Église Sainte-Onenne

{{Infobox church

| name = Église Sainte-Onenne

| fullname = Église Sainte-Eutrope

| other name = Église du Graal

| image = Église Sainte-Onenne, Tréhorenteuc, France.jpg

| coordinates = {{Coord|48|00|28|N|2|17|14|W|type:landmark_region:FR|display=title,inline}}

| location = Tréhorenteuc, Morbihan, Brittany

| country = France

| denomination = Catholic Church

| status = Parish church

| dedication = St Onenne

| earlydedication = St Eutropius of Saintes

| functional status = Active

| years built = 1516

| completed date = 1962

| parish = Tréhorenteuc

| diocese = Vannes

| province = Rennes, Dol and Saint-Malo

}}

The Église Sainte-Onenne (St. Onenne's Church), or Église Saint-Eutrope, also known as the Église du Graal (Church of the Grail),{{cite web |url=https://trehorenteuc-eglise-broceliande.fr/horaire-des-offices/ |title=Horaire des offices |author= |website=Églises de Néant-sur-Yvel & « du Graal » de Tréhorenteuc |language=fr |access-date=19 June 2022 }} is a parish church in the commune of Tréhorenteuc in Brittany. It is the only church dedicated to a local Breton saint, St Onenne. However, it is best known for its fittings and stained glass windows commissioned by the Abbé Gillard between 1942 and 1962 which mix pagan themes from Arthurian legend with Christian elements.

History

Onenne is actually the secondary patroness of Tréhorenteuc, since it was Eutropius, Bishop of Saintes, who was the first saint venerated in this parish. Despite the reputation of “country of miscreants” often attached to this remote region of Brittany, the church has always attracted fervent parishioners.{{sfn|Ealet|2008|p=137}}

A Christian religious building seems to have existed in Tréhorenteuc from the 7th century, its purpose then being to compete with a druidic centre. The creation of a priory dependent on the Abbey of {{ill|Abbaye Notre-Dame de Paimpont|lt=Notre Dame de Paimpont|fr}} (later also a parish church) dates back to 1191.{{cite web |url=https://broceliande.brecilien.org/Prieure-de-Trehorenteuc#Le-prieure-du-13e-au-14e-siecle |title=Le prieuré de Tréhorenteuc |author= |website=Encyclopédie de Brocéliande |language=fr |access-date=19 June 2022 }}{{sfn|Ealet|2008|pp=33, 47}}

It attracted the attention of the Duchy of Brittany, and in particular Anne of Brittany, as part of her special measures offering protection against soldiers who indulged in looting: on October 27, 1489, a letter to that effect was sent to Seneschal Allaire.{{cite journal |last=La Borderie |first=Arthur Le Moyne de |author-link=Arthur Le Moyne de La Borderie |date=1866 |title=Choix de documents inédits sur le règne de la Duchesse Anne en Bretagne (1488–1491) |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=GMkwAQAAIAAJ&pg=PA265 |journal=Bulletin et mémoires de la Société Archéologique du Département d'Ille-et-Vilaine |language=fr |volume=4 |page=265 |access-date=18 June 2022 }} Anne de Bretagne donated a banner representing St Onenne in 1506. The parish building was rebuilt in 1516 by Dom Hamon.{{sfn|Ealet|2008|pp=48, 138}} Tréhorenteuc was, from 1573, one of the first parishes in the region to keep a burial register.{{cite book |last1=Rosenzweig |first1=Louis Théophile |date=1881 |title=Inventaire-sommaire des Archives départementales antérieures à 1790, Morbihan. Archives civiles. Série E, supplément. 1er partie. (nos. 1 à 807) |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BV1IAAAAYAAJ&pg=PR12 |series=Collection des inventaires-sommaires des Archives départementales antérieures à 1790, 351 |language=fr |location=Vannes |publisher=Galles |page=xii |access-date=19 June 2022 }}

The French Revolution saw the confiscation of a number of properties belonging to the priory of Tréhorenteuc, including the presbytery used as a school. Similarly, the first mayor, elected on 26 December 1791, had the parish calvary demolished and the church bells sent to the foundry to make cannons, as the government demanded. In 1809 a law abolished worship in Tréhorenteuc, removing it to Néant-sur-Yvel. The parishioners protested because of the remoteness of Néant and the difficulty of getting there in winter on dirt roads. On 26 January 1820 the parish of Tréhorenteuc was reinstated. However, the building was abandoned for more than ten years and fell into ruins. Father Brogard restored it, creating a high altar, and had a floor laid. The church also acquired bells. It nevertheless remained a "country church", as noted by Sigismond Ropartz who visited it in 1861; it was small, low and coated with clay, not very different from a barn. The town not having the means to pay for restoration work, the state of the building deteriorated. Father Alliot, who arrived in 1930, testified to the fact that he "risked his life" there, the gable threatening to collapse.{{sfn|Ealet|2008|pp=67, 70, 138–141}}

