Church of Saint-Quiriace

This church dates from the 12th century, and is part of the historical heritage of the town of Provins, in the middle of the medieval city. Its particularity is to have been left unfinished. Work finally resumed in the 16th century to close the nave.

About this building

Latin cross plan building. This church is classified as a Historical Monument. The superb zinc dome was added in the 17th century.

Key Features

  • Architecture
  • Monuments
  • Links to national heritage

Other nearby buildings

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Church of Saint Ayoul

This impressive church is a mixture of different styles and periods. Today desacralized, it is the testimony of the religious history of the city. Visitors can enter the church through a sublime porch, whose tympanum and vaults bear witness to the magnificence of Gothic architecture.

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Church of Saint-Pierre-et-Saint-Paul

The Saint-Pierre-Saint-Paul church is located in La Motte-Tilly in Champagne. The choir and transept date back to the 16th century. Built in the renaissance style, they were part of the chapel of the first Motte-Tilly castle, that belonged to the local noble family, the Raguier. This church is remarkable for the chapel dedicated to Saint Margaret, which houses the marble tomb of Father Joseph Marie Terray, by the sculptor Félix Lecomte, listed in 1919

Sauvegarde de l'Art Français
A church with a round tower

Church of Saint-Georges

The Church of St. George, listed as a historical monument, is located in Vinneuf, Bourgogne-Franche-Comté region. From its original construction in the twelfth or thirteenth century, only the Romanesque portal remains. Its bell tower was built in a defensive style in the fourteenth century; the "imperial" dome dates from the 16th and 17th centuries. The building houses remarkable furniture including a sixteenth century altarpiece retracing, in 12 bas-reliefs, the life of Saint George.