Church of Saint-Georges d'Azerables

The church was built in the 12th century, although the oldest mention of the church dates back to 1201, at the chartier d'Aubignac. The bell tower would have been raised in the 16th century.

About this building

The building has a single nave and a choir with a pentagonal chevet with a barrel vault. In the nave, originally covered by an exposed roof frame, were piers consisting of a central pillar flanked by columns that were to receive ribbed vaults.

Key Features

  • Monuments

Visitors information

  • Parking within 250m

Other nearby buildings

Sauvegarde de l'Art Français
Church with a pinnacle

Church of de Chantôme

Located in Éguzon-Chantôme in the Indre, the church of Chantôme dates from the thirteenth century. Built on the site of a former priory by Augustinian monks, near the birthplace of Saint Sylvain. The restoration of the building, including stained glass windows and murals dating from the end of the 13th century, was completed in 2017.

Church of Saint-Etienne, Crozant

The building, the oldest parts of which date back to the 12th and 13th centuries, seems to have been altered at the end of the 15th following a violent destruction, and has since undergone some modifications.

Wikimedia Commons/Jean FAUCHEUX

Church of Saint-Nicolas, Beaulieu

The church of Saint-Nicolas was built in the Romanesque era around the end of the eleventh century. It has a single nave with a steeple that was probably divided by a transept. The choir ends with a flat chevet. The main attraction of this building lies in the murals from the Gothic period (13th, 14th century) which cover the walls and the vault of the choir. They were discovered during the dismantling of the altar tabernacle baroque altarpiece.