
Ennezat
William IV
merman
Puy-de-Dôme
Auvergne
France
63
capital
Craplet


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Ennezat - Collégiale Saint-Victor et Sainte-Couronne

Ennezat - Collégiale Saint-Victor et Sainte-Couronne
Around 1060 a small monastery was founded here, funded by William IV, Duke of Aquitaine (aka Fièrebrace - The Iron Arm).

The building of the romanesque church started immediately and probably only took less than 10 years. This church is counted rightly to the crown jewels of the romanesque architecture in the Auvergne by Bernard Craplet ("Auverne romane").

What makes it so interesting is, that this is the oldest of the crown jewels, as this structure is about 50 years older than Notre-Dame-du-Port, Orcival and Issoire. But it nevertheless shows already all the specific touch, the romanesque style ahs in the Auvergne.

Actually Bernard Craplet places this small church like a stepping stone between the (lost) romanesque cathedral of Étienne II/Pope Stephen II in Clermont and Notre-Dame-du-Port. Though the romanesque church is really small and not complete, this is one of the most important structures in the Auvergne.

The Collégiale Saint-Victor et Sainte-Couronne (now parish church) consists out of three architectural parts. The romanesque church with a nave, two aisles and a transept, a later added narthex and a large gothic part. The building of the gothic church from around 1280 on, took about 200 years.

There are many carved capitals in the romanesque nave. Some nice ones are around the crosssing.

So here is the wife of the merman, just seen before. She poses in the same way as here husband on the right. They seem to be in a kind of garden. This carvings were finished before 1070, and differs a lot from many other (later) "mermaid"-carvings.

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