Joyenval Abbey
{{short description|Former French abbey}}
File:Abbaye de Joyenval 01.jpg
Joyenval Abbey ({{langx|fr|Abbaye de Joyenval}}) was a Premonstratensian monastery located in the Forêt de Marly, in the present commune of Chambourcy, Yvelines, France.
History
The abbey was founded in 1224 by Barthélemy de Roye, chamberlain of King Philippe-Auguste. It was built close to the donjon or fortress of Montjoye, where (as the canons maintained) the oriflamme, the standard given to Charlemagne by Pope Leo III, was anciently preserved, and (according to legend) the location of the Fontaine des Lys, the site of the conversion of Clovis.Dutilleux, A.: Abbaye de Joyenval. Mémoires de la Société historique et archéologique de l'arrondissement de Pontoise et du Vexin (1890), vol.13, pp.43, 44, 48, 58
The church was initially dedicated to Saint Laurence, and after 1261, when his relics were transferred here, also to Saint Bartholomew.
The abbey was set on fire on 13 August 1346 during the advance of Edward III in the Hundred Years' War.
The canons also owned an hôtel, or town house, in Paris, in a street on the rive droite in the present 1st arrondissement, named after them the Rue aux Moines de Joienval and later, with some corruption, the Rue aux Moines-de-Jenvau or Rue à Moingnes de Jenvau.in, for example, Le Dit des rues de Paris by Guillot de Paris The building was replaced by a salt warehouse in 1698. The street is now known as the Rue des Orfèvres.
The abbey was destroyed in the 1790s during the French Revolution.
Remains
The only physical remains are a few traces of the abbey church, which can be seen on Joyenval golf course. They were recorded as a monument historique on 24 October 1989.{{Base Mérimée|PA00087788}}
File:Abbaye de Joyenval 02.jpg
File:Abbaye de Joyenval 03.jpg
File:Abbaye de Joyenval 04.jpg
File:Abbaye de Joyenval 05.jpg
Notes and references
{{Reflist}}
{{Authority control}}
{{Coord|48|53|10|N|2|2|10|E|display=title}}
Category:Premonstratensian monasteries in France