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France
Melle
Deux-Sèvres
Poitou-Charentes
Via Turonensis
Saint-Hilaire de Melle


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Melle - Saint-Hilaire

Melle - Saint-Hilaire
Melle was known already during Roman times, when silver and lead were mined here. The silver mines were exploited over hundreds of years, got forgotten and "rediscovered" in the 19th century. Today they are a tourist attraction. Melle was wealthy and the pilgrims, walking the Via Turonensis, passed through Melle on their way to Santiago, what brought even more money into town.

Churches were erected during the heydays of the pilgrimage- and three (!) Romanesque churches can still be found here.

Saint-Hilaire de Melle was the church of a priory, a dependency of the important Benedictian abbey in Saint-Jean-d’Angély. It was built on the bank of the Beronne river. The eastern part were built in the first half of the 12th century, while the nave and the western portals may be some decades younger.

There are more than 200 carved capitals alone in- and outside this church.

Having entered the church through the western portal, a flight of stairs leads down to the nave. The two different building phases can be seen from here. While the older (western) part has round arches, the younger arches of the nave are pointed.

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