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Villeneuve Abbey

Coordinates: 47°07′24″N 01°32′02″W / 47.12333°N 1.53389°W / 47.12333; -1.53389
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(Redirected from Château de Villeneuve)
Villeneuve Abbey
Abbaye de Villeneuve
Villeneuve Abbey, engraving of 1695
Villeneuve Abbey is located in France
Villeneuve Abbey
Location within France
Villeneuve Abbey is located in Pays de la Loire
Villeneuve Abbey
Villeneuve Abbey (Pays de la Loire)
Villeneuve Abbey is located in Loire-Atlantique
Villeneuve Abbey
Villeneuve Abbey (Loire-Atlantique)
Monastery information
OrderCistercian
Established1200
Mother houseBuzay Abbey
DioceseNantes
People
Founder(s)Constance, Duchess of Brittany
AbbotSee list
Site
LocationLe Bignon, Pays de la Loire, France
Coordinates47°07′24″N 01°32′02″W / 47.12333°N 1.53389°W / 47.12333; -1.53389

Villeneuve Abbey, dedicated to Our Lady, was a Cistercian monastery at the present-day Les Sorinières, near Nantes in Pays de la Loire (formerly in Brittany), France, founded in 1201 and dissolved in 1790, during the French Revolution.

For many years after its foundation, the abbey was the principal burial place of the founder's family. The main surviving building, also known as the Château de Villeneuve, is now a hotel.

Early history

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Coat of arms of Villeneuve Abbey

On the death of Conan IV, Duke of Brittany, his daughter Constance became ruler of Brittany and Countess of Richmond, at a time when both were parts of the Angevin Empire. She married firstly Geoffrey, a younger son of Henry II of England and Eleanor of Aquitaine, who thus became Duke of Brittany, and secondly after Geoffrey's death Ranulf, Earl of Chester. In 1196, Constance was kidnapped by her estranged husband, but in 1199 she escaped, and the marriage was dissolved on the grounds of desertion. Thirdly, about November 1199, she married Guy of Thouars, and their daughter Alix was born in 1200.[1]

On 25 March 1200, Constance brought monks from Buzay Abbey to establish a new Cistercian monastery to be called Villeneuve,[2] on land belonging to Buzay, located on the Ognon, a river flowing into the lake of Grand-Lieu, near the village of le Bignon.[3] However, the formal founding of the new abbey did not take place until 1201,[2] when on 25 March Constance gave the new abbey a charter.[4] Guillaume Robert, the Abbot of Buzay elected in 1199, was present at the foundation.[5]

Constance died in September 1201, perhaps following the birth of another daughter, and her body was intombed later that month in the oratory of her new abbey, the church of which had not yet been built.[6]

Like Prières, Villeneuve was a daughter house of Buzay, with Clairvaux as its primary abbey.[7] The first abbot, Bertrand, was appointed in 1207.[2]

The early activities of the monks of Villeneuve included helping to drain the surrounding marshes, with advice from engineers of the Poitevin Marshes, and also helping to dig a canal between Messan and the Loire.[3]

The abbey's church was consecrated on 25 October 1223, when the bodies of Constance, her last husband Guy of Thouars (died 1213), and their daughter Alix (died 1221), were transferred into it, with Étienne de La Bruère, Bishop of Nantes, officiating, supported by Guillaume de Beaumont, Bishop of Angers, in the presence of several important noblemen, including Aimery VII of Thouars and Amaury of Craon, Viscount of Beaumont, Seneschal of Angers.[6]

Later history

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Villeneuve remained an important monastery until the 15th century, but then began to decline.[8]

In the second half of the 17th century, the resident abbots of Villeneuve were replaced by commendatory abbots, who were not always priests, appointed by the favour of the king. As with other monasteries, this hastened the decline. The new commendatory abbots received about half of the monastery's income, leaving less for the monks, who now had a lower status, and fewer remained. Jean d'Estrées, in office from 1677, was the first abbot of this new kind.[9] In 1726, the Abbot of Villeneuve had an annual income of ten thousand livres, equivalent to 417 Louis d'or.[7]

In 1789, during the French Revolution, with only eight monks remaining, Claude-François Lysarde de Radonvilliers, the last commendatory abbot, died, and the abbey was immediately nationalized and sold. The eight monks, who included a prior and a sub-prior, were all priests and all remained in the parish of le Bignon.[10] The buyer of the abbey's agricultural land and buildings was a M. Blanchard, Clerk of the Presidial court of Nantes. The new owner was only interested in the abbey's land and its former hostelry, which he put into use as a house, and speedily demolished the Abbey church.[8] However, Blanchard was soon disturbed by the War in the Vendée, when Villeneuve was turned into a stronghold of the Whites and was attacked by the Blues, its buildings burned out, and the trees surrounding the property cut down.[8] Many tombs were profaned, and the human remains in them scattered.[1]

Blanchard returned after the war and restored the hostelry, dating from the early 18th century, renaming it "château de Villeneuve". This is still the present main house, but is much altered since the time of the monks.[8] Abandoned since the Second World War, it was restored in 1977 and is now a luxury hotel and restaurant. The Dalai Lama stayed here when visiting Nantes in August 2008.[11]

