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Eglises de France Eglises de France


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gothic architecture gothic architecture



Keywords

09
Simon de Montfort
gothique méridional
fiefdom of Foix
Guy de Lévis
Pierre-Roger de Mirepoix
Treaty of Paris
Treaty of Meaux
Cathédrale Saint-Maurice
Eugène Viollet-le-Duc
Cathar
bastide
France
Mirepoix
Ariège
Midi-Pyrénées
Occitanie
Prosper Mérimée
Albigensian Crusade
Mirepoix Cathedral


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Mirepoix - Cathédrale Saint-Maurice

Mirepoix -  Cathédrale Saint-Maurice
Mirepoix, part of the independent fiefdom of Foix, was a stronghold of the Cathars, who held a council here in 1206. Only 3 years later (1209) Simon de Montfort´s armee captured the town after a siege. He gave it to one of his lieutenants, Guy de Lévis. Raymond Roger von Foix reconquered Mirepoix in 1223 and re-installed the Cathar Pierre-Roger de Mirepoix.

After the Treaty of Paris (1229), that ended the Albigensian Crusade and the political autonomy of Occitan, the town was given back to Guy de Lévis, whose son moved the town after a devasting flood (1289) to higher grounds and had it rebuilt as a "bastide". This layout was never changed, so in the center is a large rectangular place, named today "Place du Maréchal-Leclerc".

The erection of the church started in 1298 and the construction continued over centuries. The structure, completed in the typical "gothique méridional" style, was restored in the 19th century by Prosper Mérimée and Eugène Viollet-le-Duc.

The parish church was between 1317 and 1801 the seat of the Bishop of Mirepoix. In the early 14th century many small and very small dioceses were founded within the former Cathar area. Mirepoix was one of them.

Other dioceses were founded at the same time in Saint Papoul (1317-1801 / 40kms north) and Alet-le-Bains (1318-1801 / 40kms east).

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