Showing posts with label Notre-Dame-de-L'Oder. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Notre-Dame-de-L'Oder. Show all posts

08 December 2010

Le Prieuré

Le Prieuré (The Priory) is my home. I have lived here for the past three months ~ in a medieval cloister snuggled on top of a hill in the middle of a quaint little village. I really could not think of a better place to spend my time in France. You may ask how this little old Priory came into existence, and why it is so important to the village?

In the eleventh century, a church and priory were built by the Benedictine Order on a hill in Ambialet, while the village had become established below.  Many centuries later, in 1860, the priory was bought by a Franciscan friar, Father Clausade. He restored the monastery of the Priory for Third Order Franciscans and also the attached Romanesque chapel of Notre-Dame-de-L’Oder. He also established a seminary school for young boys.

The Priory Overlooking Ambialet
© Tales of a Flaneur
The seminary school for boys was very hard.  Getting up at the crack of dawn was followed by shirtless gymnastics in the yard, regardless of the weather!  After, they went to Mass and later to classes. Following meals, they recited seventy Hail Mary’s in the cloister with the monks. Only after this could they enjoy some recreation time!  Their favorite day was Pentecost because they sang for the multitude who came there on pilgrimage. The seminary boarding school closed around 1960. Alumni still come today to see how the place is changed and to find the exact spot in which they slept at night.

Currently, the Priory is leased by Saint Francis University. Significant restorations have been made, which makes staying there a much more pleasant experience!  Many students come each year and experience the wonderful joys of the rural area of Ambialet. The villagers say that we have brought light into their lives. They enjoy being able to look up on the hill and see lights on in the priory. It brings them great joy to know that the once abandoned building is now being put to such good use! The people of Ambialet look forward to new groups of students coming here each semester, and to being able to share Ambialet's history with each of them. We have certainly learned a lot about this town over the past three months, and have come to greatly respect its history and its people. We have felt so very welcomed and have enjoyed our time here!

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[Spectacle son & lumière d’Ambialet 2008: Texte redige du spectacle]

06 December 2010

Religion & Churches in Ambialet

Religion shapes the way that we live our lives and how society views others. Many French people consider themselves to be Catholic, but it is not common for all to to go to a weekly church service. Roman Catholicism was France’s state religion until 1905, when a new law of the Third French Republic mandated the separation between Church and State.


There have been a total of five churches in Ambialet:

  • Eglise de Lacondomine was designed by Jean-Baptiste Vergnes (1829-1886). The Romanesque bell tower has been recently restored albeit the church itself no longer stands.
  • Eglise de Bonneval collapsed in 1867 and it was later reconstructed in neo-Gothic style. It is no longer in use today.
Remains of Eglise Saint-Gilles    © Tales of a Flaneur 





















  • Notre-Dame-de-la-Capelle was built near the former Trencavel Castle. This church was strictly used as a private chapel by  these Lords from 1388 to 1762. After the siege of the 1860s, it became a parish church. Today, it is in ruins. 
  • Eglise Saint-Gilles was the first parish church, which was so named because the Lords of Ambialet, the Trencavel family, worshiped this saint.  This church was built in the 11th century and it was devoted to one of the most popular saints of the Middle Ages, Saint Gilles. The steeple is perched on a platform based on the remains of a Roman fort.  It was burned to the ground in the Wars of Religion. Today, it now serves as an exhibition hall for the works of local painters, artists, photographers, and so on.
  • Notre-Dame-de-L'Oder is a Romanesque chapel which is the only church in use today. It is located at the top of a hill which overlooks the village of Ambialet. It was built in 1057. In 1866, it was restored by Father Clausade, the Franciscan Friar who restored the Priory. The church is alive and well today with many villagers attending the 11:15 a.m. mass and it boasts a lively choir.  
© Tales of a Flaneur
These five churches show that religious life and communal worship has always been very important in Ambialet. The town itself was not free of heresy, and did get entangled in the politics of the Albigensian Crusades ~ mainly because the Trencavel had Cathar sympathies. But Ambialet would prosper in the aftermath of these Crusades, thanks to the ingenuity and leadership of the town consuls.

Today, pilgrims coming to Ambialet very much enjoy the Stations of the Cross, installed by the Friars along the route to the priory, that is, from the bottom of the hill (base of the village) to the Chapel of Notre-Dame-de-L'Oder at the top. It’s definitely a bit of a climb with the rocky trail cutting into stone cliffs! According to legend, there was once a lady who was barren and prayed to God for children. She followed the Stations of the Cross up the hill on her knees all the while being in deep prayer. It is said that she later went on to have eleven children! The Stations are a pilgrimage route in use today. 

If you are ever in Ambialet, it’s worth the trek up to the top of the hill to visit the Chapel ~ the view is absolutely breathtaking!
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["Les Eglises" in Ambialet prestígíeux et secret, pp. 25-26]