ABBEY OF SAINT-GILLES
Beautiful abbey, masterpiece of medieval art, with a remarkable crypt, the largest in France, on the way to Compostela
At the entrance to the Camargue, in Saint-Gilles, stands the abbey church of the same name, whose magnificent facade is listed as a Unesco World Heritage Site as part of the series of sites on the pilgrimage routes to Santiago de Compostela in France. A 12th-century masterpiece of Romanesque, Medieval and Oriental art, it is decorated with scenes from the Old and New Testaments, statues of apostles, a fabulous bestiary and a frieze depicting the Passion of Christ. The building was constructed in the 12th century on the site of a 7th-century monastery dedicated to St. Peter and St. Paul, and later to St. Gilles, a local hermit who distributed all his wealth to the poor, and whose relics are stored in the abbey church. It was the fourth most important pilgrimage site in the Christian world, after Rome, Jerusalem and Santiago de Compostela. This façade was a veritable stone book for the often illiterate faithful of the time. Although damaged by the Wars of Religion and the sackings of the French Revolution, the building has retained its sculpted façade, monumental crypt and spiral staircase.
The crypt, a veritable lower church, contains the tomb of Saint-Gilles. It is exceptional for its size and the quality of its vaults. It gives access to the remains of the cloister, once at the heart of the ancient monastery, which have been excavated in astonishing detail. Even today, its study remains an essential stage in the Compagnons de taille de pierre's tour de France apprenticeship program.
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