Saint-Martin, Marcoles

Former Chapel of the Benedictine priory dependent on the Abbey of Saint-Géraud d'Aurillac, the church of Saint-Martin is a Gothic building from the 15th century. The imposing dimensions of the nave show the importance of Marcolès at the end of the Middle Ages.

About this building

This church consists of a square choir with two bays and a flat chevet, surmounted by a bell tower and preceded by a five-bay nave and side chapels. The whole is vaulted with low ribbed vaults falling on their bases according to the Southern Gothic principle.

Key Features

  • Monuments

Visitors information

  • Parking within 250m

Other nearby buildings

Wikimedia Commons

Church of Saint-Antoine

The church of St. Anthony is dedicated to St. Anthony, the Egyptian whose body was brought back from Constantinople to La Motte aux Bois in the eleventh century. It is thought that in the 13th century the Baron de Calvinet founded the commandery of the hospital order of Saint-Antoine de Viennois on the site of the current church. Wars of religion contributed to the destruction of the hospital, with only the chapel of the Commandery surviving Calvinist destruction and the Revolution.

Church of Notre Dame de l'Assomption, Montsalvy

The church of Montsalvy, which depended on the abbey of Saint Géraud d'Aurillac, dates from the second half of the 11th century. It is the main vestige of what was in the Middle Ages one of the most important abbeys of the region which still surprises us by its unusual dimensions.

Abbey Church of Saint-Cesaire

The construction of a third abbey church in Maurs-la-Jolie was undertaken at the end of the 14th century after two destructions in the 11th and 12th centuries. The choir dates from the beginning of the 15th century (date 1406 on one of the stained glass windows), as does the western portal.