Church of Saint-Martin

The Saint-Martin church is located in Laversines, in the Oise. The building, dedicated to Saint Martin, consists of a single nave, a choir from the twelfth-thirteenth century and a bell tower of the eleventh century, rebuilt in the seventeenth century that was struck by lightning in 1805. The chapel, dedicated to Saint Fiacre, was the place of pilgrimage of the neighboring parishes. The church has a remarkable Way of the Cross and stained glass windows depicting Saint Anthony, Saint Germain and a Sacred Heart of Jesus

About this building

Located in Laversines, in the Oise, Saint Martin's church was built between the eleventh and thirteenth century. The building, dedicated to St. Martin, a martyred officer of the Theban Legion who lived in the third century, consists of a single nave which was redesigned in the nineteenth century. The choir was built in the 12th and 13th centuries, while the bell tower dates from the eleventh century and was rebuilt in the seventeenth century after it was unfortunately destroyed in 1805. To the south, there is a chapel of two vaulted bays, which is extended by a sacristy, all built in the 16th century. The chapel, dedicated to Saint Fiacre, was the place of pilgrimage of neighboring parishes.

The church is built of stone from the Saint Germain mountain and brick, while the roof is slate. The church has a remarkable Way of the Cross, built in 1845 and restored in 2006/2007. There is also stained glass windows depicting St. Anthony, St. Germain and a Sacred Heart of Jesus, a baptismal font, as well as several paintings and statues, including a polychrome statue of the Blessed Virgin, restored in 1873.

Key Features

  • Architecture
  • Monuments

Other nearby buildings

Sauvegarde de l'Art Français
Lateral facade of a 12th century church with a sided view of the choir and the bell tower

Church of Saint-Martin

The Saint-Martin church was built in the 12th century in Heilles and is surrounded by the old parish cemetery. The church, which is dedicated to St. Martin of Tours follows a cruciform plan. It consists of a Gothic porch opening to the west entrance, a single Romanesque nave (12th century), an overflowing transept whose cross serves as a base for the bell tower and a choir (13th century) composed of a very short span and a seven-sided apse.

Eglise Saint-Léger et Sainte-Agnès d'Agnetz

The church was partly built in the 13th century in a radiant Gothic style: 1250 marks the beginning of the construction of the nave; 1270 to 1280, the transept and choir as well as the right span and side chapels, and finally the transept crossing at the end of the 13th century.