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Keywords

03
Prieuré Saint-Pierre-et-Saint-Paul
Aymar de Bourbon
Cluny Abbey
daughters of Cluny
filles de Cluny
Joachim Wollasch
Odilo of Cluny
Odilon de Cluny
Louis II de Bourbon
Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes
William I
France
Auvergne
Allier
Abbaye de Cluny
William the Pious
Duke of Aquitaine
Souvigny
Mayeul de Cluny
Majolus of Cluny
le bon duc


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Souvigny - Prieuré Saint-Pierre-et-Saint-Paul

Souvigny - Prieuré Saint-Pierre-et-Saint-Paul
In 915 Aymar de Bourbon, ancestor of the House of Bourbon, gave land in Souvigny to the Cluny Abbey for the construction of a monastery. At that time the "Abbaye de Cluny" was just 5 years old, as it had been founded 910 by William I, Duke of Aquitaine, (aka "William the Pious").

Souvigny was one of the first priories, dependent from the Cluny Abbey, so it was known later as "one of the five eldest daughters of Cluny".

Cluny developed into the most powerful abbey in the Middle Ages, when the Cluniac Reforms changed the monastic life in Europe. German historian Dr. Joachim Wollasch ("Cluny, Licht der Welt"), estimates that in its haydays, more than 10.000 monks were parts of this network´, that stretched all over Europe. The pelerinage to Santiago de Compostella was one of the great "themes", developed and strongly supported by Cluny.

The priory in Souvigny, located about 130kms west of Cluny, was such an important convent, that two of the powerful abbots of Cluny, Majolus (+ 994) and Odilo (+ 1049) died here. Their graves were a place of pilgrimage site soon after. To cope with the growing number of pilgrims, the priory´s church got enlarged already within the 10th century.

Mayeul (= Majolus) was the 4th, Odilon (= Odilo) was the 5th abbot of the Abbey of Cluny. Odilo "invented" and established the "All Souls' Day" (2. November), that was adopted in the whole Western church.

The church, probably built after the model of Cluny III, with five aisles structure and two transepts, crumbled, when the times got tougher in the next centuries. A renovation was done in the 15th century, but the interior structure is still "clearly" Romanesque. It got recently renovated.

In 1375 Louis II de Bourbon (aka "le bon duc"), who had spent 13 years in captivity in England after the Battle of Poitiers (1356), had a funeral chapel built into the existing southern arm of the transept.

Of course the French revolutionaries destroyed the tombs in 1793, but meanwhile they got reconstructed from the bits and pieces found.

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