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Keywords

romanesque
Saint-Hilaire-la-Croix
polylobe
mozarabic
Mozac
Puy-de-Dôme
romanisch
Auvergne
Saintonge
France
63
portal
Saint-Hilaire-lac-rouge


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Saint-Hilaire-la-Croix

Saint-Hilaire-la-Croix
What is the parish church of the tiny village of Saint-Hilaire-la-Croix today, was the church of a priory, depending from Mozat around 1165.
In the beginning the priory was named "Saint-Hilaire-lac-rouge", but over the time, the old name got a little "deformed". There is not much known about the priory. In the early years it served the pilgrims on their way - and somehow it was important enough, to built (and finance) such an extraordenary church. Bernard Craplet ("Auvergne romane") dates the building phase from around 1100 to 1200. Later Augustinian Canons and Vincentians lived here. Not a sucess story for the next centuries the buildings were sold already in 1742.

The northern portal of Saint-Hilaire-la-Croix is very elaborate and combines different artistic styles. Bernard Craplet tracks the craftmen, who created this, back to a travelling group of artists, that left their marks in Fleuriel and other places in the area. He is probably right. I see even influences from the Saitonge. The inner archivolt actually reminds me on Ganagobie, what could mean that it has traces of mozarabic style.

I will upload more detailled photos later.

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