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Collegiate Church of Our Lady of Dinant

Collegiate Church of Our Lady of Dinant

Dinant, BE

The Collegiate Church of Our Lady of Dinant was built in the 13th and 14th centuries, replacing a previous Romanesque church. Several events damaged the building, such as the sacking of Dinant in 1466 by Philip the Good and the passage of the troops of the Duke of Nevers in 1554. The collegiate church was completely restored in the 19th century under the direction of the architects Schoonejans, Jules-Jacques Van Ysendyck and Auguste Van Assche, whose work aimed to restore the stylistic unity of the 13th century. After being damaged by German troops during the First World War, the church had to be restored once again by the architect Chrétien Veraart between 1919 and 1923.

Collegiate Church of Saint Gertrude

Collegiate Church of Saint Gertrude

Nivelles, BE

The collegiate church of Saint Gertrude, built between 992 and 1046, is one of the oldest and largest surviving Romanesque churches. Five successive churches, built between the 7th and 10th centuries, preceded the Romanesque church. The present church was consecrated in the presence of Emperor Henry III (1046-1056). Heavily modified over the centuries, the church took on its present pseudo-Romanesque appearance thanks to a restoration carried out by Simon Brigode after the Second World War.

Collegiate church of Saint-Austrégésile

Collegiate church of Saint-Austrégésile

Saint-Outrille, FR

Half Romanesque church for the choir, the absidioles and part of the transept which date from the beginning of the 12th century, half Gothic for the nave of the 15th century. The chevet is surmounted by a twisted bell tower covered with chestnut shingles. The building has been classified as a historical monument since 1886. What makes the building so special is above all its bell-tower called "clocher-tors". Rare are indeed the churches in France to have an arrow whose sides are not straight, but follow a slight curve, as if they had been twisted.

Collegiate Church of Saint-Denis

Collegiate Church of Saint-Denis

Amboise, FR

The collegiate church of Saint-Denis d'Amboise is a Romanesque building built from 1107 by Hugues I, Lord of Amboise. It was built on the site of a first church built in the 4th century by Saint Martin, bishop of Tours. The 12th-century church was a parish, but also the seat of a priory of the Benedictine abbey of Saint-Julien de Tours. The parish and the priory were united around 1550. The building was enlarged in the 16th century with the addition of the entire south aisle.

Collegiate Church of Saint-Julien

Collegiate Church of Saint-Julien

Tournon-sur-Rhône, FR

A rare testimony to the Gothic architecture in Ardèche, the church of St Julien is one of the best preserved in this region. Registered on the list of historical monuments, it reminds us of the ancient character of the Tournonian heritage. Probably built on the site of a Roman temple and certainly in the place of a Romanesque church (basic remains of the bell tower), it is dedicated to St Julien, a Roman centurion beheaded in Brioude (Auvergne) during the reign of Emperor Diocletian (245-313). Erected as a collegiate church between 1316 and 1348, the church of St Julien constitutes a rather surprising architectural ensemble: the offset bell tower, the chapels replaced by houses, the Italian-style ceiling give it an atypical character.

Collegiate Church of Saint-Just

Collegiate Church of Saint-Just

Lyon, FR

The current church of "Saint-Just" or "Saint-Just and the Macchabées", replaces the one that was ravaged by the Protestants in 1562 and which was located on the site of the current archaeological garden of Saint-Just, rue des Macchabées. Its stained glass collection is a beautiful representation of the art of stained glass in Lyon, from the 19th century with the works of Lesourd, Brun-Bastenaire, Gentelet and Godart, Barrelon and Veyrat, Dufêtre, and those of the beginning of the 20th century by the Atelier Nicod.

Collegiate Church of Saint-Martin-Saint-Blaise

Collegiate Church of Saint-Martin-Saint-Blaise

Cadillac, FR

Built in ashlar except for the sacristy which is made of rubble. Its bell tower built in 1853 supports a masonry spire. The church is also decorated with terracotta statues of Saint Peter and Saint Paul.

Collegiate Church of Saints Peter and Guidon

Collegiate Church of Saints Peter and Guidon

Anderlecht, BE

The Collegiate Church of Saints Peter and Guidon is a Brabant Gothic style church built in the 14th century. The first church was in Romanesque style, as can be seen in the crypt (11th century). The present building was built between 1350 and 1527, the square tower dating from 1517. Jean van Ruysbroeck, architect (with others) of the Brussels City Hall tower, was responsible for the work between 1479 and 1485. Between 1843 and 1847, the church underwent serious restoration work under the direction of the architect Jules-Jacques Van Ysendyck. In 1898, the square tower was surmounted by a spire.

Collegiate Church of San Isidro

Collegiate Church of San Isidro

Madrid, ES

The collegiate church of San Isidro, also known as the Colegiata de San Isidro el Real, was built in the 17th century by the architect Pedro Sánchez. The church, built as the church of the former Imperial College of the Society of Jesus, replaced the sixteenth-century parish church of St. Peter and St. Paul, which was demolished, as well as the original Imperial College. In 1885, with the constitution of the Diocese of Madrid, it became the provisional cathedral of that city, a rank that it occupied for more than a century until 1993, when the present Cathedral of Santa María de la Almudena was completed and San Isidro regained its status as a collegiate church. In 1936 the building was burnt down at the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War and then restored.

Collegiate Church of Sant'Anna

Collegiate Church of Sant'Anna

Cagliari, IT

The Collegiate Church of Sant'Anna was built in the 18th century in Baroque style, replacing a previous church dating back to the 13th century. Severely damaged in 1943 during the Second World War, due to bombings, it was rebuilt after the war.

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