Apt Cathedral

Apt Cathedral (Cathédrale Sainte-Anne d'Apt) is a Roman Catholic church and former cathedral located in the town of Apt in Provence, France. It is a national monument.

Apt Cathedral
Cathédrale Sainte-Anne d'Apt
St. Anne's Church
LocationApt, Vaucluse
CountryFrance
DenominationRoman Catholic Church
History
StatusParish church
Founded1795
DedicationSt. Mary
Architecture
Architectural typechurch
StyleRomanesque, Baroque
Completed1810
Administration
DioceseDioceses of Avignon
Clergy
Bishop(s)Jean-Pierre Cattenoz

Now the church of Saint Anne, as a cathedral it was the seat of the bishop of Apt until the French Revolution. Under the Concordat of 1801 the diocese was divided between the Dioceses of Avignon and Digne.

History

The cathedral is believed to have been built on the site where Saint Auspice was buried. Tradition holds that Auspice became the custodian of the relics of St. Anne, which it is said he placed in a subterranean grotto to protect them from desecration by the barbarians. The church became a pilgrimage site. Anne of Austria came there in 1623. The church was the ecclesiastical seat of the diocese of Apt, until the diocese was dissolved in 1801.

Architecture

The cathedral combines a variety of architectural styles from Romanesque to Baroque. The lower crypt is part of the original 1st-century Roman building, used as a place of worship as early as the Carolingian era, and consists of a corridor leading to a vault where, according to local legend, Saint Anne's veil was found.[1]

The upper crypt dates back to about 1056 and consists of a small nave (around 8 metres or 26 feet) and an apse.

See also

  • Vgo (stone mason)

References

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