Thouars - Saint-Médard
Thouars - Saint-Laon
Noizé - Saint-Martin-les-Baillargeaux
Noizé - Saint-Martin-les-Baillargeaux
Noizé - Saint-Martin-les-Baillargeaux
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Oiron - Saint-Maurice
Oiron - Saint-Maurice
Airvault - Underground
Airvault - Market Hall
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Airvault - Saint-Pierre
Airvault - Saint-Pierre
Airvault - Saint-Pierre
Airvault - Saint-Pierre
Airvault - Saint-Pierre
Airvault - Saint-Pierre
Airvault - Saint-Pierre
Airvault - Saint-Pierre
Airvault - Saint-Pierre
Airvault - Saint-Pierre
Airvault - Saint-Pierre
Thouars - Saint-Médard
Thouars - Saint-Médard
Gourgé - Saint-Hilaire
Gourgé - Saint-Hilaire
Gourgé - Saint-Hilaire
Gourgé - Saint-Hilaire
Vouvant - Notre-Dame
Vouvant - Notre-Dame
Vouvant - Notre-Dame
Vouvant - Notre-Dame
Vouvant - Notre-Dame
Vouvant - Notre-Dame
Vouvant - Notre-Dame
Vouvant - Notre-Dame
Vouvant - Notre-Dame
Vouvant - Notre-Dame
Vouvant - Notre-Dame
Vouvant - Notre-Dame
Vouvant - Notre-Dame
Vouvant - Notre-Dame
Vouvant - Notre-Dame
Vouvant - Notre-Dame
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Thouars - Saint-Médard


Thouars was an Aquitanien fortress, placed in a loop of the river Thouet. It was conquered and burnt down in 762 down by Pepin the Short, King of the Franks, who was accompanied by his 14 years old son, the future Charlemagne.
In medieval times, the town prospered, and in the 12th century a large basilica-style church named "Saint-Médard-des-Champs" was erected just outside the city walls. Today this church is in the center of the town, that once was a stronghold of the Huguenots. After the revocation of the Edict of Nantes (1685) Thouars lost about half of its population, as most of the Huguenots migrated.
The facade of Saint-Médard is created in the late Romanesque "style poitevin". The facade got "heavily" renovated during the 1870s. Most of the archivolts and the corbels, seen here, are a result of that work. Above the entrance door are large statues of Christ, flanked by angels, that are weathered and/or vandalized. The design seems like a prototype of the The "gallery of the kings", often seen on Gothic cathedrals (eg Reims Cathedral, Notre-Dame de Paris).
In medieval times, the town prospered, and in the 12th century a large basilica-style church named "Saint-Médard-des-Champs" was erected just outside the city walls. Today this church is in the center of the town, that once was a stronghold of the Huguenots. After the revocation of the Edict of Nantes (1685) Thouars lost about half of its population, as most of the Huguenots migrated.
The facade of Saint-Médard is created in the late Romanesque "style poitevin". The facade got "heavily" renovated during the 1870s. Most of the archivolts and the corbels, seen here, are a result of that work. Above the entrance door are large statues of Christ, flanked by angels, that are weathered and/or vandalized. The design seems like a prototype of the The "gallery of the kings", often seen on Gothic cathedrals (eg Reims Cathedral, Notre-Dame de Paris).
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