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Stop 6 of 17

Paroisse Notre-Dame de Nantes

Paroisse Notre-Dame de Nantes
Collegiate Church of Notre-Dame de Nantes
Collegiate Church of Notre-Dame de NantesPhoto: Rehtse, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0. Cropped & resized.

Look for pale stone fragments set into old masonry: a pointed Gothic arch, a slim column remnant, and a blocked opening preserved in the surrounding walls.

This is the vanished Collégiale Notre-Dame... a church so important to Breton memory that dukes chose it for burial, even though almost nothing of it stands in plain sight now.

That is the strange tenderness of this place. You can stand here, hear footsteps and city traffic, and never guess that this ground once helped tell Brittany who it was. Most people pass through without realizing they are crossing a patch of Nantes loaded with old sovereignty, prayer, grief, and ambition.

The story begins with Alain Barbetorte. In nine hundred thirty-seven, after he drove the Normans out of Nantes, he settled inside the early fortress nearby and rebuilt a chapel here, Sainte-Marie, to mark that victory. It rose on older sacred ground, and after Alain died in nine hundred fifty-two, his body eventually came here too. So from the beginning, this was not just a neighborhood church. It held memory like a seal pressed into wax.

Centuries later, in thirteen twenty-five, Bishop Daniel Vigier raised Sainte-Marie into a collegiate church, meaning a church served by a chapter of canons, a formal body of clergy who maintained worship. Nineteen of them belonged here. But what truly fixed this place in Breton history was Duke Pierre the Second. Even before he wore the ducal crown, he chose Notre-Dame for his tomb. That choice mattered. He was saying, very quietly and very clearly, this is where my dynasty belongs.

Pierre renewed the church, added the apse, the rounded eastern end, and planned a striking spire with six sides and six little turrets. His wife, Françoise d'Amboise, gives this place its most human note. After Pierre died, she came here to pray at his tomb. Later she turned toward religious life and founded the first Carmelite convent for women in France, at Vannes. I love that detail... a duchess, a widow, returning again and again to this spot in private devotion while the church around her carried all the public weight of power.

Other Breton rulers kept shaping the building. Arthur the Third continued the work. François the Second restored Alain Barbetorte's tomb. Anne of Brittany added another part of the choir in fifteen oh six. Piece by piece, one generation laid itself beside another.

And then, the long unmaking. During the Revolution, people turned the church into a stable. After it closed, even grooms slept inside, almost as if the old holiness had been pushed aside overnight. New owners split the building into two parcels. A street cut beneath the bell tower. Lightning struck in eighteen oh one and destroyed the spire. In eighteen oh three, the engineer Pierre Fournier opened Pierre the Second's tomb and found not ducal remains, but a mannequin. That discovery sparked a romantic legend that the duke had escaped to live in secret, though later historians thought the tomb had already been disturbed.

By the nineteenth century, demolition had nearly finished the work of forgetting. And yet not completely. Those surviving bits in the walls... that broken arch, that fragment of column... they are Nantes speaking under its breath.

In a moment, we leave this slow disappearance and head toward something far more sudden: a revolutionary clash when Nantes once again became a city under immediate threat. The Battle of Nantes is just ahead.

arrow_back Back to Nantes Audio Tour: Unveiling Nantes' Nooks and Narratives
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