List of Benedictine monasteries in France

This is a list of Benedictine monasteries, extant and non-extant, in the present territory of France. It includes both monks and nuns following the Rule of Saint Benedict, excluding the Cistercians, for whom see List of Cistercian monasteries in France. Some monasteries however belonged at various times in their histories to both the Benedictines and the Cistercians.

At different times these religious houses have formed various orders, congregations or groups, of which the main ones, as far as French monasteries are concerned, are the following:

The dates in brackets indicate the start and end dates of an abbey's status as a Benedictine monastery, which are not necessarily the same as the dates of its foundation or suppression. All religious houses in France were suppressed during the French Revolution, most of them in 1791. Some communities were revived, and many more new ones established, during the 19th century, but were forced to leave France by anti-clerical legislation during the 1880s (principally the Ferry Laws), and again in the first decades of the 20th century under the Association Act, 1901 (the Waldeck-Rousseau Law).

Abbeys and independent priories currently in operation are indicated by bold type.

Dependent priories are not generally noted in this list, except for a few unusually significant ones.

Contents 

A

Saint-Germain d'Auxerre

B

Brantôme Abbey
Baume Abbey
Bec Abbey
St. Cross Abbey, Bordeaux

C

La Chaise-Dieu Abbey
Conques Abbey
Corbie Abbey

D

E

F

Fécamp Abbey

G

Gaillac Abbey
Gigny Abbey (Jura)

H

Hambye Abbey

I

J

Jumièges Abbey

K

Abbey of St Anne, Kergonan

L

Landévennec Abbey

M

Marmoutier Abbey
Moissac Abbey
Meymac Abbey
Mont Saint-Michel Abbey
Murbach Abbey

N

Nouaillé-Maupertuis Abbey

O

P

Preuilly Abbey

Q

R

S

Abbey of Saint-Sauveur-le-Vicomte
Abbey of Saint-Savin-sur-Gartempe
Saint-Sever Abbey
Abbaye aux Dames, Saintes
Abbey of Saint-Michel-en-Thiérache