List of abbots

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Regular

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Jean d'Estrées,
abbot 1677–1718
  • 1207–1215: Bertrand I[2]
  • 1215–1225: Jean I[2]
  • 1225–unknown: Pierre I
  • unknown–1250: Raoul
  • 1250–1281: Thomas[2]
  • 1281–1294: Alain[2]
  • 1294–1328: Jean II of Caen, or of Kent[2]
  • 1328–unknown: Pierre II[2]
  • unknown–1348: Jean III Goué[2]
  • 1348–1366: Jean IV of Rézai[2]
  • 1366–1384: Alain Berrai or Louvenan[2]
  • 1384–1397: Jean V Raineau[2]
  • 1397–1407: Jean VI Durand
  • 1407–1417: Jean VII Rondeau[2]
  • 1417–1424: Pierre III Maignen[2]
  • 1424–1441: Nicolas Brandai[2]
  • 1441–1456: Jean VIII de Carné[2]
  • 1456–1481: Jean IX d’Avaugour[2]
  • 1481–1509: Jean X de Loyon[2]
  • 1509–unknown: Yves I[2]
  • unknown–1540: Bertrand de Loyon[2]
  • 1540–1543: Yves II de Kerbevet[2]
  • 1543–1550: Philippe de la Chambre, cardinal, held letters of safeguard[2]
  • 1551–1558: François Le Petit[2]
  • 1558–1571: Martin Roger[2]
  • 1571–1591: Guillaume Paineau, translated from Abbot of Montdieu[2]
  • 1591–1614: Antoine Bouguier[2]
  • 1614–1623: Blaise Bouguier, nephew of Antoine[2]
  • 1623–1656: Bernard L’Argentier[2]
  • 1656–1677: Nicolas Paget[2]

Commendatory

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Notable burials

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Apart from Constance, Duchess of Brittany (died 1201), her husband Guy of Thouars (died 1213), and their daughter Alix, others buried at the abbey include:

  • Yolande of Brittany (1218–1272), daughter of Alix, Duchess of Brittany, and of Peter I, Duke of Brittany[1]
  • Nicole (died 1232), second wife (or mistress) of Peter I[1]
  • Olivier I de Machecoul (c. 1231–1279), son of Peter I and Nicole[1]
  • Amicie de Coché, marquise de Souché (1235–1268), a daughter of Olivier de Coché and Pétronille de Clisson, the first wife of Olivier I de Machecoul[1]
  • Louise de Machecoul (1276–1307), daughter of Olivier I[1]
  • Jean I de Machecoul (c. 1255–1308), son of Olivier I and Amicie de Coché.[1]

Notes

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Pierre Grégoire (abbé), "Les anciennes abbayes de Villeneuve et Melleray (diocèse de Nantes)", in «La Revue de Bretagne» (Vannes: Lafolye frères, 1915, BNF 32192609x), p: 123
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag Pierre-Hyacinthe Morice, Histoire ecclesiastique et civile de Bretagne (1756), pp. cliii–cliv (in French)
  3. ^ a b Arlette Lebigre, "Les débuts de l’abbaye cistercienne de Buzay en pays de Rais, 1144–1250", in Revue historique de droit français et étranger, Issue 3, July–September 1967, pp. 451-482 (in French)
  4. ^ Alphonse Jarnoux, Le diocèse de Nantes au XVIe: 1500–1600 (1976), p. 139: "Et pour ceux qui voudraient savoir la date de la fondation de cette abbaye, la charte de Constance, que nous allons citer est formelle: en la fête de l'Annonciation 1201, et voici la traduction des passages essentiels de ce document..."
  5. ^ Morice (1756) p. cliv (in French)
  6. ^ a b Joëlle Quaghebeur, La Cornouaille du IXème au XIIème siècles: mémoire, pouvoirs, noblesse (Presses universitaires de Rennes, Société archéologique du Finistère, 2002), pp. 367–368 (in French)
  7. ^ a b Claude-Marin Saugrain, Dictionnaire universel de la France ancienne et moderne et de la Nouvelle France traitant de tout ce qui y a rapport (1726), p. 861: "Villeneuve, Abbaye d' Hommes , Ordre de Cìteaux, Fille de Buzay, sous Clairvaux...L’Abbé en a dix mille livres des rentes."
  8. ^ a b c d Abbaye de Villeneuve at ville-sorinieres.fr, accessed 26 April 2020
  9. ^ Historical at abbayedevilleneuve.com, accessed 27 April 2020
  10. ^ a b Charles Dugast-Matifeux, Nantes ancien et le pays nantais, p. 68
  11. ^ Nicolas Lewandowski, Mon escapade à L'Abbaye de Villeneuve en tant que Testeur de Rêves pour Wonderbox, Les recettes de Zaza, 27 July 2017, accessed 27 April 2020 (in French)
  12. ^ Guy-Alexis Lobineau, Vies des saints de Bretagne (1839), p. 589: "N. Lefèbre de Laubrière, doyen de la cathédrale de Nantes, obtint l'abbaye de Villeneuve le 23 octobre 1746. Il parait qu'il mourut en 1770."

Further reading

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  • Stéphane de La Nicollière-Teijeiro, "Une pierre tombale de l'abbaye de Villeneuve. Olivier de Machecoul" in «Bulletin de la Société archéologique de Nantes» (A. Guéraud, 1860, BNF 307363741)
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