Aulnay - Saint-Pierre
Aulnay - Saint-Pierre
Aulnay - Saint-Pierre
Aulnay - Saint-Pierre
Aulnay - Saint-Pierre
Aulnay - Saint-Pierre
Aulnay - Saint-Pierre
Aulnay - Saint-Pierre
Aulnay - Saint-Pierre
Aulnay - Saint-Pierre
Aulnay - Saint-Pierre
Aulnay - Saint-Pierre
Aulnay - Saint-Pierre
Aulnay - Saint-Pierre
Aulnay - Saint-Pierre
Melle - Saint-Hilaire
Melle - Saint-Hilaire
Melle - Saint-Hilaire
Melle - Saint-Hilaire
Melle - Saint-Hilaire
Melle - Saint-Hilaire
Melle - Saint-Hilaire
Melle - Saint-Hilaire
Aulnay - Saint-Pierre
Aulnay - Saint-Pierre
Aulnay - Saint-Pierre
Aulnay - Saint-Pierre
Aulnay - Saint-Pierre
Aulnay - Saint-Pierre
Aulnay - Saint-Pierre
Aulnay - Saint-Pierre
Aulnay - Saint-Pierre
Aulnay - Saint-Pierre
Aulnay - Saint-Pierre
Aulnay - Saint-Pierre
Aulnay - Saint-Pierre
Aulnay - Saint-Pierre
Aulnay - Saint-Pierre
Aulnay - Saint-Pierre
Aulnay - Saint-Pierre
Aulnay - Saint-Pierre
Aulnay - Saint-Pierre
Aulnay - Saint-Pierre
Aulnay - Saint-Pierre
Aulnay - Saint-Pierre
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Aulnay - Saint-Pierre


"Saint-Pierre d'Aulnay" is a church outside of Aulnay, in the center of an old graveyard. The setting has not changed for centuries. For the pilgrims of the 12th century this church was a major halt - and it still is for all the tourists...
A predecessing church „Saint-Pierre-de-la-Tour“ had been here, that, when the pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostella got more and more popular, was obviously to small, as Aulnay was conveniently situated between Poitiers and Saintes on the Via Turonensis. A new, larger church was needed, so the place was handed over to the chapter of the cathedral in Poitiers. The canons then probably planned this church, that was erected from about 1130/1140 on.
"Saint-Pierre d'Aulnay" is a gem of the "style saintongeais". For Peter Strafford ("Romanesque Churches Of France") this is "one of the best examples of late Romanesque architecture in what used to be Aquitaine".
Saint-Pierre´s "South Porch" is what attracts busloads of tourists to stop in Aulnay. And they are right.The "South Porch" is mindblowing.
The most outer archivolt is the most spectacular one. So far the icons were somehow in an expectable "christian tradition" (Elders, Saints), but here mythical beasts and fantastic hybrid creatures come to life. Some of these chimerae probably derive from medieval Bestiary, while others seem to come straight from a drug related nightmare.
Four very strange creatures are fighting each other, two of them look like (symmetrical) twins, having lion´s paws and bird´s claws. It seems to be so noisy here, that the winged cyclops, with nice beard and moustache, tries to leave the scene of ordeal. Cyclops are not often seen on medieval churches (I just remember two in Burgundy).
A predecessing church „Saint-Pierre-de-la-Tour“ had been here, that, when the pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostella got more and more popular, was obviously to small, as Aulnay was conveniently situated between Poitiers and Saintes on the Via Turonensis. A new, larger church was needed, so the place was handed over to the chapter of the cathedral in Poitiers. The canons then probably planned this church, that was erected from about 1130/1140 on.
"Saint-Pierre d'Aulnay" is a gem of the "style saintongeais". For Peter Strafford ("Romanesque Churches Of France") this is "one of the best examples of late Romanesque architecture in what used to be Aquitaine".
Saint-Pierre´s "South Porch" is what attracts busloads of tourists to stop in Aulnay. And they are right.The "South Porch" is mindblowing.
The most outer archivolt is the most spectacular one. So far the icons were somehow in an expectable "christian tradition" (Elders, Saints), but here mythical beasts and fantastic hybrid creatures come to life. Some of these chimerae probably derive from medieval Bestiary, while others seem to come straight from a drug related nightmare.
Four very strange creatures are fighting each other, two of them look like (symmetrical) twins, having lion´s paws and bird´s claws. It seems to be so noisy here, that the winged cyclops, with nice beard and moustache, tries to leave the scene of ordeal. Cyclops are not often seen on medieval churches (I just remember two in Burgundy).
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