T

U

V

W

Y

Notes

  1. The English Congregation returned to England because of the French Revolution and now forms part of the Benedictine Confederation
  2. Ainay Abbey website
  3. the precursor of Alet Cathedral
  4. Website of the Cultural Encounter Centre, Ambronay
  5. formerly sometimes Andlaw
  6. Diocese of Séez website: Argentan Abbey
  7. Asnières Abbey website
  8. Ministère de la Culture: L'Abbaye Saint-Germain d'Auxerre
  9. Le Barroux Abbey website
  10. Bassac Abbey website
  11. Bec Abbey website
  12. Bellaigue Abbey website
  13. 950-1136: Benedictine priory; 1136-37: Benedictine abbey; 1137-1791: Cistercian abbey; 2000- Benedictine abbey)
  14. Belloc Abbey website
  15. Blesle municipal website: Blesle Abbey
  16. formerly Saint-Martin-au-Val
  17. Gallic Orthodox Church website: Bois-Aubry Abbey
  18. Boscherville Abbey website
  19. Encyclopédie de Bourges website: St. Sulpicius' Abbey, Bourges
  20. Bourgueil Abbey website
  21. Daughters of Calvary (Bénédictines de Notre-Dame du Calvaire); previously at Kerbeneat (1634-1976) and Landerneau (1976-2002)
  22. 1 2 English Benedictine nuns in exile
  23. historically this was a priory, not an abbey, but the description, attached to the present ensemble of buildings, has become well-established
  24. La Chaise-Dieu Abbey website
  25. Chantelle Abbey website
  26. Château-Chalon village website
  27. this may well have been a priory rather than an abbey
  28. Data.bnf.fr Abbaye Saint-Pierre, Chaumes-en-Brie
  29. Archives du département du Rhône: Abbaye des Chazeaux (Lyon)
  30. Clairval Abbey website
  31. Crespin municipal website: Crespin Abbey
  32. Cuxa Abbey website
  33. En-Calcat Abbey website
  34. Fleury Abbey website
  35. Fontdouce Abbey website
  36. raised to a bishopric in 1742: see Diocese of Saint-Claude
  37. Friends of Guîtres Abbey website
  38. Camaldolese from 1680
  39. Abbey website
  40. Daughters of Calvary (Bénédictines de Notre-Dame du Calvaire). Previously at Landerneau (1634-1976); afterwards at Bouzy-la-Forêt
  41. Website of the Abbey of St. Anne, Kergonan
  42. sometimes La Grasse Abbey
  43. Daughters of Calvary (Bénédictines de Notre-Dame du Calvaire). Founded in 1634; transferred in 1976 to Kerbeneat in Plounéventer; merged in 2002 with Bouzy-la-Forêt.
  44. Website of Friends of St. Vincent's Abbey website
  45. At first a Benedictine priory, later a house of secular canonesses from the Auvergnat nobility. Raised to the status of abbey in 1719
  46. Diocese of Coutances website: Lessay Abbey
  47. Ligugé Abbey website
  48. secularised in 1535
  49. destroyed by Protestants in 1568
  50. the church, still extant, was dedicated to Saint Sebastian
  51. Abbey of St. Peter, Le Mans: website
  52. Marmoutier Abbey website
  53. also known as Maursmunster Abbey
  54. 1 2 Saint-Jouin-de-Marnes website
  55. Mas-Grenier Abbey website; founded in the 19th century and suppressed during the Revolution; reoccupied in 1921 by the Benedictines of the Perpetual Adoration of Toulouse, exiled in 1904
  56. Maumont Abbey website
  57. Maylis Abbey website
  58. Mont Saint-Michel Abbey website
  59. Montceau Abbey website
  60. Commune of Nouaillé-Maupertuis website: Nouaillé Abbey
  61. Diocese of Pamiers website: Abbey of Notre-Dame du Pesquié
  62. Pontlevoy Abbey website
  63. Preuilly-sur-Claise municipal website: Preuilly Abbey
  64. Randol Abbey website
  65. joined to the Sainte-Chapelle in Paris in 1641
  66. joined to the Archbishopric of Reims in 1696
  67. Section of the Abbaye de La Rochette on the website of Jouarre Abbey (French)
  68. Benedictines of the Holy Sacrament; nunnery founded in 1862
  69. Abbey of Saint-Amant-de-Boixe website
  70. often inaccurately called Saint-André de Sorède
  71. Diocese of Poitiers website: St. Cross Abbey, Saint-Benoît
  72. Saint-Jacut Abbey website
  73. Abbey of St. Lioba website
  74. later secular canonesses
  75. Website of the Abbaye Saint-Louis du Temple; this community was originally in the Abbey of Saint-Louis-du-Temple, in the remains of the former Temple, Paris (1816-48); later in the Rue Monsieur in Paris (1851-1938); and then at Meudon (1938-51)
  76. Abbey of Saint-Michel-en-Thiérache website
  77. Saint-Omer town website: Abbey of St. Bertin, Saint-Omer
  78. created a cathedral in 1317
  79. or Generest, Génerez, Générez, Géneres, or Génerès
  80. united with the bishopric in 1778
  81. Abbey of Saint-Savin-sur-Gartempe website
  82. Website of the Abbaye Saint-Wandrille
  83. Site de l'Abbaye aux Dames de Saintes
  84. raised to a bishopric in 1318
  85. Solesmes Abbey website
  86. Sorèze Abbey and School website
  87. in the Quercy
  88. mother house of the Tironensian Order
  89. Benedictine from 850 to 1073
  90. Tournay Abbey website
  91. Val-de-Grâce webpage
  92. The town was known as Charenton-Saint-Maurice until 1842. The community of nuns was moved here after 1685 from Val-d'Osne in Osne-le-Val, Haute-Marne, to re-settle the site of a destroyed Protestant church
  93. Valognes Abbey website
  94. the original buildings became a hospital, which they remain; the abbey was re-established in 1810 in a former convent of the Capuchins, which was vacant by then
  95. Venière Abbey website
  96. Verneuil Abbey website
  97. Website of the Abbey of St. Paul Abbey, Wisques

See also

References

External links

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