In March 1942, Henri Gillard, a man of original and nonconformist ideas, was appointed the new rector of the parish, the diocese of Vannes probably wishing to sideline him in "the chamber pot of the diocese".{{sfn|Ealet|2008|pp=33, 145}}{{cite book |last=Arz |first=Claude |date=2011 |title=Voyages dans la France mystérieuse |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bvg6UUfSc4gC&pg=PT43 |language=fr |location=Paris |publisher=Le Pré aux clercs |isbn=9782842283711 |access-date=19 June 2022 }} He undertook to restore the church at his own expense, and at the cost of many hardships,{{sfn|Ealet|2008|p=147}} completing his task in 1962. The church became not so much a place of worship as a cultural centre, "for lack of inhabitants".{{cite web |url=https://broceliande.brecilien.org/Gillard-Henri-687#t1971-Verites-et-legendes-de-Trehorenteuc |title=Gillard, Henri |author= |website=Encyclopédie de Brocéliande |language=fr |access-date=19 June 2022 }}

Artworks

The restoration effected by Henri Gillard included the destruction of some works of art he deemed unworthy and the commissioning of many more to replace them. These, which can still be seen today, include two wooden statues of Saints Onenne and Judicaël by the sculptor Edmond Delphaut, a series of stained-glass windows by Henry Uzureau illustrating the life of St Onenne,{{cite web |url=https://broceliande.brecilien.org/Onenne#Onenne-les-artistes-et-l-abbe-Gillard |title=Onenne |author= |website=Encyclopédie de Brocéliande |language=fr |access-date=19 June 2022 }} a series of paintings, altarpieces and other fittings by Karl Rezabeck and Peter Wisdorff (both released German prisoners-of-war),{{sfn|Lacy|1996|p=609}} and a mosaic of the white hart of Brocéliande, symbolizing Christ, by Jean Delpech.{{sfn|Fairbairn|Cyprien|1983|p=147}}{{cite web |url=https://broceliande.brecilien.org/Delpech-Jean#La-mosaique-du-Cerf-Blanc-de-l-eglise-de-Trehorenteuc |title=Delpech, Jean |author= |website=Encyclopédie de Brocéliande |language=fr |access-date=19 June 2022 }} Many of these artworks depict Arthurian subjects, including the Holy Grail. The Grail appears in the east window with Joseph of Arimathea and Christ, and it manifests itself to King Arthur and his knights in a painting above the sacristy door.{{sfn|Fairbairn|Cyprien|1983|p=147}} Morgan le Fay figures in one of a series of paintings on the Stations of the Cross, notable for setting the story in local Breton scenes.{{sfn|Lacy|1996|p=609}} A statue of Gillard himself is stationed outside the church door.{{cite news |last=Le Lay |first=Dominique |date=22 September 2018 |title=Michaël Thomazo, sculpteur. « Je n'aurais pas pu faire autre chose » |url=https://www.ouest-france.fr/bretagne/ploermel-56800/ploermel-je-n-aurais-pas-pu-faire-autre-chose-5980545 |work=Ouest-France |location=Rennes |language=fr |access-date=19 June 2022 }}

Gallery

Le grand vitrail de l'Église Sainte Onenne de Tréhorenteuc - Décembre 2019.jpg|The east window

Sainte Onenne vitrail.jpg|St Onenne window

Tréhorenteuc 10.jpg|The white hart mosaic

Tréhorenteuc 07.jpg|Church door with inscription La porte est en dedans ("The door is within")

Tréhorenteuc 08.jpg|St Eutrope window

Tréhorenteuc 01 (2).jpg|The statue of Henri Gillard

See also

Footnotes

{{Reflist}}

References

  • {{cite book |last=Ealet |first=Jacky |date=2008 |title=Tréhorenteuc en Brocéliande |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=usqpPgAACAAJ |language=fr |location=Ploërmel |publisher=Les Oiseaux de papier |isbn=9782916359281 |access-date=18 June 2022 }}
  • {{cite book |last1=Fairbairn |first1=Neil |last2=Cyprien |first2=Michael |date=1983 |title=A Traveller's Guide to the Kingdoms of Arthur |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=y1gKAQAAMAAJ |location=London |publisher=Evans Brothers |isbn=9780237456566 |access-date=19 June 2022 }}
  • {{cite book |last=Lacy |first=Norris J. |author-link=Norris J. Lacy |year=1996 |chapter=Tréhorenteuc |editor-last=Lacy |editor-first=Norris J. |editor-link=Norris J. Lacy |title=The New Arthurian Encyclopedia |location=New York |publisher=Garland |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=hf6zAAAAQBAJ&pg=PA609 |isbn=9781568654324 |access-date=21 June 2022 }}